Serological parameters were compared in 15 cases of Coxiella burnetii infection comprising 5 cases each of primary Q fever, chronic granulomatous hepatitis, and endocarditis. The diagnosis was made on the basis of clinical history and serology and on the isolation of C. burnetii phase I from biopsy specimens of liver and bone marrow from two patients with granulomatous hepatitis and from the aortic valve vegetations of five patients with endocarditis. The temporal sequences of immunoglobulin levels, rheumatoid factor, and specific antibody responses to phase II and phase I antigens of C. burnetii were evaluated as predictive correlates of the three Q fever entities. Serum levels of immunoglobulin classes G, M, and A were variable in all the entities of Q fever. Increased mean levels (in milligrams per deciliter) of immunoglobulin G (IgG) and IgA were noted with chronic disease in the sera of some patients, whereas IgM levels were not significantly different from normal values. Rheumatoid factor was significantly elevated in chronic disease but not in primary Q fever. The temporal sequence of C. burnetii phase II and phase I antibodies were compared by microagglutination, complement fixation, and indirect microimmunofluorescence tests. All of these serological tests were useful in distinguishing primary from chronic disease. Thus, the ratio of anti-phase II to anti-phase I antibodies was greater than 1, greater than or equal to 1, and less than or equal to 1 for primary Q fever, granulomatous hepatitis, and Q fever endocarditis, respectively. Moreover, the high phase-specific IgA antibody titers in the indirect microimmunofluorescence test were diagnostic for endocarditis.
The authors studied 138 patients, 57 of whom were younger than 65 years of age and 81 who were 65 years of age and older, with community-acquired pneumonia to determine whether or not such pneumonia is different in the elderly and to define how such patients are investigated and treated. Pneumonia in the elderly was characterized by a higher mortality, 30 v 10%; more likely to be of unknown etiology, 54 v 30%; and more likely to show radiographic progression after the patient had been admitted to the hospital, 48 v 11%. In addition, elderly patients were more likely to be afebrile when admitted, 57 v 26%. Twenty-seven etiologic categories were present in 77 patients in whom a cause for the pneumonia was established. Streptococcus pneumoniae accounted for 9.4% of the pneumonia overall and for 27% of the pneumonia among patients who had sputum cultures performed before antibiotic therapy. The diagnostic yield was 11.6% for blood cultures, 38.2% for sputum cultures, 2.3% for throat washing, and 22.1% for serological studies. Twenty-seven percent of patients were receiving antibiotics of the time of admission to the hospital. Most (79%) received more than one antibiotic after admission. This study indicates that community-acquired pneumonia is a serious illness and that an algorithm approach to diagnosis and treatment of such pneumonia is necessary.
Q fever endocarditis is rarely reported in North America; only four cases have been documented since 1953. In 1981-1982, five cases were identified in the Victoria General Hospital, Halifax, Nova Scotia. Four patients were from widely separated areas of Nova Scotia and one was from Prince Edward Island. Four patients with long-standing valvular abnormalities, including two with prosthetic valves, presented with recurrent febrile episodes. The fifth patient, who was previously well, had recurrent septic embolic episodes. Clinical features and laboratory findings were variable. Diagnosis by serology was confirmed in four patients by culture of Coxiella burnetii from excised tissue. Histopathology varied from nonspecific inflammatory changes to two more distinctive patterns; electron microscopy showed C burnetii in two patients. Therapy with tetracycline and trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole was beneficial, although three patients required valve replacement for hemodynamic deterioration. Q fever endocarditis may be more common than is recognized, and serological investigations should be performed in all cases of culture-negative endocarditis.
An outbreak of gastroenteritis affected 19 of 34 geriatric patients and four of 23 staff assigned to the ward in a period of 3 1/2 weeks in January 1980. Fourteen of the 19 patients with gastroenteritis (17 were tested properly) and four of the ten asymptomatic patients (five asymptomatic patients were not tested) showed evidence of rotavirus infection by virus positivity and/or a significant antibody response to rotavirus. One of the four staff members with gastroenteritis showed serologic evidence (three were tested) of rotavirus infection. Nine of the 18 asymptomatic staff members (two remaining staff members were not tested) showed a fourfold rise in antibody to rotavirus but four had antibody titers of 1:32 or more. The patients had diarrhea for a mean of 2.6 days. Most of them had five or fewer diarrheal stools in one day. Six patients had a severe illness and two died. Thirteen of 15 symptomatic patients who had serum samples, collected during the acute and convalescent phases, tested manifested high titers (greater than or equal to 1:32) of complement-fixing antibody to rotavirus antigen.
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