A cluster of Legionnaires' disease (LD) with 10 confirmed, three probable and four possible cases occurred in August and September 2016 in Dendermonde, Belgium. The incidence in the district was 7 cases/100 000 population, exceeding the maximum annual incidence in the previous 5 years of 1.5/100 000. Epidemiological, environmental and geographical investigations identified a cooling tower (CT) as the most likely source. The case risk around the tower decreased with increasing distance and was highest within 5 km. Legionella pneumophila serogroup 1, ST48, was identified in a human respiratory sample but could not be matched with the environmental results. Public health authorities imposed measures to control the contamination of the CT and organised follow-up sampling. We identified obstacles encountered during the cluster investigation and formulated recommendations for improved LD cluster management, including faster coordination of teams through the outbreak control team, improved communication about clinical and environmental sample analysis, more detailed documentation of potential exposures obtained through the case questionnaire and earlier use of a geographical information tool to compare potential sources and for hypothesis generation.
Guided by endobronchial ultrasound (EBUS), mediastinal lymph nodes can be reached in a safe, minimally invasive manner, allowing fine needle aspiration for cytologic diagnosis with a high sensitivity and specificity. In describing the following clinical case, we demonstrate the use of EBUS-transbronchial needle aspiration (TBNA) in the workup of a paratracheal mass in a young female patient. Immunocytochemical analysis revealed it to be a peripheral nerve sheath tumor. EBUS-TBNA complemented computerized tomography, fluoro-deoxy-glucose positron emission tomography, and magnetic resonance imaging in establishing the diagnosis of this infrequently encountered mediastinal neoplasm. Fluoro-deoxy-glucose positron emission tomography has a potential to discriminate between high-grade sarcoma and benign soft tissue tumors, but it remains unreliable to differentiate benign schwannoma from low-grade sarcomas such as malignant peripheral nerve sheath tumor. When properly prepared, cell blocks obtained from TBNA of a paratracheal mass offer the possibility of cytologic examination and immunocytochemical staining, confirming the diagnosis of mediastinal neurogenic tumors.
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