Abstract

Background:Clostridium difficile infections result from an imbalance in normal bacterial flora, allowing C. difficile bacteria overgrowth. Whereas such bacterial overgrowth is typically confined to the colon, there have been reports of an increasing prevalence of C. difficile infections involving the small bowel, with the majority of patients presenting with a history of partial or total colectomy. We present two rare cases of necrotizing C. difficile enteritis complicating fulminant C. difficile colitis. Case Presentations: A 74-year-old male presented with a two-week history of watery diarrhea and escalating abdominal pain without recent antibiotic use. Work-up was significant for leukocytosis, bandemia, lactic acidosis, and elevated creatinine. Initial diagnosis of C. difficile was treated with intravenous fluoroquinolone and metronidazole. He deteriorated and a total colectomy with small bowel resection was performed. Final pathology revealed pseudomembranous colitis with focal mucosal ischemia and pseudomembranous necrotizing enteritis. Post-operatively the patient's condition fluctuated, requiring re-initiation of antibiotics and vasopressor therapy; he ultimately recovered. A 72-year-old female presented with severe abdominal pain and septic shock two weeks after total abdominal colectomy with end ileostomy for severe C. difficile colitis. An exploratory laparotomy appeared normal, without an identifiable pathology source. Post-operatively she required vasopressor support and mechanical ventilation. She received intravenous metronidazole and vancomycin enemas. Clostridium difficile assays confirmed the diagnosis of relapsed pseudomembranous enteritis. Antibiotic therapy continued without further incident. Conclusion:Clostridium difficile enteritis presents a unique challenge because of its difficulty in diagnosis, a fact underscored by the high morbidity and mortality of small bowel of C. difficile infections. Clostridium difficile enteritis should be suspected in patients not improving after recent colectomy for C. difficile colitis. Continuation of antibiotics and total colectomy should be considered in patients with un-explained acute intra-abdominal pathology or persistent sepsis after colectomy for fulminant C. difficile colitis.

Highlights

  • Clostridium difficile infections result from an imbalance in normal bacterial flora, allowing C. difficile bacteria overgrowth

  • Whereas such bacterial overgrowth is typically confined to the colon, there have been reports of an increasing prevalence of C. difficile infections involving the small bowel, with the majority of patients presenting with a history of partial or total colectomy

  • A 72-year-old female presented with severe abdominal pain and septic shock two weeks after total abdominal colectomy with end ileostomy for severe C. difficile colitis

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Summary

Discussion

Clostridium difficile infection is typically believed to be a disease of the colon without extra-colonic involvement. Proper diagnosis and aggressive surgical management followed by continuous antibiotic therapy allowed for successful outcome in our patients These cases highlight a rarely seen clinical entity of necrotizing C. difficile enteritis, and underscore the importance of consideration of CDI enteritis in patients with intraabdominal catastrophe after recent colectomy for fulminant CDI colitis. Kralovich et al [6] presented a case of CDI that developed after antibiotic treatment in a de-functionalized ileal branch of a patient who had undergone a jejuno-ileal bypass procedure 31 y prior They hypothesized that peristalsis and the presence of a patent ileocecal valve protect the small intestine from colonization in patients with normal anatomy. The exact etiology of C. difficile enteritis in our patients remains unknown, prompt initiation of the appropriate empiric therapy was paramount to successful clinical outcome

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Conclusion
Department of Surgery UH Case Medical Center
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