C.
difficile infection
Overview
Clostridioides difficile (klos-TRID-e-oi-deez
dif-uh-SEEL) is a bacterium that causes an infection of the large intestine
(colon). Symptoms can range from diarrhea to life-threatening damage to the
colon. The bacterium is often referred to as C. difficile or C. diff.
Illness from C. difficile typically occurs
after use of antibiotic medications. It most commonly affects older adults in
hospitals or in long-term care facilities. In the United States, about 200,000
people are infected annually with C. difficile in a hospital or care setting.
These numbers are lower than in previous years because of improved prevention
measures.
People not in care settings or hospitals also
can develop C. difficile infection. Some strains of the bacterium in the
general population may cause serious infections or are more likely to affect
younger people. In the United States, about 170,000 infections occur annually
outside of health care settings, and these numbers are increasing.
The bacterium was formerly named Clostridium
(klos-TRID-e-um) difficile.
Symptoms
Some people carry C. difficile bacteria in
their intestines but never become sick. These individuals are carriers of the
bacteria and may spread infections.
Signs and symptoms usually develop within 5 to
10 days after starting a course of antibiotics. However, they may occur as soon
as the first day or up to three months later.
Mild to moderate
infection
The most common signs and symptoms of mild to
moderate C. difficile infection are:
·
Watery diarrhea three
or more times a day for more than one day
·
Mild abdominal
cramping and tenderness
Severe infection
People who have a severe C. difficile
infection tend to become dehydrated and may need to be hospitalized. C.
difficile can cause the colon to become inflamed and sometimes form patches of
raw tissue that can bleed or produce pus. Signs and symptoms of severe
infection include:
·
Watery diarrhea as
often as 10 to 15 times a day
·
Abdominal cramping and
pain, which may be severe
·
Rapid heart rate
·
Dehydration
·
Fever
·
Nausea
·
Increased white blood
cell count
·
Kidney failure
·
Loss of appetite
·
Swollen abdomen
·
Weight loss
·
Blood or pus in the
stool
C. difficile infection that is severe and
sudden, an uncommon condition, may also cause intestinal inflammation leading
to enlargement of the colon (also called toxic megacolon) and sepsis. Sepsis is
a life-threatening condition that occurs when the body's response to an
infection damages its own tissues. People who have these conditions are
admitted to the intensive care unit.
When to see a doctor
Some people have loose stools during or
shortly after antibiotic therapy. This may be caused by C. difficile infection.
See your doctor if you have:
·
Three or more watery
stools a day
·
Symptoms lasting more
than two days
·
A new fever
·
Severe abdominal pain
or cramping
·
Blood in your stool
Causes
C. difficile bacteria enter the body through
the mouth. They can begin reproducing in the small intestine. When they reach
the large intestine (colon), they can release tissue-damaging toxins. These
toxins destroy cells, produce patches of inflammatory cells and cellular
debris, and cause watery diarrhea.
When the bacteria are outside the colon —
virtually anywhere in the environment — they are in a dormant state, or
essentially shutdown. This enables them to survive for a long time in any
number of places:
·
Human or animal feces
·
Surfaces in a room
·
Unwashed hands
·
Soil
·
Water
·
Food, including meat
When bacteria once again find their way into a
person's digestive system, they "wake up" and can begin to produce
infection again. The ability of dormant C. difficile to survive outside the
body enables the generally easy transmission of the bacterium, particularly in
the absence of thorough hand-washing and cleaning.
Risk factors
Although people who have no known risk factors
have gotten sick from C. difficile, certain factors increase the risk.
Taking antibiotics or
other medications
Your intestines contain about 100 trillion
bacterial cells and between 500 to 2,000 different kinds of bacteria, many of
which help protect your body from infection. When you take antibiotics to treat
an infection, these drugs tend to destroy some of the helpful bacteria in your
body in addition to the bacteria causing the infection.
Without enough helpful bacteria to keep it in
check, C. difficile can quickly grow out of control. While any antibiotic can
be implicated, the antibiotics that most often lead to C. difficile infection
include:
·
Clindamycin
·
Cephalosporins
·
Penicillins
·
Fluoroquinolones
Proton pump inhibitors, a type of medicine
used to reduce stomach acid, also may increase your risk of C. difficile
infection.
Staying in a health
care facility
The majority of C. difficile infections occur
in people who are or who have recently been in a health care setting —
including hospitals, nursing homes and long-term care facilities — where germs
spread easily, antibiotic use is common and people are especially vulnerable to
infection. In hospitals and nursing homes, C. difficile spreads on:
·
Hands
·
Cart handles
·
Bedrails
·
Bedside tables
·
Toilets and sinks
·
Stethoscopes,
thermometers or other devices
·
Telephones
·
Remote controls
Having a serious
illness or medical procedure
Certain medical conditions or procedures may
make you more susceptible to a C. difficile infection, including:
·
Inflammatory bowel
disease
·
Weakened immune system
from a medical condition or treatment (such as chemotherapy)
·
Chronic kidney disease
·
Gastrointestinal
procedure
·
Other abdominal
surgery
Other risk factors
Older age is a risk factor. In one study, the
risk of becoming infected with C. difficile was 10 times greater for people age
65 and older compared with younger people.
Having one C. difficile infection increases
your chance of having another one, and the risk continues to increase with each
infection.
Women are more likely than men to have C.
difficile infection, for reasons that are not clearly understood.
Complications
Complications of C. difficile infection
include:
·
Dehydration. Severe diarrhea can lead to a
significant loss of fluids and electrolytes. This makes it difficult for your
body to function normally and can cause blood pressure to drop to dangerously
low levels.
·
Kidney
failure. In some cases,
dehydration can occur so quickly that kidney function rapidly deteriorates
(kidney failure).
·
Toxic
megacolon. In this rare
condition, your colon is unable to expel gas and stool, causing it to become
greatly enlarged (megacolon). Left untreated, your colon may rupture. Bacteria
from the colon may then enter your abdominal cavity or bloodstream. Toxic
megacolon may be fatal and requires emergency surgery.
·
A
hole in your large intestine (bowel perforation). This rare condition results from
extensive damage to the lining of the colon or after toxic megacolon. Bacteria
spilling from the colon into your abdominal cavity can lead to a
life-threatening infection (peritonitis).
·
Death. Rarely, mild to moderate C. difficile
infection — but more commonly, serious infection — can quickly progress to
fatal disease if not treated promptly.
Prevention
To help prevent the spread of C. difficile,
hospitals and other health care facilities follow strict infection-control
guidelines. If you have a friend or family member in a hospital or nursing
home, follow recommended practices. Ask questions if you observe caregivers or
other people not following guidelines.
Preventive measures include:
·
Avoid
unnecessary use of antibiotics. Antibiotics are sometimes prescribed for nonbacterial
conditions, such as viral illnesses, that aren't helped by these drugs. Take a
wait-and-see approach for these illnesses. If you do need an antibiotic, ask
your doctor if it's possible to get a prescription for a drug that is taken for
a shorter time or is a narrow-spectrum antibiotic. Narrow-spectrum antibiotics
target a limited number of bacteria species and are less likely to affect
healthy bacteria.
·
Hand-washing. Health care workers should practice good
hand hygiene before and after treating each person in their care. In the event
of a C. difficile outbreak, using soap and warm water is a better choice for
hand hygiene, because alcohol-based hand sanitizers don't effectively destroy
C. difficile spores. Visitors also should wash their hands with soap and warm
water before and after leaving the room or using the bathroom.
·
Contact
precautions. People who are
hospitalized with C. difficile infection have a private room or share a room
with someone who has the same illness. Hospital staff and visitors wear
disposable gloves and isolation gowns while in the room.
·
Thorough
cleaning. In any health
care setting, all surfaces should be carefully disinfected with a product that
contains chlorine bleach. C. difficile spores can survive exposure to routine
cleaning products that don't contain bleach.
Diagnosis
A diagnosis of C. difficile infection is based
on the presence of:
·
Diarrhea
·
Other signs and
symptoms of C. difficile infection
·
Presence of C.
difficile in a stool sample
People who have regular, formed stools should
not be tested for C. difficile infection. Recent use of antibiotics is not
required for making a diagnosis of C. difficile infection.
Stool tests
If C. difficile infection is suspected, your
doctor will order one or more laboratory tests of a stool sample. These tests
identify either the toxins or strains of the bacteria that produce toxins.
Colon examination
In rare instances, to help confirm a diagnosis
of C. difficile infection and look for alternative causes of your symptoms,
your doctor may examine the inside of your colon. This test (flexible
sigmoidoscopy or colonoscopy) involves inserting a flexible tube with a small
camera on one end into your colon to look for areas of inflammation or abnormal
tissue.
Imaging tests
If your doctor is concerned about possible
complications of C. difficile infection, he or she may order an abdominal X-ray
or a computerized tomography (CT) scan, which provides images of your colon.
The scan can detect the presence of complications such as:
·
Thickening of the
colon wall
·
Enlargement of the
bowel
·
A hole (perforation)
in the lining of your colon.
Treatment
Treatments are used only if a person has signs
or symptoms of infection. People who carry the bacteria — but are not sick —
are not treated.
Antibiotics
If C. difficile infection is related to an
antibiotic you're taking, your doctor will likely discontinue use of that drug.
In many cases, however, an antibiotic treatment is critical for treating
another infectious condition. Your doctor may prescribe a different antibiotic
that is less likely to contribute to diarrhea related to C. difficile
infection.
Antibiotics are the mainstay to treat C.
difficile infection. Commonly used antibiotics include:
·
Vancomycin (Vancocin
HCL, Firvanq)
·
Fidaxomicin (Dificid)
Metronidazole (Flagyl) may be used in
combination with vancomycin to treat serious C. difficile infection.
Surgery
Surgery to remove the diseased portion of the
colon may be necessary in some cases, including:
·
Severe pain
·
Organ failure
·
Toxic megacolon
·
Inflammation of the
lining of the abdominal wall
Treatment for
recurrent infection
Approximately 25% of people treated for C.
difficile infection get sick again, either because the initial infection never
went away or because they've been reinfected with a different strain of the
bacteria. The risk increases with each C. difficile infection episode and
exceeds 50% after three or more infections.
Your risk of recurrence is higher if you:
·
Are older than 65
·
Are taking other
antibiotics for a different condition while being treated with antibiotics for
C. difficile infection
·
Have a severe
underlying medical disorder, such as chronic kidney failure, inflammatory bowel
disease or chronic liver disease
Treatment for recurrent disease may include
the following strategies.
·
Antibiotics. Antibiotic therapy for recurrent
infections may involve one or more courses of a medication. The drugs are
usually different from the type of antibiotic used previously. The
effectiveness of antibiotic therapy declines with each subsequent recurrence.
·
Antibody-based
therapy. A therapy, known
as bezlotoxumab (Zinplava), is a human antibody against the C. difficile toxin
B and has been shown to reduce the risk of recurrent C. difficile infection in
those at a high risk of recurrence.
·
Fecal
microbiota transplant (FMT). FMT is an emerging treatment for multiple recurrent
C. difficile infection that has been studied in clinical trials. The U.S. Food
and Drug Administration has not approved FMT but allows the use
of FMT for C. difficile infection as an experimental procedure. You
need to sign an informed consent about the benefits and risks of the experimental
procedure. FMT is also called a stool transplant or an intestinal
microbiota transplant.
FMT restores healthy intestinal bacteria by placing another
person's (donor's) stool in your colon with specialized tubes inserted through
your rectum. Donors are screened for medical conditions, their blood is tested
for infections, and stools are carefully screened for parasites, viruses and
other infectious bacteria before being used for FMT.
Research has shown that FMT done one or more times has
a success rate higher than 85% for treating recurrent C. difficile infections.
·
Probiotics. Probiotics are supplements or foods that
contain microorganisms intended to maintain or improve the "good"
bacteria in the body. The role of these products in C. difficile infection is
controversial. Research hasn't consistently shown that currently available
products are helpful in preventing or treating infection with C. difficile.
Advanced probiotics are currently being studied for their potential use in the
treatment or prevention of C. difficile infection but aren't currently
available.
Lifestyle and home
remedies
Supportive treatment for diarrhea includes:
·
Plenty
of fluids. Choose fluids
containing water, salt and sugar, such as diluted fruit juice, soft drinks and
broths.
·
Good
nutrition. If you have
watery diarrhea, eat starchy foods, such as potatoes, noodles, rice, wheat and
oatmeal. Other good choices are saltine crackers, bananas, soup and boiled
vegetables. If you aren't hungry, you may need a liquid diet at first. After
your diarrhea clears up, you may have temporary difficulty digesting milk and
milk-based products.
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