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      Laboratory methods for the diagnosis of Legionella infections

      , ,
      Journal of Microbiological Methods
      Elsevier BV

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          Legionnaires' disease: description of an epidemic of pneumonia.

          An explosive, common-source outbreak of pneumonia caused by a previously unrecognized bacterium affected primarily persons attending an American Legion convention in Philadelphia in July, 1976. Twenty-nine of 182 cases were fatal. Spread of the bacterium appeared to be air borne. The source of the bacterium was not found, but epidemiologic analysis suggested that exposure may have occurred in the lobby of the headquarters hotel or in the area immediately surrounding the hotel. Person-to-person spread seemed not to have occurred. Many hotel employees appeared to be immune, suggesting that the agent may have been present in the vicinity, perhaps intermittently, for two or more years.
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            List of Bacterial Names with Standing in Nomenclature: a folder available on the Internet.

            J Euzéby (1997)
            The List of Bacterial Names with Standing in Nomenclature includes, alphabetically and chronologically, the official names of bacteria as published or validated in the International Journal of Systematic Bacteriology. It encompasses 5,569 taxa (as of 31 December 1996) and is available on the Internet (URL: ftp:@ftp.cict.fr/pub/ bacterio/).
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              Classification of the Legionnaires' disease bacterium: Legionella pneumophila, genus novum, species nova, of the family Legionellaceae, familia nova.

              Deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) relatedness was used to classify strains of the Legionnaires' disease (LD) bacterium. These DNA comparisons showed that all strains of the LD bacterium were members of the same species. Included were strains isolated from the environment and strains with three different O-antigens. The DNA from the LD bacterium was not significantly related to DNA from any other group of bacteria that was tested. Biochemical data, growth characteristics, and guanine-plus-cytosine ratios were used to rule out the possibility that the LD bacterium was significantly related to members of genera whose DNA was not tested. In view of these data we propose that the LD bacterium be named Legionella pneumophila species nova, the type species of Legionella, genus novum. The type strain of L. pneumophila is Philadelphia 1.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Journal of Microbiological Methods
                Journal of Microbiological Methods
                Elsevier BV
                01677012
                June 1998
                June 1998
                : 33
                : 1
                : 59-79
                Article
                10.1016/S0167-7012(98)00041-4
                7d475b57-98d8-4ea1-9511-5e68d0ea658a
                © 1998

                http://www.elsevier.com/tdm/userlicense/1.0/

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