Legionnaires' Disease
- 9 February 1979
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Medical Association (AMA)
- Vol. 241 (6) , 597-598
- https://doi.org/10.1001/jama.1979.03290320039029
Abstract
LEGIONNAIRES' disease can occur in both epidemic and sporadic forms, and the clinical manifestations may range from asymptomatic infection to fulminant pneumonia.1We report a case of lung abscess from the Legionnaires' bacterium occurring in a renal homograft recipient. Report of a Case A 32-year-old woman who had been receiving long-term hemodialysis for four years for chronic renal failure secondary to nephrosclerosis received her second cadaver kidney transplant in November 1977. Immunosuppression consisted initially of azathioprine, 2.5 mg/kg of body weight, and methylprednisolone, 1.2 mg/kg of body weight. Four courses of antirejection therapy, each consisting of 1 g of methylprednisolone intravenously daily for three days, were given during a one-month period. The kidney was removed 34 days after transplantation, due to irreversible rejection. Azathioprine therapy was discontinued, and the dosage of methylprednisolone was halved to 24 mg/day on the day of transplant nephrectomy. She had been afebrile during theKeywords
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