A prospective clinical study of 40 cases of legionnaires' disease combined with serial laboratory examinations enabled us to present an update as well as new recommendations concerning the use of diagnostic tests for legionnaires' disease. Transtracheal aspirate specimens are the optimal specimen for recovery of Legionella pneumophila by culture as well as the most sensitive method for early diagnosis. In addition, with recent improvements in culture media and methodology, L pneumophila can now be readily isolated from sputum. Examination of respiratory specimens by direct immunofluorescence (DFA) is useful, but the sensitivity is much less than that of culture. The yield from DFA examination directly correlates with the number of L pneumophila recoverable by cultural methods; thus, the DFA test result may be negative in an early or mild case of legionnaires' disease. Antibody titers were elevated in 27% of cases within one week of onset of pneumonia and may, therefore, be useful in early diagnosis in selected patients.
In a prospective study of 16 patients with Legionnaires disease confirmed by cultural isolation of Legionella pneumophila from the respiratory tract, 38% (6 of 16) had positive blood cultures. Daily subcultures were made onto buffered charcoal-yeast extract plates from 6B aerobic and 7C anaerobic BACTEC blood culture bottles (Johnston Laboratories, Inc., Towson, Md.). Isolation of L. pneumophila was achieved from both aerobic and anaerobic bottles. L. pneumophila growth indices failed to exceed the BACTEC threshold limits; thus, the organism would have been overlooked despite its presence in the blood culture bottles. Bacteremic patients had statistically significant higher quantities of L. pneumophila isolated from sputum and visualized on direct fluorescent antibody stains. Thus, the potential exists for improved diagnosis of Legionella infection by a relatively noninvasive procedure (blood culture) with an instrument already in use in many hospital laboratories.
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