A case is reported of a patient without previous gastrointestinal symptoms, who presented with polymicrobial septicemia caused by Escherichia coli, Enterococcus faecalis, Clostridium difficile and Bacteroides vulgatus. Septicemia occurred during acute diverticulitis. A strain of Clostridium difficile, which was of the same serogroup C as the blood culture isolate and also produced toxin, was recovered from the stools, but the pathogenic role of this organism in the gastrointestinal symptomatology was not clearly established. Other reported cases of Clostridium difficile septicemia are also reviewed.
Ten healthy volunteers received on separate days the following regimens: imipenem 500 mg, clindamycin 600 mg, latamoxef 1 g, and metronidazole 500 mg. The antibiotics were given intravenously as an infusion over 15 min. Blood samples were obtained before and 30 min, 1 and 6 h after the start of the infusion. Serum bacteriostatic and bactericidal activities were measured against the following strains of strict anaerobes: two strains of Bacteroides fragilis, one strain each of B. vulgatus, B. thetaiotaomicron, B. oralis, Fusobacterium symbiosum, Eubacterium lentum, Clostridium perfringens, and Peptostreptococcus magnus. Sera from patients receiving clindamycin showed the highest inhibitory and bactericidal activities except against B. thetaiotaomicron and F. symbiosum. Imipenem had similar inhibitory and bactericidal activity to that shown by latamoxef. Metronidazole had a moderate activity against all strains although the activity persisted for 6 h. Latamoxef was the most active antibiotic against the test strain of C. perfringens.
The aim of the study was to assess the incidence and clinical significance of Clostridium difficile in patients in our cancer center. Over a period of seven consecutive months, 557 stools samples obtained from 156 hospitalized cancer patients (37 leukemic patients receiving oral antimicrobial prophylaxis and 119 patients from whom a stool sample was sent to the laboratory) were analyzed for the presence of Clostridium difficile. Clostridium difficile and/or its toxin was recovered from 13 (35%) of the 37 patients receiving oral antimicrobial prophylaxis, and from 15 (12%) of the other 119 patients (p less than 0.05). Isolation of Clostridium difficile was associated with diarrhoea in 13 (46%) of 28 patients but specific treatment was initiated only in 7 (25%) of the 28 patients in whom Clostridium difficile was isolated. The wide distribution of the serotypes identified in our patients does not suggest an epidemic situation in our hospital.
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