Publication | Open Access
Clostridium difficile in haematological malignancy.
58
Citations
12
References
1985
Year
Microbial ToxinMedical MicrobiologyAntibioticsClostridium DifficileToxin BGastroenterologyPathologyC DifficileTraveler DiarrheaMicrobiologyInfection ControlBlood CultureMedicineClinical MicrobiologyAntimicrobial Resistance
Twenty patients with haematological malignancies who developed Clostridium difficile bowel infection or colonisation are described. All isolates of C difficile were toxigenic in vitro and faecal cytotoxin (toxin B) was detected in 20/26 episodes. Ten of 20 episodes with detectable faecal cytotoxin were associated with typical antibiotic associated diarrhoea. In the other 10 episodes (nine patients), there was a severe unusual illness which was associated with detection of C difficile. The unusual features of the illness were pronounced jaundice (total bilirubin greater than or equal to 44 mumol/l), abdominal pain and distension, and initial constipation followed either by diarrhoea or by large bowel stasis. Four of these patients died within seven days. Bacteraemia was often a presenting feature in neutropenic patients subsequently shown to have C difficile. This was not the case in non-neutropenic patients. Bacteraemia was commonly polymicrobial and in two cases C difficile was isolated from blood culture. The clinical implications of recognition of this atypical C difficile associated syndrome are discussed.
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