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Query: UMLS:C0023241 (
Legionella
)
6,990
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
As specialized laboratory tests became more widely available,
Legionella
species were found to be common causes of nosocomial and community-acquired pneumonia. Patients with chronic
lung disease
and organ transplants are at greatest risk. Clinical manifestations are non-specific, although fever greater than 39 degrees C and diarrhea are common. Erythromycin remains the antibiotic of choice, although many alternative agents are available. Once cases are discovered, a search for the organism in water distribution systems and respiratory equipment can be fruitful. Disinfection of water distribution systems by superheating and flushing or by hyperchlorination is feasible.
...
PMID:Legionella infection. 185 70
It has been suspected that the number of
Legionella
pneumophila infections is substantially higher than commonly reported, due to subclinical infections. We report a patient where the diagnosis of a legionella infection was made only because of a large-scale surveillance programme for legionellosis. The case demonstrates the possibility of legionellas being involved in
lung disease
though not necessarily causing overt legionellosis.
...
PMID:Atypical legionellosis: isolation of Legionella pneumophila serogroup 1 from a patient with aspiration pneumonia. 256 12
Both sporadic cases and outbreaks of
legionnaire's disease
have been reported. To date, no outbreaks have occurred but several case reports have been published in Switzerland. The newly organized surveillance system of notifiable diseases, introduced in 1987, makes it possible for the first time to analyze reported sporadic cases more precisely. In 1988, the laboratories reported a total of 32 cases with cultural or serologic proof of legionellosis. In 75% of cases patients were aged over 40 years, 78% occurred among males. The majority of them were known to be smokers. In 9 cases an underlying predisposing condition was known: hairy cell leukemia (3 cases), immune hemolytic anemia (1), type 2 diabetes (2), chronic
lung disease
(1), heart failure (1). The case fatality was 9%. A possible source of exposure, such as air-conditioned rooms or evaporative condensers, was reported in 4 cases.
...
PMID:[Epidemiology of legionnaires' disease in Switzerland in 1988]. 269 49
Between August 1982 and December 1985, seven patients at a children's hospital developed hospital-acquired pneumonia caused by
Legionella
pneumophila. Demographic data included the following: mean age 12.3 years (range 9 months to 20.5 years); male/female ratio 5:2; all patients were white. Some previously identified risk factors present in our patients included high-dose corticosteroid therapy (five patients), other immunosuppressive therapy (four), and chronic lung (five) or kidney (three) disease. Symptoms and signs included rapid onset, fever, cough, pleuritic chest pain, dyspnea, abdominal pain, diarrhea, and headache. Rhinitis, myalgia, and neurologic abnormalities were not noted. Chest roentgenograms revealed single-lobe consolidation in three patients, diffuse bilateral alveolar infiltrates in three, and pleural effusion in three. All patients were treated with erythromycin; three patients also received rifampin. Tracheal intubation and mechanical ventilation were required by four patients. Six patients improved after therapy. One child died of persistent
lung disease
1 month after the onset of legionnaires disease. L. pneumophila was isolated from potable water in the hospital. Aerosol equipment cleansed with tap water and the showers were implicated as means of exposure by patients to contaminated potable water. No new nosocomial cases were seen after immunocompromised children were prohibited from taking showers, and sterile water was used to cleanse equipment for administering aerosol medications.
...
PMID:Nosocomial legionnaires disease in a children's hospital. 273 94
In a one-year prospective study of 106 adults (mean age, 60 years) who were admitted to hospital with community-acquired pneumonia, an aetiological diagnosis was made in 82 (77%) patients. Streptococcus pneumoniae was considered to be responsible for 44 (42%) and respiratory viruses for 19 (18%) infections. Other aetiological agents that were found in a smaller number of patients included Haemophilus influenzae (9% of patients), enteric Gram-negative bacilli (8% of patients), Staphylococcus aureus (3% of patients),
Legionella
spp. (3% of patients), Mycobacterium tuberculosis (3% of patients), Mycoplasma pneumoniae (8% of patients) and Chlamydia psittaci (5% of patients). The mortality was 10% and was related significantly to increasing age and to coexisting heart and
lung disease
. Antibiotic treatment that was commenced before admission to hospital and investigations were undertaken reduced significantly the isolation rate of susceptible bacterial pathogens. The Gram-stained smear of sputum was valuable in establishing a tentative diagnosis of bacterial pneumonia. The most-useful tests in making an early diagnosis proved to be those which detected pneumococcal and mycoplasmal antigens, blood cultures and culture of sputum for appropriate bacterial pathogens.
...
PMID:A prospective hospital study of the aetiology of community-acquired pneumonia. 273 13
In a kidney-transplant patient, there was superinfection of the lungs by Klebsiella pneumoniae and
Legionella
pneumophilia with multiple necroses in the course of a primary cytomegalovirus infection. In a later phase of the disease, there was an opportunistic colonization of the necrotic cavities and the adjacent lung tissue by Aspergillus fumigatus and Candida albicans. The cytomegalovirus infection led to a pronounced cellular immunosuppression in the patient. This favored superinfections by bacteria and fungi. A poor nutritional state and a chronic
lung disease
are to be considered as predisposing risk factors.
...
PMID:[Cytomegalovirus-associated superinfection of the lung following kidney transplantation]. 302 68
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
Diagnosis of acute, primary extensive pneumopathies provoking severe hypoxemia is particularly difficult, became of the non-specific radiological findings, resulting from the oedema and associated alveolar collapse, and the fact that the clinical picture and biological test results are not very characteristic of a particular etiology. Similar findings may be obtained, therefore, in bacterial pneumopathies so-called typical pulmonary affections, certain forms of acute, tuberculosis, and other types of infection of three patients admitted for acute respiratory insufficiency, two died after treatment with a betalactamine, alone or associated with an aminoside, subsequent serology providing evidence of psittacosis. Diagnosis was immediately established in the third patient, the wife of one of the other cases, and she recovered after erythromycin treatment. The lungs of the two patients that died showed suggestive bronchiolitis and peribronchiolar alveolitis, together with obliterative alveolar granulations and fibrosis, probably secondary to the psittacosis, and responsible for the fatal outcome. Psittacosis as a cause of an extensive
pneumopathy
of probable infectious origin may easily pass unrecognized, typical etiologies being infections due to pneumococcus,
Legionella
pneumophila. Mycoplasma pneumoniae, and viruses. Erythromycin, active against these microorganisms, would therefore appear to be the antibiotic therapy that should be prescribed initially, those with wider spectrums being reserved for cases with atypical radiological findings, or when precise bacteriological data is available.
...
PMID:[Psittacosis as a cause of acute respiratory distress syndrome (author's transl)]. 710 4
Although the frequency of community-acquired pneumonia caused by Streptococcus pneumoniae continues to be high, studies show that Mycoplasma pneumoniae, Chlamydia pneumoniae, or
Legionella
pneumophila are the etiologic agents in 20% to 40% of community-acquired pneumonia in adults. The clinical presentation of pneumonia caused by these organisms may be indistinguishable from pneumonia due to S pneumoniae. Separation of cases of pneumonia due to S pneumoniae as typical and that caused by M pneumoniae, C pneumoniae, or L pneumophila as atypical is unwarranted and unhelpful in planning therapy. As many as 35% to 50% of patients do not have an etiologic agent identified. Community-acquired pneumonia can have high morbidity and mortality in patients who are older, have underlying
lung disease
, diabetes mellitus, or other comorbid conditions, or who have decreased immune function regardless of the specific etiologic agent. In choosing appropriate empiric antimicrobial therapy in hosts who are not immunocompromised, erythromycin and other macrolide antibiotics have the advantage of being effective against a wide range of pathogens likely to be encountered, including S pneumoniae, M pneumoniae, and L pneumophila, and of having some benefit against C pneumoniae. In other patients, the selection of antibiotic therapy can be based on age, clinical suspicion, epidemiologic data, and laboratory test results. Antimicrobial therapy can be directed at specific organisms when and if they are identified.
...
PMID:Community-acquired pneumonia in adults. 781 49
Previous reports have suggested that nosocomial and community
Legionella pneumonia
cases are similar. However, community and hospital characteristics, such as aquatic environment, antibiotic pressure (usage) and populations, are quite different, leading to the suspicion that Legionella infection may differ in the two settings. Univariate and multivariate analyses were performed to compare demographic data, risk factors, clinical, radiological and outcome data between 125 nosocomial and 33 community-acquired cases of
Legionella pneumophila infection
. Patients in the nosocomially acquired
Legionella pneumonia
(NALP) group were older than those in the community-acquired
Legionella pneumonia
(CALP) group. Univariate analysis showed that smoking habit, cough, thoracic pain, and extrapulmonary manifestations were more prevalent in the CALP group, whilst chronic
lung disease
and cancer were more prevalent in the NALP group. Moreover, patients in the NALP group were more likely to have received oxygen and corticosteroid therapy and also to have altered creatinine values than patients in the CALP group, whilst more patients in the latter group had altered alanine amino-transferase values. However, multivariate analysis failed to confirm most of these differences. Smoking habit and blood creatinine levels were the only variables remaining significant. In conclusion, demographic, clinical, laboratory, radiological and outcome data in nosocomial and community-acquired
Legionella pneumonia
are quite similar.
...
PMID:Nosocomial and community-acquired Legionella pneumonia: clinical comparative analysis. 862 Sep 64
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