63 Matching Annotations
  1. May 2017
    1. USA and Australia showed case–fatality rates of 14% for nosocomial infections and 5–10% for community-acquired infections (Benin et al., 2002;Howden et al., 2003). In Europe, the overall case–fatality rate is about 12%

      mortality

  2. www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
    1. nother factor that favors the survival of Legionella in natural or treated waters is its relative resistance to the effects of chlorine and heat; Legionella can find refuge in relatively inhospitable environments such as hot-water tanks.

      PH concern

    2. may appear that we are defenseless against Legionella infection, because the most effective type of host defense shows only very modest bactericidal abilities in vitro. In fact most infections are subclinical, and mortality is low in patients who are not immunocompromised. Similarly, even susceptible experimental animals survive infection unless moderately large doses of bacteria are given. The defense mechanisms probably function better in vivo than in vitro. The action of host defenses may also be additive in vivo. One can construct a scenario by which bacteria are increasingly phagocytosed by cells that do not permit bacterial growth. The net result is a decreasing number of extracellular bacteria and hence a decreased source of infection for a decreasing population of permissive cells. Obsolescent inflammatory cells in the lungs are removed by the mucociliary escalator and expectorated as sputum. Therefore, the infection may begin with a bang, but it ends in most cases with a whimper.

      PH - not a huge concern

    3. The preferred drug for symptomatic Legionella infections is erythromycin. If the patient is seriously ill, it is important to deliver the antibiotic intravenously at first; subsequently, oral therapy may be used. Rifampin is sometimes added as a second antibiotic in seriously ill patients

      antibiotic

    4. his medium contains yeast extract, iron, L-cysteine, and α-ketoglutarate for bacterial growth; activated charcoal to inactivate toxic peroxides that develop in the media; and buffer with a pK at pH 6.9, the optimum for growth of Legionella organisms. Addition of albumin to the media may further facilitate growth of species other than L pneumophila. For contaminated specimens such as sputum, antibiotics should be added. Morphologically distinctive bacterial colonies can usually be detected within 3 to 5 days and identified presumptively as Legionella species if the isolated bacteria depend on cysteine for growth. The identification can be confirmed by specific immunologic typing of the isolated bacteria or, in problematic cases, by molecular analysis.

      growth + test

    5. Virulence appears to be multifactorial. An outer membrane protein that functions as a metalloprotease and a cytoplasmic membrane heat-shock protein elicit protective immune responses, but are not essential for expression of virulence. A gene that encodes a 29 Kd protein and plays a role in cellular infection has been identified. Mutations of the gene are associated with decreased virulence.

      virulence

    6. ymptoms of Legionella infection undoubtedly result from a combination of physical interference with oxygenation of blood, ventilation-perfusion imbalance in the remaining lung tissue, and release of toxic products from bacteria and inflammatory cells. Bacterial factors include a protease that may be responsible for tissue damage. Cellular factors include interleukin-1, which produces fever after it is released from monocytes, and tumor necrosis factor, which may be responsible for some of the systemic symptoms.

      virulence

    7. The bacteria bind to alveolar macrophages via the complement receptors and are engulfed into a phagosomal vacuole. However, by an unknown mechanism, the bacteria block the fusion of lysosomes with the phagosome, preventing the normal acidification of the phagolysosome and keeping the toxic myeloperoxidase system segregated from the susceptible bacteria. The bacilli multiply within the phagosome. Thus, a cellular compartment that should be a death trap instead becomes a nursery. Eventually, the cell is destroyed, releasing a new generation of microbes to infect other cells.

      virulence

    8. rimary growth factor required is L-cysteine, a nutrient that is also essential for Francisella tularensis. Ferric iron is also essential, and other compounds are necessary for optimal growth. Energy is derived from amino acids rather than carbohydrates.

      nutrients to grow

    9. acute pneumonia, which varies in severity from mild illness that does not require hospitalization (walking pneumonia) to fatal multilobar pneumonia. Typically, patients have high, unremitting fever and cough but do not produce much sputum. Extrapulmonary symptoms, such as headache, confusion, muscle aches, and gastrointestinal disturbances, are common. Most patients respond promptly to appropriate antimicrobial therapy, but convalescence is often prolonged (lasting many weeks or even months).

      symptoms and treatment of pneumonia varient

    1. binding inhibits peptidyl transferase activity and interferes with translocation of amino acids during translation and assembly of proteins. Erythromycin may be bacteriostatic or bactericidal depending on the organism and drug concentration.

      erythromycin

  3. medical-dictionary.thefreedictionary.com medical-dictionary.thefreedictionary.com
    1. irect fluorescent antibody (DFA) testing has the ability to provide results in a time frame able to influence clinical management and has a specificity of close to 100% (5). However, DFA is technically demanding and insensitive. As with sputum culture, DFA has limited usefulness when patients cannot produce sputum.

      tests

    2. L pneumophila by urinary antigen testing (LPUAT) is a rapid tool for early diagnosis of Legionella infection (6-14). An enzyme immunoassay (EIA) for detecting L pneumophila serogroup 1, which accounts for between 50% and 70% of cases of Legionella p

      test

    1. Since the organism was first identified in 1976 during an outbreak at an American Legion Convention in Philadelphia, Legionella has been recognized as a relatively common cause of both community-acquired [1,2] and hospital-acquired pneumonia

      Outbreak and environment