Publication | Closed Access
Clinical Presentation and Outcome of Listeriosis in Patients with and without Immunosuppressive Therapy
182
Citations
21
References
1992
Year
Microbial DiseaseAllergyUnderlying DiseaseGreater Helsinki AreaImmunosuppressive TherapyFoodborne IllnessPathogenesisImmunologySystemic ListeriosisClinical PresentationMicrobiologyInfection ControlImmunosuppressionMedicineClinical Microbiology
Seventy-four cases of systemic listeriosis occurring from 1971 to 1989 in the greater Helsinki area in Finland are reviewed with a special interest in the effect of preceding immunosuppressive therapy on the clinical presentation. Of these patients, 66% had an underlying disease, most commonly malignancy, diabetes mellitus, or renal transplantation, and 43% had received immunosuppressive therapy within 1 week before onset of listeriosis. Bacteremia and central nervous system infections (both in 43% of cases) were the most common clinical entities. The percentage of patients with meningitis was not greater among immunosuppressed patients (13/32, 41%) than among patients with underlying diseases not treated with immunosuppressive agents (9/16, 56%) or among previously healthy nonpregnant hosts (7/11, 64%). Immunosuppressed patients did not die more frequently than did those with underlying diseases not treated with immunosuppressive therapy (case fatality rate, 29% vs. 38%, respectively). However, all previously healthy non-neonatal patients survived, whereas 32% (15/47) of those with any kind of underlying disease succumbed.
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