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Updated: Aug 15 2017

Clostridium difficile (C. diff)

Snapshot
  • A 50-year-old female is hospitalized for a course of intravenous clindamycin to treat an abscess. Four days later she develops a watery diarrhea with > 3 stools /day.  Temperature is 102.2°F (39°C). Physical exam reveals abdominal tenderness with no guarding. Her WBC is 15,000 mm³ with a positive fecal leucocyte test. Sigmoidoscopy reveals 0.2-2 cm raised adherent yellow plaques.
Introduction
  • C diffClassification
    • bacteria
      • gram-positive bacilli
        • spore-forming
          • Clostridium
            • C. difficile 
Presentation
  • Antibiotic-associated diarrhea
    • affects hospitalized adult patients
    • most commonly tested causative antibiotics
      • clindamycin
        • "Linda gives me diarrhea"
      • ampicillin
      • cephalosporins
      • amoxicillin
    • bacteria are non-invasive
  • Fever, abdominal pain
  • Fecal RBCs and WBCs
  • Most commonly causes colitis but may involve small bowel
  • Complications
    • toxic megacolon 
Evaluation
  • Test for C. difficile toxin in stool
  • Pseudomembranes on sigmoidoscopy 
Differential
  • Infectious diarrhea: S. aureus, C. perfringens
  • Non infectious diarrhea: Crohn's disease, irritable bowel syndrome
  • Acute abdomen: small bowel ileus, volvulus
Treatment
  • Conservative
    • discontinue inciting antibiotic
      • indication
        • this is an important initial step when treating patients with C. difficile infection
  • Medical
    • metronidazole  
      • indication
        • oral metronidazole is used for non-severe C. difficile infection
        • oral metronidazole can be used for initial recurrence of non-severe C. difficile infection 
    • vancomycin
      • indication
        • oral vancomycin is used for non-severe and severe C. difficile infection
        • oral vancomycin can be used for second recurrence of non-severe C. difficile infection
          • fidaxomicin can be used as an alternative
        • oral vancomycin in addition to intravenous metronidazole in patients who are
          • critically ill with fulminant or refractory disease
Prognosis, Prevention and Complications
  • Recurrences occur in 25% of cases after completion of antibiotic therapy
    • repeat PO metronidazole or vancomycin
    • fidaxomicin is an acceptable alternative
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