Journal of Case Studies - Juniper Publishers
Legionellosis is the term used to describe clinical
manifestations of infection caused by the Legionella bacteria. It
includes Legionnaires disease (LD), focal non-pulmonary infections and
Pontiac fever. LD is a type of bacterial pneumonia, while Pontiac fever
is a several days long non-pneumonic, febrile, influenza like illness
associated with exposure to Legionella spp. That resolves spontaneously. Legionnaires disease was first described during an
outbreak at a convention of the American legion in Philadelphia in 1976
[1]. Twenty-nine of 182 cases were fatal. Extensive epidemiologic work
led to identification of the bacterium.
The legionella spp. is small gram-negative rods
with fastidious growth requirements. More than 58 different Legionella
spp. have been described, about half of which have been reported to
infect humans [2].
Legionella pneumophila (Lp) is the most commonly encountered
species. Lp contains at least 16 different serogroups. Lp serogroup 1 is
the most common clinical isolate. The most common non Lp species
isolated from humans are L.longbeachae, L.micdadei, L.bozemanae, and L.dumoffii
[3]. These constitute less than 5% of culture -proven cases in North
America. This bacteria needs special growth medium which contains Iron,
L-cysteine, α-ketoglutarate, and charcoal-containing yeast extract agar
buffered with an organic buffer (BCYEα agar).
Legionella bacteria are found in natural aqueous
environment, in lakes, streams and costal oceans. Warm water (25°C-40°C)
supports its growth [4]. Free living amoebas in the same waters support
the intracellular growth and survival of Legionella. Almost all cases
of LD results from this bacteria growing in water heaters, warm water
baths, warm water plumbing systems and air conditioning and other types
of cooling towers. Rain puddles in tropical regions, tsunami related
water exposure, and windshield viper fluid are few other reported
sources of infection. One exception to water as risk factor is that Llb,
which is mainly transmitted through soil contact, especially from
potting soil. LD is initiated by inhalation of aerosolized
Legionella bacteria. After bacteria enter lung they are phagocytosed by
alveolar macrophages. Bacteria prevents fusion of phagosome to lysosomes
or endosomes, thus avoiding acidification and degradative enzymes.
After sufficient intracellular replication, the bacteria kill the
macrophage and then rephagocytosed by other macrophage. This process
recruits other inflammatory cells leading to pneumonia [5].
Pathogenesis of Pontiac fever is not known with
certainty. It is believed that PF is caused by inhalation of disease
causing environmental aerosol derived from water containing
microorganisms including Legionella bacteria. The incubation period of LD is between 2-10 days and
for PF 4 hours- 3 days [1]. Person-to-person transmission of either LD
or Pontiac fever does not occur. Legionella spp. is ubiquitous in
environment. However, disease is not that common. Legionella is
causative organism of only 0.5-10% hospitalized cases of community
acquired pneumonia, an average value is probably 2% even in the
geographic regions with excellent diagnostic capabilities [6]. Male
gender, cigarette smoking, chronic heart or lung disease, diabetes, end
stage renal failure, organ transplantation, immunosuppression, some
forms of cancer and old age are well known host risk factors. Also
important are environmental and bacterial factors such as relative
bacterial virulence, bacterial aerosol stability, organism growth
conditions and factors that facilitate the spread of bacterium from
contaminated water to host, such as wind direction, relative humidity
and aerosol formation.
LD is one of cause of bacterial pneumonia.
Sometimes it is characterized by fever with pulse-temperature
dissociation, myalgia, few pulmonary symptoms, nonproductive cough,
diarrhea, confusion, hyponatremia, hypophosphatemia, and elevated liver
enzymes. This symptom complex, however, is neither specific nor frequent
enough to allow differentiation of LD from other common causes of
community acquired pneumonia [7]. LD starts with prodrome of headache,
muscle aches, and anorexia. Fever accompanies these symptoms. Cough may
develop hours to days after onset of prodrome. Careful examination
always demonstrates findings of pneumonia including focal rales and
patchy infiltrate to dense focal consolidation on Chest X ray.
Diagnosis of LD requires high degree of suspicion and
keen consideration of epidemiology. Various laboratory tests
can be sued including sputum culture, urine antigen testing,
immunofluorescent microscopy, paired serum antibody and
molecular amplification techniques. Culture requires special
media; hence laboratory needs to be informed about this. Yield
of sputum culture varies between 20%-95%. Many clinical
laboratories have neither expertise nor ability to properly
perform these specialized cultures. Urine antigen testing has
revolutionized the diagnosis. It is easy to perform and has fast
turnaround time. The average sensitivity of this test is in the
range of 70% to 80% [8]. Big caveat in using urine antigen is
that it detects Lp serogroup 1 and poorly sensitive for other Lp
serogroups. Hence negative test should be taken with grain of
salt. Urine antigen test can be positive for months after the initial
infection.
Legionella bacteria are intracellular, this means
antimicrobials which are concentrated intracellularly are
going to be more efficacious. The macrolides, quinolones, and
tetracyclines all meet these criteria. Prospective, adequately
sized clinical trials of antimicrobial therapy for LD have not been
performed. In absence of these, decisions about antimicrobials
must be made on the basis of experimental animal and cell
culture studies [9]. For mild pneumonia in immunocompetent
host first choice antibiotics include: Azithromycin 500mg
daily for 3-5 days, Levofloxacin 500mg daily for 7-10 days,
ciprofloxacin 500 twice a day for 7-10 days, moxifloxacin 400mg
daily for 7-10 days or clarithromycin 500mg twice a day for 10-
14 days. Second choice for these patients will be Doxycycline
200mg loading dose followed by 100mg twice a day for 10-14
days or Erythromycin 500mg four times a day for 10-14 days
[9,10].
In severe cases or immunocompromised host treatment
of LD includes using Azithromycin 500mg daily for 5-7 days
or levofloxacin 500mg daily for 7-10 days or 750mg daily
for 5-7 days. Second lie drugs for these severe cases include
Ciprofloxacin 750mg twice daily for 14 days or moxifloxacin
400mg daily for 14 days or Erythromycin 750-1000mg IV four
times a day for 3-7 days followed by 500mg four times a day for
total of 21 days or Clarithromycin 500mg IV twice a day for 3-7
days followed by 500mg twice a day for total of 21 days. Failure to respond to specific therapy for LD should bring
into question the validity of the diagnosis, the possibility of
coinfection or superinfection. No human vaccine exists for LD, and prior infection does
not prevent reinfection [11]. Antibiotic prophylaxis prevents LD
and should be considered during nosocomial epidemics and for
high-risk population before control of an epidemic. Engineering
modifications and maintenance of water supply systems is
important to prevent contamination of water with Legionella.
Disinfection of water distribution systems and surveillance for
Legionella contamination should be a routine practice to prevent
disease transmission from contaminated water.
To know more about Journal of Case Studies
Click here: https://juniperpublishers.com/jojcs/index.php
Click here: https://juniperpublishers.com/jojcs/index.php
To know more about Juniper Publishers
Click here: https://juniperpublishers.com/index.php
Click here: https://juniperpublishers.com/index.php
No comments:
Post a Comment