A rural outbreak of Legionnaire's disease linked to visiting a retail store

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Abstract

Between May 7 and June 7, 1986, 27 residents of a rural county in Maryland developed legionellosis, and two died. Legionella pneumophila serogroup 1 was cultured from the sputum of two patients and identified in lung tissue of a third patient by direct fluorescent antibody staining. An additional 11 patients had four-fold rises in antibody titer to L. pneumophila, and 13 had single titers ≥1:256. To determine risk factors for disease, we performed a case-control study. Twelve of 16 case-patients reported visiting store A in the two weeks before onset of illness compared with four of 28 control-patients. A serologic survey of employees showed that employees of store A were 3.63 times more likely than control employees to have titers of antibody to L. pneumophila ≥1:256 (95% confidence intervals 0.8, 16.7). Cultures of soil specimens, samples of water from the hot water system of store A and from stagnant ponds near store A collected five weeks after the end of the outbreak were negative for Legionella species. Store A was adjacent to a site of excavation and construction during May 1986, when the community was experiencing an extended drought. This investigation suggests that exposure to excavation and construction activity may be a risk factor for legionellosis.

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Redd, S. C., Lin, F. Y. C., Fields, B. S., Biscoe, J., Plikaytis, B. B., Powers, P., … Cohen, M. L. (1990). A rural outbreak of Legionnaire’s disease linked to visiting a retail store. American Journal of Public Health, 80(4), 431–434. https://doi.org/10.2105/AJPH.80.4.431

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