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Query: UMLS:C0023241 (
Legionella
)
6,990
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
An illness characterized by high fever and
pneumonia
struck 2.9% of a group of the Independent Order of Odd Fellows attending a convention held in Philadelphia, in September, 1974. The convention headquarters was the hotel where the American Legion met in July, 1976. The epidemiological, clinical, and laboratory characteristics of the illness were nearly identical to those of the disease in American legionnaires in 1976. Illness was significantly associated with attendance at one convention activity held on Monday morning, Sept. 16, 1974, in the grand ballroom of the hotel. A serological survey in February and March, 1977, showed that people who had attended the convention and became ill were more likely to have raised indirect fluorescent antibody titres than persons who had attended and remained well. The illness seen in Odd Fellows members in September, 1974, was caused by the
legionnaire's disease
organism.
...
PMID:1974 outbreak of Legionnaires' Disease diagnosed in 1977. Clinical and epidemiological features. 7 24
The acute lesion in
Legionnaires' disease
pneumonia
is an acute fibrinopurulent bronchopneumonia in which the alveoli are filled with many neutrophils and macrophages and abundant fibrin. There is only slight necrosis. Although characteristic, the lesion is not specific for this agent. However, the association with this lesion of myriad small pleomorphic rods, which stain well with Dieterle's silver-impregnation method but poorly or not at all with Gram-type stains, is uncommon except in
Legionnaires' disease
pneumonia
. Final diagnosis requires isolation of the organism or immunofluorescent studies of the tissue, sera or both. The full spectrum of the
pneumonia
is not known, but organization has been reported once. No definite anatomic correlate for the extrathoracic manifestations of
Legionnaires' disease
has been identified nor has the organism been found at extrathoracic sites.
...
PMID:Pathology of Legionnaires' disease. 8 11
A gram-negative, weakly acid-fast bacillus has been isolated in embryonated eggs and in guineapigs from lung tissue of two renal-transplant recipients with acute purulent
pneumonia
. Culture of infected lung tissue and subculture of the egg isolate on artificial media, including media for legionnaires' disease bacterium (
Legionella
pneumophila), failed to produce growth. Ultrastructural analysis showed that the organism is a prokaryote with a cell-wall structure typical of a gram-negative bacillus but different from that of L. pneumophila. In both patients serum antibody to both isolates developed in high titre. In its microbiological, tinctorial, and ultrastructural characteristics this bacterium differs sufficiently from L. pneumophila and other pulmonary pathogens to indicate that it may be a new agent of bacterial pneumonia.
...
PMID:New bacterial agent of pneumonia isolated from renal-transplant recipients. 8 63
Culture of a bronchial aspirate from an immunosuppressed patient with severe
pneumonia
yielded a growth of filamentous poorly staining gram-negative rods. Fluorescence with
Legionella
pneumophila direct fluorescein-isothiocyanate conjugate was equivocal. Gas-liquid chromatography (GLC) and GLC/mass-spectrometry (GLC-MS) of the cellular fatty acids of the isolate confirmed that the organism was L. pneumophila. GLC and GLC-MS constitute a rapid and definitive method for identification of L. pneumophila isolates.
...
PMID:Identification of a clinical isolate as Legionella pneumophila by gas chromatography and mass spectrometry of cellular fatty acids. 8 89
A group of related bacteria designated atypical
Legionella
-like organisms (ALLO) has been identified. ALLO, like L. pneumophila, are fastidious gram-negative rods that grow well on charcoal yeast extract (CYE) agar and produce ground glass colonies and browning of modified yeast extract agar. Unlike L. pneumophila, ALLO do not grow well on Feeley-Gorman (FG) agar, and on CYE agar they fluoresce under longwave ultraviolet light. ALLO and L. pneumophila have a similar predominance of branched-chain forms among total cellular fatty acids but have distinctive fatty-acid profiles. 2 patients with culture-verified ALLO
pneumonia
and 10 with
pneumonia
of uncertain aetiology who seroconverted to ALLO offer evidence that ALLO may be a cause of community-acquired
pneumonia
. Like L. pneumophila, ALLO appear to be water-associated; both persons with culture-verified ALLO infection were exposed to fresh water or its contents before becoming ill, and two strains of ALLO were isolated from water or wet environments.
...
PMID:Atypical Legionella-like organisms: fastidious water-associated bacteria pathogenic for man. 9 Oct 24
To identify the etiologic agent of
Legionnaire's disease
, we examined patients' serum and tissue specimens in a search for toxins, bacteria, fungi, chlamydiae, rickettsiae and viruses. From the lungs of four of six patients we isolated a gram-negative, non-acid-fast bacillus in guinea pigs. The bacillus could be transferred to yolk sacs of embryonated eggs. Classification of this organism is incomplete. We used yolk-sac cultures of the bacillus as antigen to survey suspected serum specimens, employing antihuman-globulin fluorescent antibody. When compared to controls, specimens from 101 to 111 patients meeting clinical criteria of
Legionnaires' disease
showed diagnostic increases in antibody titers. Diagnostic increases were also found in 54 recent sporadic cases of severe
pneumonia
and, retrospectively, in stored serum from most patients in two other previously unsolved outbreaks of respiratory disease. We conclude that
Legionnaires' disease
is caused by a gram-negative bacterium that may be responsible for widespread infection.
...
PMID:Legionnaires' disease: isolation of a bacterium and demonstration of its role in other respiratory disease. 33 45
A patient with
Legionnaires' disease
developed consolidated
pneumonia
with severe hypoxemia and mental confusion; his condition improved with therapy with positive end-expiratory pressure, steroids, and chloramphenicol. The retrospective diagnosis was made by a fourfold rise in indirect fluorescent antibody titers. The chest x-ray films showed bilateral alveolar infiltrates and air bronchograms.
...
PMID:Legionnaires' disease. A sporadic case. 34 Jan 53
The first case of
Legionnaires' disease
recognized in Pennsylvania since the Philadelphia epidemic of 1976 was that of a 53-year-old emphysematous man who had extensive unilateral
pneumonia
accompanied by high fever, hypoxemia, and disorientation. His illness progressed despite treatment with cephalothin, but he recovered coincident with the administration of gentamicin and erythromycin. The diagnosis was established serologically by a 32-fold rise in antibody titer to the agent of
Legionnaires' disease
. Similar illness did not affect others in his community, and infection in four family members was excluded clinically and serologically.
...
PMID:Sporadic Legionnaires' disease. 34 Jul 16
Thirty-two confirmed and 24 highly probable cases of
Legionnaires' disease
occurred in Vermont between May 1 and Oct 15, 1977. Confirmed cases had positive results for direct fluorescent antibody testing of lung tissue or fourfold rise in antibody titer. Highly probable cases had one elevated titer (greater than or equal to 1:256) and a compatible illness. Forty-eight (86%) had underlying chronic disease, and 22 (39%) were immunocompromised. Prominent early symptoms were fever, cough, chills, and malaise. All but one patient had verified
pneumonia
. Courses ranged from a
pneumonia
not requiring hospitalization to respiratory failure necessitating support with mechanical ventilation. Seventeen patients died. Although the clinical presentation was variable, rapid development of high fever and leukocytosis together with negative cultures of lower respiratory tract secretions strongly suggested the diagnosis in an epidemic setting.
...
PMID:Legionnaires' disease in Vermont, May to October 1977. 35 Dec 19
In January 1977 an unsolved outbreak of infection at St. Elizabeth's Hospital (Washington, D.C.) that occurred in 1965 was linked with
Legionnaires' disease
. The link was made by fluorescent antibody testing with the bacterium isolated from tissues of persons with
Legionnaires' disease
in the 1976 outbreak in Philadelphia. In July and August 1965, an epidemic of severe respiratory disease characterized by abrupt onset of high fever, weakness, malaise, and nonproductive cough, frequently accompanied by radiographic evidence of
pneumonia
, affected at least 81 patients at St. Elizabeth's Hospital, a general psychiatric hospital. Fourteen (17%) of the affected patients died. Intensive epidemiologic and laboratory investigations in 1965 did not determine the etiology. The etiologic organism may have become airborne from sites of soil excavation.
...
PMID:An outbreak in 1965 of severe respiratory illness caused by the Legionnaires' disease bacterium. 36 97
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