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Legionella on board trains: effectiveness of environmental surveillance and decontamination.

Authors :
Quaranta, Gianluigi
Vincenti, Sara
Ferriero, Anna Maria
Boninti, Federica
Sezzatini, Romina
Turnaturi, Cinzia
Gliubizzi, Maria Daniela
Munafo', Elio
Ceccarelli, Gianluca
Causarano, Carmelo
Accorsi, Massimo
Del Nord, Pasquale
Ricciardi, Walter
Laurenti, Patrizia
Quaranta, Gianluigi (ORCID:0000-0002-8164-4857)
Ricciardi, Gualtiero (ORCID:0000-0002-5655-688X)
Laurenti, Patrizia (ORCID:0000-0002-8532-0593)
Quaranta, Gianluigi
Vincenti, Sara
Ferriero, Anna Maria
Boninti, Federica
Sezzatini, Romina
Turnaturi, Cinzia
Gliubizzi, Maria Daniela
Munafo', Elio
Ceccarelli, Gianluca
Causarano, Carmelo
Accorsi, Massimo
Del Nord, Pasquale
Ricciardi, Walter
Laurenti, Patrizia
Quaranta, Gianluigi (ORCID:0000-0002-8164-4857)
Ricciardi, Gualtiero (ORCID:0000-0002-5655-688X)
Laurenti, Patrizia (ORCID:0000-0002-8532-0593)
Publication Year :
2012

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Legionella pneumophila is increasingly recognised as a significant cause of sporadic and epidemic community-acquired and nosocomial pneumonia. Many studies describe the frequency and severity of Legionella spp. contamination in spa pools, natural pools, hotels and ships, but there is no study analysing the environmental monitoring of Legionella on board trains. The aims of the present study were to conduct periodic and precise environmental surveillance of Legionella spp. in water systems and water tanks that supply the toilet systems on trains, to assess the degree of contamination of such structures and to determine the effectiveness of decontamination. METHODS: A comparative pre-post ecological study was conducted from September 2006 to January 2011. A total of 1,245 water samples were collected from plumbing and toilet water tanks on passenger trains. The prevalence proportion of all positive samples was calculated. The unpaired t-test was performed to evaluate statistically significant differences between the mean load values before and after the decontamination procedures; statistical significance was set at p ≤ 0.05. RESULTS: In the pre-decontamination period, 58% of the water samples were positive for Legionella. Only Legionella pneumophila was identified: 55.84% were serogroup 1, 19.03% were serogroups 2-14 and 25.13% contained both serogroups. The mean bacterial load value was 2.14 × 10(3) CFU/L. During the post-decontamination period, 42.75% of water samples were positive for Legionella spp.; 98.76% were positive for Legionella pneumophila: 74.06% contained serogroup 1, 16.32% contained serogroups 2-14 and 9.62% contained both. The mean bacterial load in the post-decontamination period was 1.72 × 10(3) CFU/L. According to the t-test, there was a statistically significant decrease in total bacterial load until approximately one and a half year after beginning the decontamination programme (p = 0.0097). CONCLUSIONS: This study indicates that sys

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1105012236
Document Type :
Electronic Resource