Author:
SCATURRO M.,FONTANA S.,CRIPPA S.,CAPORALI M. G.,SEYLER T.,VESCHETTI E.,VILLA G.,ROTA M. C.,RICCI M. L.
Abstract
SUMMARYAn unusually long-lasting community-acquired outbreak of Legionnaires’ disease (LD) occurred in the inhabitants of a town in northern Italy from 2005 to 2008. Overall, 43 cases were diagnosed including five deaths. Hundreds of water samples were collected forLegionellaisolation but only two clinical samples were obtained. Clinical strains were ST23 as were environmental isolates detected in mostLegionella-positive patients' homes and those from a public fountain. Although noLegionellawas found in the municipal water mains, a continuous chlorination was applied in 2008. This action resulted in a halving of cases, although incidence remained tenfold higher than the Italian average incidence until the end of 2013, when it dropped to the expected rate. Retrospective analyses of prevalent wind direction suggested that a hidden cooling tower could have been the main cause of this uncommon outbreak, highlighting the importance of implementation of cooling tower registers in supporting LD investigations.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Epidemiology
Cited by
17 articles.
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