0521779407-10 CUNY1086/Karliner 0 521 77940 7 June 6, 2007 17:44
Laxative Abuse Legionella Infections 887
■For those with underlying psychological factors or altered self-image,
prognosis depends on the success of psychiatric treatment
■For those who progress to cathartic colon, chronic constipation
refractory to medical therapy may occur
LEGIONELLA INFECTIONS
RICHARD A. JACOBS, MD, PhD
history & physical
History
■Legionella are small, fastidious (grow on charcoal yeast extract, but
not routine culture media), slow-growing (3–5 days for culture to
turn positive), aerobic, Gram-negative bacilli.
■Over 40 species and 60 serogroups, but most human infections
caused by L. pneumophila serogroups 1, 4, and 6
■Other species that less commonly cause human infection include L.
micdadei, L. bozmonii. L. dumoffi, L. longbeachae and L. wadswor-
thii.
■Natural habitat of Legionella is water; low numbers of organisms in
natural bodies of water (lakes, rivers); larger numbers in reservoirs
(water towers, water condensers, potable water distribution systems)
■Transmission by aerosolization and inhalation of contaminated
water or aspiration after colonization of the upper airways
■Risk factors include immunosuppression, chronic lung disease,
smoking and older age.
Signs & Symptoms
■Pneumonia most common clinical syndrome; manifestations simi-
lar to other causes of pneumonia; cough productive of small amounts
of sputum; fever almost always present (25% with temperatures
above 40◦C); GI symptoms (abdominal pain, nausea, vomiting) com-
mon, with diarrhea in up to 50%; headache and confusion also
common; exam frequently reveals rales or consolidation
■Extrapulmonary infection uncommon and results from hematoge-
nous spread from lungs; cardiac involvement (myocarditis, peri-
carditis, endocarditis) most common extrapulmonary site; other
sites (skin, pyelonephritis, peritonitis, dialysis shunts, wounds)
described, particularly in the immunosuppressed patient