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Query: UMLS:C0023241 (
Legionella
)
6,990
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Ten days after starting military service in a police barracks a 25-year-old man developed left middle and lower lobe pneumonia which did not respond to ampicillin (8 g daily) and gentamycin (120 mg daily).
Parenteral
administration of doxycycline (100 mg daily) was equally ineffective. However, the fever fell on administration of cefotiam (4 g daily). Antibody tests demonstrated
Legionella
pneumophila serogroup 1 as the causative organism. Because of the confined accommodation of the conscripts the source of the infection was thought to be the hot water system in the barracks. In two other policemen the demonstration of antibodies and of urine antigens confirmed Legionella infection as cause of an acute respiratory illness (Pontiac disease).
Legionella
pneumophila serogroup 1 subtype Philadelphia, 1-8 colony-forming units per ml, was isolated from six of 14 hot water samples in the barracks. This subtype possesses a virulence-associated antigen which is found in the majority of patient isolates of
Legionella
pneumophila serogroup 1.
...
PMID:[A minor epidemic due to Legionella pneumophila serogroup 1]. 154 2
Legionnaires' disease
is a relatively common cause of community-acquired pneumonia and of some outbreaks of hospital-acquired pneumonia. Moreover,
Legionella
pneumophila is frequently involved in the aetiology of the subset of pneumonias that is characterised by severe clinical course and high mortality. No sure clinical, radiographical or analytical features are useful in differentiating Legionella infection from other aetiologies of pneumonia. On the basis of these data, a rational initial therapeutic approach to community-acquired pneumonia, as well as to nosocomial pneumonia in certain circumstances, has to include an antimicrobial agent that is clinically effective against
Legionella
spp. Clinical studies have provided evidence that erythromycin is the first-line treatment. An intravenous dosage of 1g every 6 hours as initial therapy will be effective in most cases.
Parenteral
treatment may be switched to oral administration only after clinical response is observed. In vitro susceptibilities and preliminary experimental and clinical results suggest that clarithromycin will most likely become the preferred treatment once an intravenous preparation is available worldwide. However, orally administered clarithromycin at the dosage of 500 mg every 12 hours may be recommended in those developing countries in which health systems cannot afford the costs of intravenous therapy. In the case of clinically severe illness or in seriously immunosuppressed hosts with confirmed legionellosis, a combined therapeutic approach is warranted. Rifampicin 600 mg every 12 hours intravenously or orally has to be added to the usual dosage of erythromycin. Other alternative therapies, but with less distinct clinical efficacy, that can be combined with erythromycin are doxycycline 100 mg every 12 hours intravenously or orally, and intravenous ciprofloxacin 200 mg every 6 hours.
...
PMID:Treatment of Legionnaires' disease. Current recommendations. 769 8
In most cases of respiratory tract infection, antibiotic therapy has to be initiated before the results of microbiological examination are available. The four most common pathogens of acute exacerbations of chronic bronchitis are pneumococci, Haemophilus influenzae, Moraxella catarrhalis and Staphylococcus aureus. Pneumococci are the predominant pathogens of community-acquired pneumonia, followed by H. influenzae and staphylococci.
Legionella
, mycoplasma and chlamydia vary in frequency according to the population studied. Staphylococci, Pseudomonas, Enterobacter and Klebsiella spp. as well as H. influenzae are the major pathogens of secondary pneumonia. For reasons of cost and environmental problems, oral antibiotics ought to be used whenever possible considering the severity of the infection and patient circumstance.
Parenteral
antibiotics are indicated in severe infections in order to provide high therapeutic drug levels. Second generation cephalosporins are appropriate for initial therapy of lower respiratory tract infections. In case of severe infection, cephalosporins should be combined with an aminoglycoside, ureidopenicillin or quinolone. Cefuroxime has shown good clinical efficacy and tolerance in lower respiratory tract infections.
...
PMID:[Parenteral cephalosporins for the treatment of lower respiratory tract infections]. 831 90
All series of infective endocarditis had a variable proportion of cases without an etiologic agent because all cultures were negative. New microbiologic techniques have permitted the discovery of the role of many microorganisms in infective endocarditis. C. burnetii is an increasing causative agent of subacute infective endocarditis. In the diagnosis, to the detection of antiphase-I antibodies, immunohistochemical, molecular techniques and cellular cultures have been added. Total cure is difficult to obtain. The combination of doxicicline plus ciprofloxacin for at least 3 years has been proposed as the treatment of choice. Surgery must be reserved for patients with cardiac insufficiency. Less than 2% of cases of acute brucellosis are complicate with infective endocarditis. Infective endocarditis produces serious and rapid valvular destruction with high mortality rates if valve surgery is not performed. For medical treatment at least 3 active agents are required. Bartonella has recently been described as an etiologic agent of infective endocarditis. It mainly affects to homeless people living in poor hygienic conditions. The aortic valve is most commonly involved and, frequently, valve insufficiency requires valve replacement. Blood culture isolation needs long incubation periods.
Parenteral
nutrition, immunosuppression, wide spectrum antibiotic regimens, intravenous drug addiction and cardiovascular surgery are risk factors previously described in the development of fungal endocarditis. C. albicans and Aspergillus spp. are most frequent etiologic agents. Infective endocarditis should be suspected in any patient with systemic fungal disease. Blood cultures are often negative except for Candida spp. Peripheral emboli and large vegetations are frequent. Mortality is high, antifungal therapy combined with surgery is the treatment of choice.
Legionella
, Mycoplasma, Chlamydia, Mycobacteria, viruses are potential agents of infective endocarditis, and difficult to diagnose because of special culture requirements. Epidemiological clues, serologic and molecular techniques and blood cultures could identify them.
...
PMID:[Infective endocarditis caused by unusual microorganisms]. 965 53
A 53-year-old man developed a
Legionella
pneumophila
pneumonia complicated by rhabdomyolysis, acute kidney injury, and protracted ileus. Risk factors were smoking and chronic alcoholism, but the patient had no history of previous abdominal surgery. Hemodialysis was required for a period of 5 weeks with a full renal recovery. Pneumonia required respiratory support but for a limited period of 6 days. The protracted course of the ileus led to explorative laparotomy despite negative computed tomography findings. No cause of mechanical obstruction was found at surgery and common etiologies of intestinal obstruction were excluded.
Parenteral
nutrition was needed for a total of 4 weeks, before recovery of intestinal motility. This case illustrates the apparent discrepancy between the pulmonary symptoms and the extrapulmonary manifestations that could be seen as a consequence of an exaggerated immune response.
...
PMID:Extreme Rhabdomyolysis, Acute Renal Failure, and Protracted Ileus in a Case of Legionella Pneumonia. 3083 38