Legionnaires’ disease in the time of COVID-19

Abstract Due to similarities in initial disease presentation, clinicians may be inclined to repeatedly test community-acquired pneumonia cases for COVID-19 before recognizing the need to test for Legionnaires’ disease. Legionnaires’ disease is an illness characterized by pneumonia that has a summer/...

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Main Authors: Kelsie Cassell, J Lucian Davis, Ruth Berkelman
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2021-01-01
Series:Pneumonia
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s41479-020-00080-5
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spelling doaj-14a1a508e3304eebbfc9c1b9e96ae8172021-01-10T12:40:23ZengBMCPneumonia2200-61332021-01-011311310.1186/s41479-020-00080-5Legionnaires’ disease in the time of COVID-19Kelsie Cassell0J Lucian Davis1Ruth Berkelman2Department of Epidemiology of Microbial Diseases, Yale School of Public HealthDepartment of Epidemiology of Microbial Diseases, Yale School of Public HealthRollins School of Public Health, Emory UniversityAbstract Due to similarities in initial disease presentation, clinicians may be inclined to repeatedly test community-acquired pneumonia cases for COVID-19 before recognizing the need to test for Legionnaires’ disease. Legionnaires’ disease is an illness characterized by pneumonia that has a summer/early fall seasonality due to favorable conditions for Legionella growth and exposure. Legionella proliferate in warm water environments and stagnant sections of indoor plumbing and cooling systems. During the ongoing pandemic crisis, exposures to aerosolized water from recently reopened office or retail buildings should be considered as an epidemiologic risk factor for Legionella exposure and an indication to test. The majority of Legionnaires’ disease cases occurring each year are not diagnosed, and some experts recommend that all patients hospitalized with community-acquired pneumonia without a known etiology be tested for Legionella infection. Proper diagnosis can increase the likelihood of appropriate and timely antibiotic treatment, identify potential clusters of disease, and facilitate source attribution.https://doi.org/10.1186/s41479-020-00080-5Legionnaires’ diseaseEpidemiologyCOVID-19
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kelsie Cassell
J Lucian Davis
Ruth Berkelman
spellingShingle Kelsie Cassell
J Lucian Davis
Ruth Berkelman
Legionnaires’ disease in the time of COVID-19
Pneumonia
Legionnaires’ disease
Epidemiology
COVID-19
author_facet Kelsie Cassell
J Lucian Davis
Ruth Berkelman
author_sort Kelsie Cassell
title Legionnaires’ disease in the time of COVID-19
title_short Legionnaires’ disease in the time of COVID-19
title_full Legionnaires’ disease in the time of COVID-19
title_fullStr Legionnaires’ disease in the time of COVID-19
title_full_unstemmed Legionnaires’ disease in the time of COVID-19
title_sort legionnaires’ disease in the time of covid-19
publisher BMC
series Pneumonia
issn 2200-6133
publishDate 2021-01-01
description Abstract Due to similarities in initial disease presentation, clinicians may be inclined to repeatedly test community-acquired pneumonia cases for COVID-19 before recognizing the need to test for Legionnaires’ disease. Legionnaires’ disease is an illness characterized by pneumonia that has a summer/early fall seasonality due to favorable conditions for Legionella growth and exposure. Legionella proliferate in warm water environments and stagnant sections of indoor plumbing and cooling systems. During the ongoing pandemic crisis, exposures to aerosolized water from recently reopened office or retail buildings should be considered as an epidemiologic risk factor for Legionella exposure and an indication to test. The majority of Legionnaires’ disease cases occurring each year are not diagnosed, and some experts recommend that all patients hospitalized with community-acquired pneumonia without a known etiology be tested for Legionella infection. Proper diagnosis can increase the likelihood of appropriate and timely antibiotic treatment, identify potential clusters of disease, and facilitate source attribution.
topic Legionnaires’ disease
Epidemiology
COVID-19
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s41479-020-00080-5
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