Microsoft word - two linked cases of legionellosis with an unusual industrial source
Two linked cases of legionella with an unusual industrial
Two linked cases of legionellosis with an unusual industrial source Noelene S O'Keefe,* Kristina A Heinrich- Morrison,† Bruce McLaren‡
* Project Officer, Legionella Program, Environmental Health, † Public Health
Nurse, ‡ Medical Officer, Communicable Diseases Section, Department of
Human Services, 17/120 Spencer Street, Melbourne, VIC 3000.
bruce.mclarenATdhs.vic.gov.au
TO THE EDITOR: A 23-year-old man presented to a Victorian
hospital with a 4-day history of fever, rigors, confusion and
malaise. A chest x-ray showed left lower-lobe pneumonia, and
Legionella pneumophila serogroup 1 antigen was detected in
his urine. No respiratory specimens were obtained. He
recovered completely after treatment for community-acquired
pneumonia, including intravenous ampicillin and oral
roxithromycin, and returned to work 16 days after onset.
Investigations for the source of the infection included
environmental review and sampling of cooling towers near his
workplace, home, and other sites visited during the incubation
Active workplace surveillance prompted testing for and detection
of L. pneumophila serogroup 1 urinary antigen in a second
employee, a 53-year-old man who had presented 2 days earlier
than the patient above to another Victorian hospital with fever,
abdominal pain and diarrhoea. Legionellosis was not suspected
on presentation. He had no symptoms, signs or radiological
evidence of pneumonia. Treatment, including intravenous
Two linked cases of legionella with an unusual industrial
ampicillin and oral roxithromycin, began when the antigen result
was obtained, and he was discharged after 10 days in hospital,
although he felt unwell for 2 or 3 weeks after discharge.
The two men worked near each other in a welding area. A water
tank was placed at the entrance to the area, with the cover left
open. This acted as a heat exchange for the welding cooling
system. A high count of L. pneumophila serogroup
1 (1300 colony-forming units/mL) was grown from a sample of
this water. It was common on hot days to cool the work place
with an industrial fan. The open water tank was between the fan
and the two employees during the incubation period. No L. pneumophila isolates were found in any linked cooling towers.
Remedial action included commencing a disinfection program
for the water reservoir, and a request to fit the cover correctly
and move the fan. No further cases were detected. Because no
clinical isolates were obtained, a direct subtype match between
clinical and environmental specimens was not possible. Urine
antigens are considered definitive laboratory tests given a
compat-ible illness (fever or cough or pneumonia).1
Outbreaks of Legionnaire’s disease and Pontiac fever
(legionellosis without pneumonia) with industrial sources other
than cooling towers have been reported.2,3 This outbreak
demonstrates that a simple change in the environment (adding
a fan) and an apparently low-risk source (a warm water bath)
have the potential to give rise to significant disease. It also
shows the value of active workplace surveillance after a single
1. Communicable Diseases Network Australia. Legionellosis case
Two linked cases of legionella with an unusual industrial
http://www.health.gov.au/internet/wcms/publishing.nsf/Content/cd
a-surveil-nndss-casedefs-cd_legion.htm (accessed Aug 2005).
2. Allan T, Horgan T, Scaife H, et al. Outbreak of Legionnaires’
disease among automotive plant workers — Ohio, 2001. MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep 2001; 50: 357-359. <PubMed>
3. Castor ML, Wagstrom EA, Danila RN, et al. An outbreak of
Pontiac fever with respiratory distress among workers performing
high-pressure cleaning at a sugar-beet processing plant. J Infect Dis 2005; 191: 1530-1537. <PubMed>
Publications of Lian Yu as of 1 July 2011 1. Zhu, L.; Brian, C.; Swallen, S. F.; Straus, P. T.; Ediger, M. D.; Yu, L. Surface Diffusion of an Organic Glass. Phys. Rev. Lett. 2011 , 106 , 256103-1 to 256103-4. 2. Cai, T.; Zhu, L.; Yu, L. Crystallization of Organic Glasses: Effects of Polymer Additives on Bulk and Surface Crystal Growth in Amorphous Nifedipine. Pharm. Res. 2011 , in