Clinical Aspects of Legionnaires' Disease
Abstract
Since the initial description of Legionnaires' disease 2 years ago, a clearer picture of its clinical manifestations has emerged as a result of investigations of further epidemics and studies of laboratory-confirmed sporadic cases. Although individual clinical features are not sufficiently distinctive to distinguish Legionnaires' disease from other types of acute pneumonia, a composite can provide a sufficiently characteristic clinical profile to indicate the likelihood of this diagnosis. Such a profile includes high fever (above 39.4°C); recurrent chills; relative bradycardia; early gastrointestinal symptoms (particularly diarrhea); prominent myalgias; microscopic hematuria; liver function abnormalities; toxic encephalopathy; nonproductive cough; absence of bacterial pathogens on Gram stain and culture of transtracheal aspirate; progression from patchy bronchopneumonia to lobar and multilobar consolidation; and frequently prompt and sometimes dramatic response to treatment with erythromycin.
Article and Author Information
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▸From the Harvard Medical School and the Infectious Disease Unit, Massachusetts General Hospital; Boston, Massachusetts.
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Requests for reprints should be addressed to Morton N. Swartz, M.D.; Infectious Disease Unit, Massachusetts General Hospital, Fruit Street; Boston, MA 02114.
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- Received November 15, 1978.
- Accepted December 22, 1978.
- ©1979 American College of Physicians
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