Potable water and nosocomial Legionnaires' disease – check water from all rooms in which patient has stayed
- 1 February 1995
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in Epidemiology and Infection
- Vol. 114 (2) , 267-276
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s0950268800057939
Abstract
We studied 7 patients with nosocomial Legionnaires' disease to determine the relationship between isolates of Legionella pneumophila recovered from potable water and those recovered from patients. Potable water was cultured from all rooms in which patients had stayed prior to the diagnosis of Legionnaires' disease. The 38 isolates of L. pneumophila (31 environmental, 7 patient) were resolved into 9 distinct patterns by pulse-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE), 3 by plasmid content and 2 each with monoclonal antibodies and conventional agarose gel electrophoresis of small fragments of DNA.Using PFGE it was determined that 4 of the 7 patients were infected with L. pneumophila identical to an isolate recovered from the potable water supply in one of the rooms each had occupied prior to the diagnosis of Legionnaires' disease. Patients had resided in a mean of 3·57 rooms before a diagnosis of nosocomial Legionnaires' disease. We conclude that in the setting of contaminated potable water and nosocomial Legionnaires' disease water from all the rooms which the patient has occupied prior to this diagnosis should be cultured. PFGE of large DNA fragments discriminated best among the isolates of L. pneumophila.Keywords
This publication has 39 references indexed in Scilit:
- Each water outlet is a unique ecological niche forLegionella pneumophilaEpidemiology and Infection, 1992
- Colonisation of the respiratory tract with Legionella pneumophila for 63 days before the onset of pneumoniaJournal of Infection, 1992
- Control of endemic nosocomial Legionnaires' disease by using sterile potable water for high risk patientsEpidemiology and Infection, 1991
- A Cluster of Legionella Sternal-Wound Infections Due to Postoperative Topical Exposure to Contaminated Tap WaterNew England Journal of Medicine, 1991
- New and Emerging Etiologies for Community-Acquired Pneumonia with Implications for TherapyMedicine, 1990
- A method for DNA restriction endonuclease fingerprinting of coagulase-negative staphylococciJournal of Microbiological Methods, 1990
- Phenotypic variation amongst genotypically homogeneousLegionella pneumophilaserogroup 1 isolates: implications for the investigation of outbreaks of Legionnaires' diseaseEpidemiology and Infection, 1990
- Ubiquitousness ofLegionella pneumophilain the Water Supply of a Hospital with Endemic Legionnaires' DiseaseNew England Journal of Medicine, 1982
- Legionnairesʼ DiseaseMedicine, 1980
- Taxonomy and Epidemiology of Gram-negative Bacterial Plasmids Studied by DNA-DNA Filter Hybridization in FormamideJournal of General Microbiology, 1978