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Query: UMLS:C0023241 (
Legionella
)
6,990
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Thirty-nine cases of
Legionnaires' disease
in a 16-month period were identified in visitors to and residents of Bloomington, Indiana. Thirty-five patients had spent at least one night at the Indiana Memorial Union in the 2 weeks before becoming ill. Five of 32 sporadic cases nationwide between 1 January and 31 March 1978 were retrospectively shown to be in persons who had recently visited the Union. The risk of acquiring
Legionnaires' disease
as a Union visitor was at least 17 times greater than that for Bloomington residents 20 years or older. Employees who had worked at the Union 5 years or longer were more likely to be seropositive than workers in other Bloomington hotels.
Legionnaires' disease
bacterium was isolated from five environmental sites in Bloomington. A cooling tower may have been involved in disease spread, but it was not the only source.
Hypochlorite
solution was added to cooling tower water as a precautionary measure; however, one case was confirmed in a man with Union exposure 9 days after
hypochlorite
treatment had begun.
...
PMID:A major focus of Legionnaires' disease in Bloomington, Indiana. 43 40
The
Legionnaires' disease
(LD) bacterium can now be readily cultured on artificial media. Studies were done to define the growth and survival of the LD bacterium in these media and ascertain its susceptibility to disinfecting agents. Growth-curve studies of the Philadelphia 1 strain using Mueller-Hinton broth with ferric pyrophosphate and L-cysteine (Feeley-Gorman broth) showed a lag phase of less than 24 h, a generation time of 3.8 h during the logarithmic phase, a plateau of 2 x 10(7) organisms per millilitre, and continued viability for as long as 110 d. Viability on chocolate agar with 1% hemoglobin and 2% IsoVitaleX added reached 150 d. This strain was susceptible to a variety of commonly recommended hospital and laboratory disinfectants, often in low concentrations. These investigations suggest that prolonged survival may occur in natural as well as artificial milieus and that low concentrations of phenolics, quaternary ammonium compounds, glutaraldehyde, formaldehyde, and
hypochlorite
could eradicate potential reservoirs for human infection.
...
PMID:Growth, survival, and resistance of the Legionnaires' disease bacterium. 57 Dec 58
Although epidemics of nosocomial
Legionnaires' disease
attract great attention, up to 30% of sporadic cases of hospital-acquired pneumonia are caused by legionellae. Legionellae are ubiquitous contaminants of potable water and can achieve high numbers in the hot-water systems of large buildings such as hospitals. They are present in the mains water supply in small numbers but are amplified considerably in the hospital's hot-water system. This is encouraged by water temperatures below 50 degrees C, areas of stagnation and sludge formation, the presence of amoebae and other bacteria and the materials used in the piping. Formation of aerosols from contaminated water is a major mode of spread of legionellae, but there is evidence to suggest that aspiration is also a mode of entry. Safe levels of legionellae in cooling towers have been defined, but not for hot-water systems. A combination of culture and antigen detection by immunofluorescence offer the best method for enumerating legionellae in environmental samples. Control involves a mixture of physical (heat, UV irradiation, sanitation) and chemical (
hypochlorite
, ozone) methods combined with good plumbing practice (e.g. arrangement of pumps and calorifiers, elimination of dead-legs). Adequate control can be costly and requires considerable attention to detail.
...
PMID:Legionella in hospitals: a review. 167 19
Fourteen people living in or near the city of Gloucester fell ill with
Legionnaires' disease
caused by
Legionella
pneumophila serogroup (SG) 1 between 27 August and 27 October 1986. Another patient had fallen ill on 30 May. Nine of the 15 were diagnosed retrospectively during a case finding exercise. There were three deaths. Three cases of Pontiac fever were also diagnosed. The source was probably one or more wet cooling towers. Nineteen premises in the city with such towers were identified, and three just outside Gluocester. Samples from 11 of the 22 premises grew
Legionella
spp.; from nine of these L. pneumophila SG 1 (Pontiac) was isolated. The efficacy of regular addition of biocide in addition to
hypochlorite
added at the time of disinfection in inhibiting the growth of
Legionella
spp. was demonstrated. A survey of patients' movements during their likely incubation period showed that there was no single building that all patients had visited, but there were two areas of the city which nearly all had visited or passed through by car. A case-control study demonstrated an association with one of these areas. Cooling towers near both areas may have been sources but the evidence is insufficient to incriminate any single one. The unexpected finding of L. pneumophila SG 1 (Pontiac) in nine towers supports the hypothesis that there may have been multiple sources. Cooling towers may have been contaminated by mains water or by drift from other towers.
...
PMID:An outbreak of Legionnaires' disease in Gloucester. 187 80
Methods using polymerase chain reaction (PCR) and gene probes to detect viable
Legionella
pneumophila were investigated with cells exposed to biocide or elevated temperature. Exposure to
hypochlorite
caused viable nonculturable cells to form. Culturable and viable nonculturable cells showed positive PCR amplification, whereas nonviable cells did not. Viable cells were also specifically detected with mip mRNA as the target, reverse transcription (to form cDNA), and PCR amplification. After exposure to elevated temperature, only viable culturable cells were detected, which corresponded with positive PCR amplification.
...
PMID:Detection of viable Legionella pneumophila in water by polymerase chain reaction and gene probe methods. 201 94
Legionnaires' disease
is a severe pneumonia caused by the bacterium
Legionella
pneumophila. Outbreaks of
Legionnaire's disease
have occurred in hotels, hospitals, and homes but had not been reported yet in the work environment. The authors report the occurrence of
Legionnaires' disease
in three employees of two industrial plants. The potable water in the two plants contained high numbers of
Legionella
pneumophila. Monoclonal antibody subtyping of environmental and patient isolates of L. pneumophila implicated one of the plants as the source for the disease. L. pneumophila was eradicated from this plant using acidic and caustic scale removers, calcium
hypochlorite
, and a biocide. A systematic approach to
Legionnaires' disease
in the work environment, a problem which can be expected to be recognized with increasing frequency, is presented.
...
PMID:Legionnaires' disease in the work environment: implications for environmental health. 319 73
Twelve samples of water taken from the cooling tower of UOEH were examined for the presence of microorganisms belonging to the genus
Legionella
by using a new selective medium, Wadowsky-Yee-Okuda (WYO) medium. Three samples contained this organism and they were identified as
Legionella
pneumophila from their biochemical properties. Among the three contaminated samples, two yielded L. pneumophila serogroup 1 and 3, and the other contained only L. pneumophila serogroup 1. One of the samples of the contaminated cooling tower water was treated with sodium
hypochlorite
as a disinfectant, indicating that this agent is probably not effective in eliminating L. pneumophila from cooling tower water at that concentration. An effective method of disinfection for
Legionella
spp. in the cooling tower must be developed to prevent infection in the hospital.
...
PMID:[Isolation of Legionella pneumophila from the UOEH cooling tower]. 380 18
Three different species of
Legionella
were recovered from samples of water taken from chlorinated public water supplies where no coliform bacteria were simultaneously detected. Five of 856 samples yielded
Legionella
isolates. Three isolates were identified as
Legionella
pneumophila serogroup 1, the fourth was identified as
Legionella
dumoffii, and the fifth was identified as
Legionella
jordanis. Studies to determine the survival of L. pneumophila Flint 1 serogroup 1 in tap water at various temperatures and in tap water with added sodium
hypochlorite
were done. These organisms were found to survive for 299 days in tap water at 24 and 5 degrees C but not at 35 degrees C. A concentration of at least 0.2 mg of residual chlorine per ml was required to eliminate at least 90% of L. pneumophila and Escherichia coli inocula in 2 h.
...
PMID:Isolation of Legionella species from drinking water. 650 92
Hypochlorite
has been used as a disinfectant for more than 100 years. It has many of the properties of an ideal disinfectant, including a broad antimicrobial activity, rapid bactericidal action, reasonable persistence in treated potable water, ease of use, solubility in water, relative stability, relative nontoxicity at use concentrations, no poisonous residuals, no color, no staining, and low cost. The active species is undissociated hypochlorous acid (HOCl).
Hypochlorites
are lethal to most microbes, although viruses and vegetative bacteria are more susceptible than endospore-forming bacteria, fungi, and protozoa. Activity is reduced by the presence of heavy metal ions, a biofilm, organic material, low temperature, low pH, or UV radiation. Clinical uses in health-care facilities include hyperchlorination of potable water to prevent
Legionella
colonization, chlorination of water distribution systems used in hemodialysis centers, cleaning of environmental surfaces, disinfection of laundry, local use to decontaminate blood spills, disinfection of equipment, decontamination of medical waste prior to disposal, and dental therapy. Despite the increasing availability of other disinfectants, hypochlorites continue to find wide use in hospitals.
...
PMID:Uses of inorganic hypochlorite (bleach) in health-care facilities. 933 64
It was reported that two mechanics working on a cargo ship under repair in the port of Barcelona had died after having fever. An investigation was made into the possibility of any additional cases and the presence of
Legionella
pneumophila in the ship they were repairing and in their hotel. The contaminated water system was treated with sodium
hypochlorite
. Both patients died after having been repeatedly diagnosed as having influenza. The two cases occurred among those who had been working with the pump of the ship's water system, while no cases were observed among the other workers (p = 0.02). Various serogroups of L. pneumophila were isolated from the ship's water pump and distribution system. However, organism of serogroup 1, subgroup Pontiac (Knoxville) were identified with identical deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) patterns in the lung tissue of one patient and in the cooling water circuit valve of the ship's water pump. The first postintervention control water samples showed no further growth of legionella, but serogroups 4 and 8 were identified 8 months later. This legionellosis outbreak, although small, was highly lethal, probably due to the high levels of bacteria to which the patients were exposed and also because of the failure of correct diagnosis. International recommendations on prevention and control of legionellosis, which include ships under repair, are required.
...
PMID:A small outbreak of Legionnaires' disease in a cargo ship under repair. 1149 Nov 80
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