Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Pseudomembrane colitis (PMC)
Anmerkungen:
- an acute, exudative colitis usually caused byClostridium difficile
- can be caused by other bacteria than C. diff
- Staphylococcus spp
- enterotoxigenic Clostridium perfringens
- Campylobacter spp.
- Listeria spp.
- Salmonella spp.
- Symptoms
- Typically, symptoms come on between 5 and
10 days after antibiotic therapy. Occasionally
patients will not have had antibiotic exposure
- Most patients become unwell
during their course of antibiotics,
but 25-40% may not do so for as
many as 10 weeks afterwards
- Most affected individuals experience
watery diarrhoea (varies from
self-limiting to severe and debilitating)
± blood-stained stools, abdominal
cramps, fever (especially so in severe
cases), rigors ± septicaemia.
- Severe abdominal pain is
uncommon but may mimic
an acute abdomen.
- Frank rectal bleeding suggests
other causes (for example,
inflammatory bowel disease).
- lethal to elderly patients