| Literature DB >> 30501994 |
Udo Buchholz1, Franziska Reber2, Ann-Sophie Lehfeld3, Bonita Brodhun4, Walter Haas5, Benedikt Schaefer6, Fabian Stemmler7, Christina Otto8, Corinna Gagell9, Christian Lück10, Ronny Gamradt11, Maxi Heinig12, Christian Meisel13, Uwe Kölsch14, Martin Eisenblätter15, Heiko J Jahn16.
Abstract
In Germany community-acquired Legionnaires' disease is usually caused by the species Legionella pneumophila. Recurrent cases of Legionnaires' disease are rarely reported and are due either to a second infection (reinfection) or a relapse of a previous case. We report a case of recurrent Legionnaires' disease in an 86-year-old female patient infected with Legionella pneumophila serogroup 1, monoclonal antibody-subtype Knoxville, sequence type unknown. Between the two disease incidents the patient had completely recovered. Legionella pneumophila was detected with the monoclonal antibody-subtype Knoxville, sequence type 182, in the drinking water of the patient's apartment. Exposure to contaminated drinking water was interrupted after the first incident exposure through the application of point-of-use water filters. The filters were later removed due to low water pressure, and the second illness occurred thereafter. It is unclear if immunological predisposition has contributed to this case of probable reinfection of Legionnaires' disease. Clinical, microbiological and epidemiological information combined suggest this is a case of reinfection of Legionnaires' disease. In cases of recurrent Legionnaires' disease complete collection of patient and water samples is necessary to differentiate relapse from reinfection cases, to implicate the source of infection and to gain more evidence for the role of immunological predisposition.Entities:
Keywords: Legionella; Legionnaires' disease; Recurrent disease; Reinfection; Relapse
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30501994 DOI: 10.1016/j.ijheh.2018.11.001
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Hyg Environ Health ISSN: 1438-4639 Impact factor: 5.840