Pseudomembranous enterocolitis

Pseudomembranous enterocolitis (also known as CDAD – clostridium difficile associated diarrhea) is a serious, life-threatening complication in patients treated with broad-spectrum antibiotics that disrupt the natural microflora and lead to intestinal dysmicrobia. Clostridium difficile toxins play a major role in pathogenesis.

Cause
The causative agent is the anaerobic G+ rod Clostridium difficile, which multiplies extremely, mainly after lincomycin, cephalosporins and aminopenicillins, and begins to produce the toxins  enterotoxin A and cytotoxin B.
 * Toxin A – induces fluid accumulation in the intestinal epithelium of the host. It is an accumulation of viscous viscous fluid of blood origin. Toxin A thus causes dysfunction of the intestinal epithelial cells, which can no longer optimally control the movement of water due to the large amount of viscous fluid in the cells. Toxin A is a probable cause of diarrhea, which is the first symptom of pseudomebranous enterocolitis. It also has marked polymorphonuclear (PMN) chemotaxis and is therefore responsible for the inflammatory response of intestinal epithelial cells. Toxin A is toxic to most cells of the immune system because it disrupts cytoskeletal components.
 * Pseudomembranous Colitis, Colectomy (Gross) (7410583840).jpgToxin B – does not show enterotoxic activity, but kills intestinal epithelial cells. It is about 100-1000 times more toxic than toxin A.

Intestinal mucosa cells are only destroyed if both types of toxins are present at the same time. Toxins A destroy the surface structures of the intestinal mucosa cells ''and at the same time shield the possible preventive effect of PMNs. This allows toxin B molecules to successfully attack intestinal epithelial cells. Toxin B kills intestinal epithelial cells'' only if its surface structures are disrupted and the cells are affected by water transport dysfunction. Extensive ulcerations form on the intestinal mucosa – necrotic formations, pseudomembranes - conglomerates of destroyed intestinal epithelial cells, dead PMNs, fibrin and mucin in the form of cauliflower swollen, yellow crusts, which can be relatively easily endoscopically detected.

Any other antibiotic can cause CDAD. It can occur after 5–10 days of treatment, but also for many days after the end of therapy. Up to 15 % of patients occur after beta-lactams and up to 25 % clindamycin. As a rule, the disease subsides after the end of therapy.

Clinical picture
Signs of pseudomembranous enterocolitis are: Therefore, hospitalization in the ICU is necessary.
 * Pseudomembranous colitis 1.jpge inflammatory ulcerations of the intestinal mucosa, the mortality of which can often reach up to 45 %;
 * sudden multiple watery diarrhea with dehydration;
 * nausea, abdominal pain, often fever and leukocytosis;
 * strong-smelling stools, with strips of mucous membranes and blood;
 * in progression – shock and death.

Diagnosis
The exact diagnosis is based on two points:
 * Endoscopy – whitish or yellowish pseudomembranes in the colon with a tendency to merge (mostly ulcers that are typical of bacillary or amoebic dysentery or ulcerative colitis are missing)
 * Detection of clostridial toxin – performed by ELISA from stool sample

Therapy
Basic measures include discontinuation of current ATB therapy and metronidazole orally for 10-14 days. Vancomycin is administered orally in severe cases due to the risk of spreading vancomycin-resistant enterococcus. The macrolide antibiotic fidaxomycin enables a new, selective therapy, the disadvantage of which is the high cost so far.

Antimony drugs are not given, diarrhea is an attempt by the body to get rid of the pathogen. The benefit of probiotics has not been proven in treatment. Intestinal microbiome transplantation (insertion of homogenized stool from the donor into the patient's intestine using a nasogastric tube or enema) is successfully used in recurrence.

Related articles

 * Endotoxin shock
 * Clostridium difficile

Source

 * HAVRÁNEK, Jiří: Pseudomembranosní enterocolitis.
 * HAVRÁNEK, Jiří: Pseudomembranosní enterocolitis.