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Risk factors for contamination of domestic hot water systems by legionellae.

Michel Alary, +1 more
- 01 Aug 1991 - 
- Vol. 57, Iss: 8, pp 2360-2367
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TLDR
To assess risk factors associated with the contamination of the domestic environment by legionellae, 211 houses in the Quebec City area were randomly selected and water samples were collected from the hot water tank, the shower heads, and the most frequently used faucet.
Abstract
To assess risk factors associated with the contamination of the domestic environment by legionellae, 211 houses in the Quebec City area were randomly selected and water samples were collected from the hot water tank, the shower heads, and the most frequently used faucet. After centrifugation, concentrated samples were seeded in triplicate on BCYE and GPV media. Data on the characteristics of the hot water system and plumbing in the house and on the personal habits of the occupants were collected for each house. Among these 211 houses, hot water was provided by either an oil or gas heater in 33 and by an electric heater in 178. Legionellae were isolated from none of the samples from houses with oil or gas heaters and from 39% (69 of 178) of those with electric water heaters (P less than 0.0001). This association remained highly significant after control for water temperature and other variables in a stratified analysis. In the 178 houses with an electric heater, 12% of the faucets, 15% of the shower heads, and 37% of the water heaters were contaminated. Legionella pneumophila serogroups 2 and 4 were the most frequently isolated strains. Logistic regression showed that factors associated with electric water heater contamination were (i) location of the house in older districts of the city (P less than 0.0001), (ii) old age of the water heater (P = 0.003), and (iii) low water temperature (P = 0.05). Contamination of the water heater was the only factor significantly associated with the contamination of peripheral outlets (P less than 0.0001).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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Citations
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Risk Factors for Contamination of Hotel Water Distribution Systems by Legionella Species

TL;DR: The Legionella colonization frequency at 385 Greek hotel hot and cold water distribution systems was 20.8%, and contamination was associated with the presence of an oil heater, sample temperature, and seasonal operation.
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Occurrence of legionellae in hot water distribution systems of Finnish apartment buildings

TL;DR: The occurrence of legionellae in the hot water distribution systems of 67 buildings located in different parts of Finland was studied, finding that a high organic matter content in surface waters might favor the occurrence of Legionellae and also the growth of other heterotrophic microbes.
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Influence of amoebae and physical and chemical characteristics of water on presence and proliferation of Legionella species in hospital water systems

TL;DR: Multivariate analysis shows that high hardness and presence of amoebae were strongly correlated statistically with the presence of Legionella when showers, tanks, pH, and temperature promoted their proliferation.
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Evaluations of different domestic hot water preparing methods with ultra-low-temperature district heating

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated the performances of five different substation configurations in single-family houses supplied with ULTDH (ultra-low-temperature district heating).
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Regrowth of Legionella pneumophila in a heat-disinfected plumbing system

TL;DR: Genomic analysis (pulsed-field gel electrophoresis) revealed the strains to be survivors of the decontamination and temperature tolerance experiments showed that the serogroup 1 strain exhibited a higher tolerance to 60 degrees C than theserogroup 2 strain, which could account for the order of reappearance of the strains after the heat treatment.
References
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TL;DR: Hosmer and Lemeshow as discussed by the authors provide an accessible introduction to the logistic regression model while incorporating advances of the last decade, including a variety of software packages for the analysis of data sets.
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TL;DR: In this paper, the role and limitations of retrospective investigations of factors possibly associated with the occurrence of a disease are discussed and their relationship to forward-type studies emphasized, and examples of situations in which misleading associations could arise through the use of inappropriate control groups are presented.
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Legionnaires' Disease: Description of an Epidemic of Pneumonia

TL;DR: 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, killing 29 people, and epidemiologic analysis suggested that exposure may have occurred in the lobby of the headquarters hotel or in the area immediately surrounding the hotel.
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Preliminary report on the pathogenicity of Legionella pneumophila for freshwater and soil amoebae.

TL;DR: Initial studies with seeded material indicate that amoebal enrichment could be utilised for the isolation of legionellae from clinical specimens and natural habitats, and it is suggested that a vacuole, orAmoeba, full of Legionellae, rather than free legionelae, could be the infective particle for man.
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Ecological distribution of Legionella pneumophila.

TL;DR: The data suggest that Legionella pneumophila is part of the natural aquatic environment and that the bacterium is capable of surviving extreme ranges of environmental conditions, and demonstrate the effectiveness of the direct fluorescent-antibody technique for detecting L. pneumophILA in natural aquatic systems.
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