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Query: UMLS:C0023241 (
Legionella
)
6,990
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
To develop a model of legionnaires' disease in a host with defective cell-mediated immunity, rats were treated with subcutaneous cortisone acetate and exposed to aerosolized
Legionella
pneumophila. Bacterial clearance, histopathology, cell recovery by bronchoalveolar lavage, serology, and splenocyte blastogenesis to heat-killed L. pneumophila were studied in cortisone-treated rats and normal controls. Corticosteroid administration resulted in a dosage-related defect in the clearance of L. pneumophila. Cortisone-treated animals had a diffuse, progressive pneumonitis, but the influx of neutrophils to the lung, the serum antibody response, and the sensitization of splenocytes to L. pneumophila were not impaired by corticosteroids. The marked lymphocyte depletion observed in cortisone-treated animals may have contributed to defective expression of cell-mediated immunity. This model may be useful in further studies of the pathogenesis and treatment of
legionellosis
in the compromised host.
...
PMID:Impaired clearance of aerosolized Legionella pneumophila in corticosteroid-treated rats: a model of Legionnaires' disease in the compromised host. 276 Apr 83
A prospective study during 44 months has been carried out in order to establish the incidence of pneumonia due to
Legionella
sp. in our hospital's intensive care unit (ICU). Thirty cases of
legionellosis
were diagnosed (22.2% of the studied pneumonias) two of them were acquired in the ICU and 76.6% were caused by L. pneumophila serotype. The most evident symptomatology was intense dyspnea, neurological disorders, acute respiratory and renal failure. The biochemical alterations, most commonly encountered were increased liver enzymes, hypoxemia, hypoalbuminemia, increased urea, creatinine and hematuria. As a consequence of this severe disease, the mortality rate was high (13 out of 30 cases).
...
PMID:[Legionellosis at intensive care units: study of 30 cases]. 277 93
As part of an ongoing investigation into nosocomial
Legionella infections
at Stanford University Medical Center (SUMC), we applied the technique of restriction endonuclease analysis (REA) to determine strain differences among three species, including
Legionella
pneumophila,
Legionella
dumoffii, and Legionella micdadei. A total of 26 human and environmental water isolates from SUMC were selected for REA and compared with control strains that were not epidemiologically linked to SUMC. REA results were compared with results of alloenzyme typing, typing by monoclonal antibodies, and plasmid fingerprinting in all but L. micdadei strains. REA and alloenzyme typing showed that SUMC patient isolates were derived from distinct strains of three species. L. pneumophila strains from SUMC patients were genotypically identical to those isolated from potable water. REA was especially useful in proving that SUMC L. dumoffii patient isolates were derived from a single strain and that patients may have been exposed to a common source(s). REA typing correlated well with alloenzyme typing. These methods complement serologic typing of L. pneumophila and provide discriminating capability between strains of other
Legionella
species such as L. dumoffii, for which serologic types have not been identified. In addition, REA typing is somewhat easier to perform than alloenzyme typing and can be done in clinical laboratories.
...
PMID:Molecular epidemiology of Legionella species by restriction endonuclease and alloenzyme analysis. 282 60
A prospective pneumonia study was conducted simultaneously on head-and-neck surgery wards at two hospitals over 2 years; one hospital had a water supply contaminated with
Legionella
pneumophila but no record of having had a case of legionella pneumonia, and the other had just decontaminated its water supply because of known endemic nosocomial
legionellosis
. Special laboratory tests for legionella were done on all cases of nosocomial pneumonia irrespective of clinical impression. Over the first 18 months, the rate of nosocomial
legionellosis
was 30% at the first hospital and 0% at the second. Patients who underwent laryngectomy did not acquire the disease. Hyperchlorination at the first hospital was followed by a fall (p less than 0.01) in legionella pneumonias. Thus legionella pneumonias can be overlooked if special laboratory tests are not applied routinely, and surgical patients with head-and-neck cancer may be at high risk of nosocomial
legionellosis
because of the potential for pulmonary aspiration of contaminated water or orophyaryngeal microflora and/or frequent manipulation of the respiratory tract. This study demonstrates the benefits of examining the environment for legionella despite the absence of documented disease.
...
PMID:Nosocomial legionellosis in surgical patients with head-and-neck cancer: implications for epidemiological reservoir and mode of transmission. 286 67
Of 33 patients infected in an outbreak of
legionellosis
in Glasgow in 1984, 26 lived in the Dennistoun district and the remainder either worked in or visited there. There were three main clusters of cases, the onset of illness being in early and mid June in two clusters and early September in the third. Most patients were not severely ill, but 1 patient died. The likely source of infection was a cooling tower from which
Legionella
pneumophila serogroup 1 was isolated. Strains indistinguishable from the cooling-tower strain were isolated from 2 of the patients. Cases occurred downwind of this cooling tower up to a distance of 1700 m. It is suggested that airborne infection with L pneumophila may extend further from the source than has hitherto been recognised.
...
PMID:Outbreak of legionellosis in a community. Report of an ad-hoc committee. 287 78
In March-April 1987 an outbreak of
Legionella infection
was registered among 236 workers at a rubber factory in Armavir. An ARD-like syndrome and acute alveolitis were the main variants of the clinical course of the infection.
Legionella infection
was diagnosed on the basis of a fourfold and greater increase in the titers of antibodies to L. pneumophila, serogroup 1, as determined in the indirect immunofluorescence test and enzyme immunoassay (EIA). In urine samples obtained from patients
Legionella
antigen was determined with the use of EIA techniques. The culture of L. pneumophila, serogroup 1, was isolated from the recycling-type water supply system of the factory. The outbreak was stopped by a complex of sanitary, hygienic and epidemic control measures.
...
PMID:[An outbreak of Legionella infection in Armavir]. 297 49
A 57-year-old man had
Legionella pneumonia
and acute pancreatitis. The diagnosis of
legionellosis
was established by both culture and significant rise in antibody titer to
Legionella
pneumophila. The pancreatitis was diagnosed by elevated amylase and lipase values, peaking on the fourth hospital day, roentgenologic findings, and a clinical picture compatible with the disease. The patient was not an alcohol consumer and had had no previous pancreatic disease. We conclude that acute pancreatitis can be a manifestation of
legionellosis
.
...
PMID:Acute pancreatitis caused by Legionella pneumophila. 304 84
Between 11 November 1986 and 28 February 1987,
legionellosis
was diagnosed in 23 patients at one hospital with a recently marketed
Legionella
-specific DNA probe for respiratory secretions. Only 10 of the 23 probe-positive patients showed findings typical of
Legionella pneumonia
, including a temperature of greater than or equal to 100.5 degrees F (approximately 38.1 degrees C) and radiographic evidence of pneumonia. No differences were found in the results of laboratory studies, demographic features, or underlying risk factors for these 10 probe-positive patients when compared with the 13 probe-positive patients with nonpneumonic illnesses. A case-control study comparing probe-positive and -negative patients failed to identify any different features of disease or epidemiologic characteristics. Probes of repeat specimens of sputum were still positive 2 to 13 weeks after the initial test in 5 (50%) of the 10 probe-positive patients. The clinical features in most patients were atypical for
legionellosis
, and the diagnosis could not be confirmed by traditional laboratory tests performed on duplicate specimens processed at the Centers for Disease Control. This report emphasizes the need for clinical microbiology laboratories to confirm test results from new procedures by accepted diagnostic methods.
...
PMID:False-positive DNA probe test for Legionella species associated with a cluster of respiratory illnesses. 304 52
A patient is described who developed cavitary
Legionella pneumonia
2 weeks after kidney transplantation. The initial pulmonary symptoms were followed by severe thrombocytopenia and acute renal failure. Although acute irreversible graft rejection was suspected, this was not supported by the pathology findings in the resected kidney, which were compatible with tubular damage. We presume that the extrapulmonary symptoms were caused by
Legionellosis
.
...
PMID:Legionella infection with acute renal failure and thrombocytopenia mimicking allograft rejection. A pitfall in post-transplantation diagnosis. 307 87
A 38 year old woman with diabetes mellitus and bronchial asthma was admitted to hospital with pneumonia caused by Mycoplasma pneumoniae; she recovered promptly on erythromycin treatment. Six weeks later she presented with aortic valve endocarditis without concurrent lung disease. A concurrent increase in titres of antibody to
Legionella
bozemanii, L longbeachae, and L jordanis indicated a
Legionella infection
.
Legionella infection
should be considered, even in the absence of pneumonia, in cases of endocarditis where no other cause can be detected.
...
PMID:Aortic valve endocarditis associated with Legionella infection after Mycoplasma pneumonia. 311 81
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