Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0023241 (Legionella)
6,990 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A review of the medical records of 123 persons with Legionnaires' disease hospitalized in the 1976 Philadelphia epidemic showed that the manifestations of infection ranged from mild grippe to a severe pneumonia that also involved other organ systems. Early in the illness, constitutional symptoms predominated. Fever, malaise, myalgia, rigors, confusion, headache, and diarrhea were usually followed by nonproductive cough and dyspnea. Physical examination showed few abnormalities other than rales. Moderate leukocytosis with left shift, elevated erythrocyte sedimentation rate, elevation of serum levels of liver enzymes, and hematuria and proteinuria were characteristic. Chest radiograph showed patchy, often nodular, areas of consolidation. Progression of pneumonia led to respiratory failure and the need for mechanical ventilatory assistance for 19 patients; renal failure, primarily after shock, occurred in 18 persons. Twenty-six patients died. Treatment with erythromycin or tetracycline resulted in the lowest case-fatality ratios, but the associations were not statistically significant.
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PMID:Legionnaires' disease: clinical features of the epidemic in Philadelphia. 43 27

A neonatal case of legionnaires' disease (LD) is reported. A male neonate was admitted to our hospital with high fever and dyspnea, which had started 5 days after birth, and died due to severe pneumonia at 10 days old. An autopsy revealed small areas of granular consolidation scattered diffusely in the bilateral lungs. Microscopic examination of the lungs showed mainly lobularly distributed pneumonia. Extensive exudation of macrophages and neutrophils was observed in the terminal respiratory tract and alveolar spaces. Warthin-Starry and Gimenez staining and electron microscopy detected many coccobacilli in the cytoplasm of exudated macrophages and neutrophils. Immunofluorescence staining using antiserum against Legionella pneumophila, serogroup 1, showed a positive reaction. Bacteriological examinations of aspirate from the respiratory tract and autopsied lung tissue confirmed the presence of Legionella pneumophila, serogroup 1. Extrapulmonary LD was not detected. LD usually affects aged or immunocompromised hosts, but there was no evidence of immune deficiency in this case. Pediatric cases of LD have rarely been reported, and a survey of the literature revealed few neonatal cases. The present case may alert neonatologists and other medical personnel to the possibility of neonatal LD infection.
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PMID:Neonatal Legionnaires' disease. Histopathological findings in an autopsied neonate. 150 3

Two male patients ages 54 and 58 years had persisting pneumonia with dry cough, dyspnea, weight loss, and fever up to 39 degrees C that did not respond to erythromycin treatment. There was extensive restrictive impairment of ventilation and loss of diffusing capacity for carbon monoxide. Histologic examination of the basal pulmonary infiltrates showed fibrosing alveolitis. Serologic titers indicated that the patients had suffered from Legionella pneumophila infection. We believe that Legionella had caused the fibrosing alveolitis since there was absence of any other causative agents or factors. Both patients responded to corticosteroid treatment with rapid clinical improvement but delayed radiologic regression.
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PMID:Fibrosing alveolitis responsive to corticosteroids following Legionnaires' disease pneumonia. 812 53

Legionnaires' disease in a 37-year-old male who had had silicosis was reported. He was admitted because of dyspnea. The chest X-ray film and CT scan showed infiltrative shadow and swelling of mediastinal lymph nodes. Open lung biopsy was done and Legionella pneumohila was detected. REP and EM were started and infiltrative shadow of X-ray was disappeared. Pleuro-pneumonectomy and thoracoplasty were performed because of hemoptysis and postoperative empyema. The patient is now well.
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PMID:[Legionnaires' disease with mediastinal lymph nodes swelling, diagnosed by open lung biopsy--a case report]. 203 40

Approximately 4% of recipients of solid organ transplants in the United States develop bacterial pneumonia in the posttransplant period, often in the first 3 months following transplantation. The incidence of bacterial pneumonia is highest in recipients of heartlung (22%) and liver transplants (17%), intermediate in recipients of heart transplants (5%), and lowest in renal transplant patients (1 to 2%). The crude mortality of bacterial pneumonia in solid organ transplantation has exceeded 40% in most series. Beyond those risk factors identified for nosocomial pneumonia, the occurrence of primary cytomegalovirus (CMV) infection, graft rejection, maintenance antirejection therapy with prednisone, azathioprine, and antilymphocyte globulin, antirejection therapy with high-dose corticosteroids or OKT3 and splenectomy have been associated with a significantly increased risk of bacterial pneumonia in these patients. In the first 3 months posttransplant, gram-negative bacilli, Staphylococcus aureus and Legionella predominate and mortality is very high, in excess of 60%. Thereafter, bacterial pneumonias are caused primarily by Streptococcus pneumoniae and Hemophilus influenzae, with considerably lower mortality. Bacterial pneumonia must be suspected in any transplant patient presenting with fever and cough, especially associated with dyspnea or infiltrates on chest radiograph. If large numbers of bacteria and polymorphonuclear leukocytes are not visualized in respiratory secretions the work-up should proceed directly to fiberoptic bronchoscopy with bronchoalveolar lavage and/or protected brush specimen to establish the microbiologic diagnosis as accurately as possible. For presumptive gram-negative bacillary pneumonia, the initial regimen must be effective against Pseudomonas aeruginosa. Prevention of bacterial pneumonia in transplant patients must begin with immunization against S pneumoniae and Influenza A, and include precautions taken to prevent nosocomial pneumonia. It further may include measures to prevent CMV infection and the use of trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole prophylaxis during the first year posttransplantation. Ultimately, novel technologies such as selective antimicrobial decontamination and/or protective isolation during the early postoperative period may prove effective.
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PMID:Bacterial pneumonia in solid organ transplantation. 218 17

Pulmonary affections in patients with legionellosis are the main ones. The affections of the heart, gastrointestinal tract and other organs and systems are less frequent. Some characteristic features of the legionellosis clinical process in the case described are indicated. The torpid process of chronic bronchitis, the two-phase pattern of the disease, dyspnea at 3-4 month intervals, intermissions, edema and failure of complex therapy with antibiotics and cardiac glycosides provided a tentative diagnosis of Legionella pneumonia with affection of the myocardium. The importance of early serological diagnosis (enzyme immunoassay) was shown. A new approach to the treatment of legionellosis with cefuroxime was of interest.
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PMID:[A case of successful antibiotic therapy of legionnaires' disease with lesions of the lungs and heart]. 240 Feb 94

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.
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PMID:Nosocomial legionnaires disease in a children's hospital. 273 94

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).
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PMID:[Legionellosis at intensive care units: study of 30 cases]. 277 93

A previously healthy 27 year-old male plumber presented with six days of fever, nausea, vomiting, malaise and headache. The subsequent development of cough, dyspnoea and pleuritic pain coincided with the simultaneous development of progressive bilateral cavitary pneumonia with pleural effusion. Leucocytosis, thrombocytopenia, hyponatraemia, hypoalbuminaemia, hypophosphataemia and hypoxaemia were the main laboratory abnormalities. Clinical suspicion of Legionnaires' disease was confirmed by the presence of serum antibody to Legionella pneumophila (titre 1:512) by an indirect fluorescent antibody test. Treatment with erythromycin and rifampicin resulted in clinical recovery with minimal residual bilateral pleural effusion six months after presentation. This patient is the first to acquire Legionnaires' disease in Singapore.
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PMID:Legionnaires' disease--report of Singapore's first local case. 355 84

A diabetic patient presented with symptoms and laboratory findings compatible with atypical pneumonia. Despite appropriate antibiotic therapy, his dyspnea, arterial oxygenation, and chest roentgenographic findings worsened. Because the patient had a history of homosexual contact, an open lung biopsy was obtained to morphologically define the tissue reaction and to search for a specific etiology. Histologic examination showed bronchiolitis obliterans but did not demonstrate a cause. Legionnaires' disease was subsequently diagnosed on the basis of a fourfold rise in indirect fluorescent antibody titer. This case report demonstrates that Legionella pneumophila may induce lung injury with bronchiolitis obliterans. Such patients may benefit from corticosteroid treatment.
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PMID:Bronchiolitis obliterans caused by Legionella pneumophila. 399 79


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