Legionella
From IDWiki
Background
Microbiology
- Small, fastidious Gram-negative bacillus
- Uses proteins rather than carbohydrates as an energy source
- Requires media enriched with L-cysteine
- L. pneumophila is an facultative intracellular parasite of a number of amoebae
- Close relative of Coxiella burnetti
- Also have a quiescent state that is "viable but not cultivable"
Species
- L. pneumophila serogroup 1: most common cause (70-80%)
- L. micdadei: sometimes referred to as the "Pittsburgh pneumonia agent" or Tatlockia micdadei
- L. pneumophila serogroups 2-15
- L. dumoffi
- L. longbeachae
- L. bozemanii
Epidemiology
- Ubiquitous in water: lakes, streams, oceans
- Warm water has higher burden of bacteria
- Free-living water amoebae support intracellular growth of Legionella
- No person-to-person transmission (one case report)
- Most cases are sporadic, but there are also epidemics
- Half of cases are associated with travel
- Other risk factors include cell-mediated immunocompromise (e.g. anti-TNF-alpha)
- Also spas, hot tubs, potting mix
- Most common strain is L. pneumophila Pontiac subtype serogroup 1 (90%)
Pathophysiology
- Inhalation or microaspiration
- Phagocytosed by alveolar macrophages
- Replicate intracellularly, then escape and are rephagocytosed by other macrophages
- The population of bacteria increases in the lungs
- Infiltration by neutrophils etc causes pulmonary edema
Clinical Manifestations
- Incubation period of 2 to 10 days (median 4 to 6 days); at most up to 28 days
Legionnaires' Disease
- Presents as a community-acquired or healthcare-associated pneumonia
- May have a prodrome of hours to days that involves headaches, myalgias, asthenia, and anorexia, possibly fevers
- Diarrhea and abdominal pain
- Cough, sometimes chest pain, sometimes productive
- Fevers with pulse-temperature dissociation, myalgias, nonproductive cough, diarrhea, confusion, hyponatremia, hypophosphatemia, and elevated liver enzymes
- Can have leukopenia, thrombocytopenia, DIC, leukocytosis, pyuria
Extrapulmonary Infections
- Rare, in immunocompromised patients or severe illness
- Except for pleural effusions, which are common
- Can develop abscesses in brain, spleen, extrathoracic lymph nodes, and skeletal and myocardial myscles
- Case reports of endocarditis
Pontiac Fever
- Incubation period 4 hours to 3 days
- Self-limited, short febrile illness
- Fevers, myalgias, headaches, and asthenia
- Only diagnosed when there's an outbreak, since they're usually not sick enough to present to healthcare
- Outbreaks associated with industrial processes using sprayed water, recreational spas, decorative water fountains, and cooling towers
- Can have cough, dyspnea, anorexia, arthralgia, and abdominal pain
Diagnosis
- Legionella urine antigen if the most widely-used test
- Most sensitive for L. pneumophila serogroup 1, less sensitive for others
- Cultured best on buffered charcoal yeast extract (BCYE) agar is preferred
- Colistin
- Needs cysteine
- Stained best with Warthin-Starry or Dieterle, but stains poorly
Test | Specimens | Sensitivity | Specificity | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Culture | Spurum, other lower respiratory tract secretions, lung, pleural fluid, blood, extrapulmonary tissues, fluids | 20-95% | 100% | Positive several days after treatment, needs special media |
Antigen | Urine | 60-95% | >99% | Highest sensitivity for serogroup 1, Pontiac type; positive for days to months |
Immunofluorescent microscopy | Same as culture | 20-50% | 99% | Highest specificity with monoclonal antibody |
Antibody | Paired serum (acute and convalescent) | 20-70% | 95-99% | Highest specificity for serogroup 1 |
Molecular amplification | Sputum (ideally BAL), other lower respiratory tract secretions, urine | 70-95% | 90-95% | Not well standardized, good performance in reference labs |
Management
- First-line: Levofloxacin 750 mg PO or IV once daily or moxifloxacin 400 mg PO or IV once daily
- Alternative: azithromycin 500 mg PO or IV once daily
- Usual duration 7-10 days
- No need to treat Pontiac fever
Prevention
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