Clostridium difficile infection
Epidemiology
Etiology
Risk factors for CDI
- Recent antibiotic treatment
- Antibiotics destroy the normal intestinal bacterial flora that normally suppresses C. difficile overgrowth. C. difficile is resistant to most of the commonly used antibiotics.
- High-risk antibiotics (odds ratio ≥ 5)
- Clindamycin
- Cephalosporins
- Fluoroquinolones
- Advanced age
- Gastric acid suppression (e.g., with proton pump inhibitors) or bypass (e.g., enteral feeding)
- Recent hospitalization
Pathophysiology
- Toxin A (enterotoxin): binding to brush border of enterocytes → disruption of actin cytoskeleton functioning → increase in epithelial permeability and apoptosis → diarrhea
- Toxin B (cytotoxin): same as in toxin A, but can also cause pore formation within the endosomal membrane via insertion of the translocation domain → release of endosomal content into the cytosol → cytopathic effect
Clinical features
Diagnostics
Treatment