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14 April 2018

Bacteria And The Bellevue: The Birthplace Of Legionnaires' Disease ...
src: hiddencityphila.org

The 1976 Legionnaires Disease outbreak, occurring in the late Summer in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, was the first occasion in which a cluster of a particular type of pneumonia cases were determined to be caused by the Legionella pneumophila bacteria.

Previous outbreaks were retroactively diagnosed as being most probably caused by Legionella bacteria.


Video 1976 Philadelphia Legionnaires' disease outbreak



Background

On July 21, 1976, the American Legion opened its annual three-day convention at the Bellevue-Stratford Hotel in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. More than 2,000 Legionnaires, mostly men, attended the convention. The date and city were chosen to coincide with America's celebration of the 200th anniversary of the signing of the US Declaration of Independence at Philadelphia in 1776.

On July 27, three days after the convention ended, Legionnaire Ray Brennan, a 61-year-old retired US Air Force captain and an American Legion bookkeeper, died at his home of an apparent heart attack. Brennan had returned home from the convention on the evening of July 24 complaining of feeling tired. On July 30, another Legionnaire, Frank Aveni, aged 60, also died of an apparent heart attack, as did three other Legionnaires. All of them had been convention attendees. Twenty-four hours later, on August 1, six more Legionnaires died. They ranged in age from 39 to 82, and, like Ray Brennan, Frank Aveni, and the three other Legionnaires, all had complained of tiredness, chest pains, lung congestion, and fever.

Three of the Legionnaires had been patients of Ernest Campbell, a physician in Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania, who noticed that all three men had been at the Legionnaires convention in Philadelphia. He contacted the Pennsylvania Department of Health. Officials at the American Legion also began getting notices of the sudden deaths of several members, all at the same time. Within a week, more than 130 people, mostly men, had been hospitalized, and 25 had died.

Both the first week and later, there were 149 Legionnaires who became sick and 33 other persons associated with the hotel or in the area who also became sick. Of these total of 182 cases, 29 persons died.


Maps 1976 Philadelphia Legionnaires' disease outbreak



Epidemiology

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention mounted an unprecedented investigation and, by September, the focus had shifted from outside causes, such as a disease carrier, to the hotel environment itself. In January 1977, the Legionella bacterium was finally identified and isolated and was found to be breeding in the cooling tower of the hotel's air conditioning system, which then spread it through the building. This finding prompted new regulations worldwide for climate control systems.

Complicating the situation was a fear among the public that the original cluster of 14 cases, six of whom died all within days of each other, represented an outbreak of swine flu. The total number of cases reached 211, and of those, 29 had died. At the time of the outbreak, epidemiological investigation protocols did not include active participation by both the laboratory specialists and investigators. No effective communication existed between scientists in the field interviewing patients, and those in the laboratory testing specimens.


Legionella Matt Zahn, MD Medical Director Epidemiology and ...
src: slideplayer.com


Discovery of Legionella pneumophila

While the Center for Disease Control responded rapidly, as did the Pennsylvania Health Department, it wasn't until nearly a year later that Joseph McDade made the discovery that a previously identified bacterium was the cause of the outbreak. It had not been considered previously because it was believed to affect only animals. The bacterium was later named Legionella pneumophila.

Legionella pneumophila is the most common cause, but sometimes other species of Legionella bacteria also cause Legionnaires' disease. The terms "Philadelphia fever" and "Legion fever" appear to have been used at the time of the outbreak and for shortly thereafter, although at least one 2008 source which covers disease in a historical narrative sense also included "Legion Fever" as alternate name. Both the World Health Organization in 2018 and the United States Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) in 2017 only use the term Legionnaires' disease to refer to the serious version with pneumonia.

Pontiac Fever is the name for the more minor version without signs of pneumonia.


Legionella Matt Zahn, MD Medical Director Epidemiology and ...
src: images.slideplayer.com


Retrospective diagnosis of earlier outbreaks as Legionnaires' disease

An outbreak of pneumonia in July and August, 1965, at St. Elizabeth's Hospital in Washington, DC, which killed 16 persons out of 78 infected was later determined to be Legionnaires' disease.

A Sept. 1974 convention of the Independent Order of Odd Fellows was also held at the Bellevue-Stratford Hotel. Out of approximately 1,500 members who attended, 20 developed pneumonia and two died. A later article in the Lancet reported that, "Illness [high fever and pneumonia] was significantly associated with attendance at one convention activity held on Monday morning, Sept. 16, 1974, in the grand ballroom of the hotel."


Legionnaires Disease Fact Sheet
src: preventlegionnaires.org


See also

  • 1999 Bovenkarspel legionellosis outbreak
  • Legionella pneumophila
  • Legionnaires' disease
  • List of Legionellosis outbreaks

Seven dead in Legionnaires' outbreak in New York - CNN
src: cdn.cnn.com


References


Legionnaires' disease: Symptoms, transmission, and causes
src: cdn1.medicalnewstoday.com


External links

  • 1976 Philadelphia Legionnaires' disease outbreak at Curlie (based on DMOZ)

Source of the article : Wikipedia

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