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Query: UMLS:C0023241 (Legionella)
6,990 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

An indirect fluorescent antibody (IFA) test was used to establish the background prevalence of antibody to Legionella pneumophila in single serum specimens from 1,143 persons. The serum specimens had been obtained from volunteers 46 years of age and older who were not acutely ill and who resided in the areas of Atlanta, Georgia; Washington, D.C.; Houston, Texas; and Rochester, New York. The overall prevalence of seropositivity (reciprocal titer, greater than or equal to 64) was 1.7%. The prevalence of seropositivity did not vary with age, sex, or geographic location. Groups of persons in which the prevalence of reciprocal titers of greater than or equal to 64 is significantly higher than 1.7% may have unusually great exposure to L. pneumophila. In the population tested, a reciprocal IFA titer of greater than or equal to 64 would have a specificity of 98.3% in the diagnosis of an acute illness as Legonnnaires' disease.
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PMID:Prevalence of antibody to Legionella pneumophila in middle-aged and elderly Americans. 39 79

Specific IgM and IgG antibody responses to Legionella pneumophila (LDB) and Chlamydia psittaci (PSI) in serum specimens from 22 cases of Legionnaires' Disease (LD) were examined by micro-immunofluorescence (IF) tests to explore the diagnostic significance of the IgM antibody response. Serial samples from 5 patients with LD showed greater than or equal to 4-fold changes in IgG antibody against LDB and PSI. All 5 patients possessed IgM antibodies against LDB but not against PSI. In single convalescent serum samples from 17 additional cases, 16 exhibited IgG and 15 showed IgM antibodies against LDB; all 17 exhibited IgG but not IgM antibodies against PSI. The IgM antibody response appears more specific than the corresponding IgG response in the serodiagnosis of LD, and may be valuable in differentiating LDB infections from those due to PSI.
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PMID:Diagnostic specificity of immunoglobulin M (IgM) response in differentiation Legionnaires' disease from psittacosis. 39 7

A crude extract of Escherichia coli O13:K92:H4 inhibited 97% of positive indirect immunofluorescence titers against a variety of gram-negative bacterial antigens while lowering Legionella pneumophila titers in only 6% of sera from patients with suspected legionellosis. Legionella-specific titers were the result of immunoglobulins G, M, and A, singly or in combination.
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PMID:Measure of immunoglobulin G-, M-, and A-specific titers against Legionella pneumophila and inhibition of titers against nonspecific, gram-negative bacterial antigens in the indirect immunofluorescence test for legionellosis. 39 23

Rabbits were infected with Legionella pneumophila by intravenous administration of allantoic fluid from eggs infected with this organism. Heated plasma from animals with severe illness caused by L. pneumophila lysed erythrocytes from guinea pigs in a radial hemolysis assay. Plasma from control rabbits did not lyse guinea pig erythrocytes in parallel assays. Urine from two of the infected animals also showed hemolytic activity. Attempts to induce illness in rabbits by intranasal administration of L. pneumohpila were less successful. Allantoic fluid from embrynated hen eggs developed hemolytic activity when maintained eithr in vitro at room temperature or in eggs whose embryos were killed by refrigeration. Hemolytic activity in filtrates of allantoic fluid from eggs infected with L. pneumophila, as previously reported, may not be due to the presence of bacterial hemolysins in the fluid.
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PMID:Hemolytic activity of plasma and urine from rabbits experimentally infected with Legionella pneumophila. 39 83

The AA. report the personal contributions and the recent findings of other investigators dealing with the toxic activities of Legionella pneumophila, the causative agent of Legionnaires' Disease. From the results of some tests (particularly Limulus endotoxin assay, pyrogenic reaction, skin Shwartzman reaction) there is an increasing evidence that Legionella pneumophila possesses some of the in vitro and in vivo biological properties associated with endotoxins of Gram negative bacteria, even if to a different of potency in different strains. However, the exact roles of an endotoxin and other bacterial products (e.g. haemolysins) as a pathogenetic mediators of the pathophysiological events of the disease remain to be determined.
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PMID:[Toxic activity of Legionella pneumophila: current findings and prospects]. 39 30

This report confirms the gram-negative ultrastructural characteristics of the Legionnaires' disease organism by direct examination of pulmonary tissue from six confirmed cases--two from the original Philadelphia epidemic of 1976 and four from more recent sporadic cases. All microorganisms seen in all six lungs were identical ultrastructurally and were predominantely within intra-alveolar macrophages, as previously observed by light microscopy. They appeared as short, blunt rods that were clearly prokaryotic; i.e., they had diffuse electron-lucent nucleoid areas interspersed among areas of well-defined ribosomes, a pinching nonseptic division, and enclosure within a double envelope consisting of two three-layer "unit" membranes, each approximately 75 A wide. This structure, together with a pinching division, is typical of gram-negative bacteria. The Legionnaires' disease organism multiples both intracellularly and extracellularly in tissue and has no unique ultrastructural features that would aid in its specific identification. These findings are compared with recent reports describing the ultrastructure of what was considered to be the Legionnaires' disease organism in yolk sac and culture medium, and in one human lung.
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PMID:Ultrastructure of the agent of Legionnaires' disease in the human lung. 42 Jan 72

Over a two year period, we studied prospectively 80 cases of diffuse pneumonia at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center. In 72 per cent of these, the patient had leukemia or lymphoma. Diagnostic procedures consisted of extensive serologic testing for antibody to known respiratory pathogens, including the agent of Legionnaire's disease, and culturing of biopsy specimens for bacteria, viruses, mycoplasmas and fungi. Of 44 cases in which open lung biopsy was performed, a specific cause was found in 61.4 per cent: Pneumocystis carinii in 38.6 per cent, other infections in 9.1 per cent and tumor involvement in 13.7 per cent. There were nonspecific pulmonary changes in 38.6 per cent. Of the 56 cases in which biopsy, autopsy or both were performed, a specific diagnosis was made in 69.7 per cent: P. carinii infection in 37.5 per cent and other infections in 12.5 per cent. In cases in which neither biopsy nor autopsy was performed, a specific infection was diagnosed in 33 per cent; no specific diagnosis was made in the remainder. One patient in the entire group had a significant antibody titer for Legionnaire's disease. Although diagnostic in some cases, extensive serologic testing proved relatively unfruitful. Pneumocystosis was the most frequent diagnosis in this study. The cause of some cases remained obscure, even after lung biopsy.
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PMID:Diffuse pulmonary infiltrates in immunosuppressed patients. Prospective study of 80 cases. 42 Feb 37

Legionnaire's disease presenting as empyema has not been previously described, although pleural effusions are not uncommon. A 56-year-old woman had a ten-day history of pleuritic chest pain and a large loculated empyema. Legionnaires' disease was documented by serum indirect fluorescent antibody studies.
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PMID:Legionnaires' disease presenting with empyema. 42 92

The authors have provided ultrastructural demonstration from human material of a small rod shaped organism that represents the causative agent of Legionnaires' disease. The organisms are found mainly in intracytoplasmic vacuoles of alveolar cells. They have a thin outer cell wall and a more delicate plasma membrane. On the basis of morphology, arguments are presented to classify these unusual organisms as rickettsia-like.
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PMID:An ultrastructural demonstration of the agent of Legionnaires' disease in the human lung. 42 98

Since the initial description of Legionnaires' disease 2 years ago, a clearer picture of its clinical manifestations has emerged as a result of investigations of further epidemics and studies of laboratory-confirmed sporadic cases. Although individual clinical features are not sufficiently distinctive to distinguish Legionnaires' disease from other types of acute pneumonia, a composite can provide a sufficiently characteristic clinical profile to indicate the likelihood of this diagnosis. Such a profile includes high fever (above 39.4 degrees C); recurrent chills; relative bradycardia; early gastrointestinal symptoms (particularly diarrhea); prominent myalgias; microscopic hematuria; liver function abnormalities; toxic encephalopathy; nonproductive cough; absence of bacterial pathogens on Gram stain and culture of transtracheal aspirate; progression from patchy bronchopneumonia to lobar and multilobar consolidation; and frequently prompt and sometimes dramatic response to treatment with erythromycin.
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PMID:Clinical aspects of Legionnaires' disease. 43 24


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