| Literature DB >> 22870945 |
Gianluigi Quaranta1, Sara Vincenti, Anna Maria Ferriero, Federica Boninti, Romina Sezzatini, Cinzia Turnaturi, Maria Daniela Gliubizzi, Elio Munafò, Gianluca Ceccarelli, Carmelo Causarano, Massimo Accorsi, Pasquale Del Nord, Walter Ricciardi, Patrizia Laurenti.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Legionella pneumophila is increasingly recognised as a significant cause of sporadic and epidemic community-acquired and nosocomial pneumonia. Many studies describe the frequency and severity of Legionella spp. contamination in spa pools, natural pools, hotels and ships, but there is no study analysing the environmental monitoring of Legionella on board trains. The aims of the present study were to conduct periodic and precise environmental surveillance of Legionella spp. in water systems and water tanks that supply the toilet systems on trains, to assess the degree of contamination of such structures and to determine the effectiveness of decontamination.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22870945 PMCID: PMC3519711 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2458-12-618
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Figure 1Cases of Legionellosis notified in Italy, 2000–2009 (Data source: Italian Ministry of Health).
Results of the microbiological analysis performed on the water samples collected
| 679 (54.538% of total samples analyzed) | 566 (45.462% of total samples analyzed) | 1245 | |
| 394 (58.027%) | 242 (42.756%) | 636 | |
| 220 (55.838%) | 177 (73.140%) | 397 | |
| 75 (19.036%) | 39 (16.116%) | 114 | |
| 99 (25.127%) | 23 (9.504%) | 122 | |
| 0 (0.000%) | 3 (1.240%) | 3 | |
| 69 (17.513%) | 14 (5.785%) | 83 | |
| 155 (39.340%) | 121 (50.000%) | 276 | |
| 138 (35.025%) | 85 (35.124%) | 223 | |
| 32 (8.122%) | 22 (9.091%) | 54 |
Effectiveness of decontamination onbacterial loading
| October 2008 | 992.2414 | 6.9000 | 0.6591 | 0.2550 |
| November 2008 | 583.8235 | 6.3696 | 1.1843 | 0.1183 |
| December 2008 | 397.0000 | 5.9839 | 1.6083 | 0.0541 |
| January 2009 | 320.1613 | 5.7688 | 1.8698 | 0.0309 |
| February 2009 | 295.1282 | 5.6874 | 2.1259 | 0.0169 |
| March 2009 | 306.3265 | 5.7247 | 2.3673 | 0.0091 |
| April 2009 | 315.3801 | 5.7538 | 2.5402 | 0.0056 |
| May 2009 | 295.0256 | 5.6871 | 2.7428 | 0.0031 |
| June 2009 | 417.9909 | 6.0355 | 2.7060 | 0.0035 |
| July 2009 | 498.4615 | 6.2115 | 2.6624 | 0.0039 |
| August 2009 | 554.6850 | 6.3184 | 2.6735 | 0.0038 |
| September 2009 | 592.1561 | 6.3838 | 2.6817 | 0.0037 |
| October 2009 | 753.6237 | 6.6249 | 2.4677 | 0.0069 |
| November 2009 | 752.5163 | 6.6234 | 2.5500 | 0.0055 |
| December 2009 | 748.6751 | 6.6183 | 2.6023 | 0.0047 |
| January 2010 | 726.0479 | 6.5876 | 2.7144 | 0.0034 |
| February 2010 | 934.4538 | 6.8400 | 2.3195 | 0.0103 |
| March 2010 | 962.5000 | 6.8695 | 2.3432 | 0.0097 |
| April 2010 | 1369.3270 | 7.2221 | 1.3341 | 0.0912 |
| May 2010 | 1314.9530 | 7.1816 | 1.4680 | 0.0712 |
| June 2010 | 1521.4860 | 7.3274 | 1.0917 | 0.1376 |
| July 2010 | 1482.9550 | 7.3018 | 1.1885 | 0.1174 |
| August 2010 | 1707.7110 | 7.4429 | 0.7837 | 0.2167 |
| September 2010 | 1697.6230 | 7.4370 | 0.8044 | 0.2107 |
| October 2010 | 1684.2690 | 7.4291 | 0.8432 | 0.1996 |
| November 2010 | 1635.7890 | 7.3999 | 0.9556 | 0.1697 |
| December 2010 | 1719.8530 | 7.4500 | 0.8037 | 0.2109 |
| January 2011 | 1721.6250 | 7.4510 | 0.8141 | 0.2079 |
[In Table 2 are reported the results of the unpaired t-tests performed to compare the mean value of the bacterial load in the pre-decontamination period (grand mean: 2142.7840 CFU/L – 7.6698 in logarithmic value) with the ones of the post-decontamination period].