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Clostridium difficile human colonization

Clostridium difficile is a commensal Gram-positive anaerobic bacterium of the human intestine, found in about 2-5% of the population. C. difficile is the most serious cause of antibiotic-associated diarrhoea and can lead to pseudomembranous colitis, a severe infection of the colon, often resulting from eradication of the normal gut flora by antibiotics. Discontinuation of causative antibiotic treatment is often curative. In more serious cases, oral administration of metronidazole or vancomycin is the treatment of choice. The bacterium produces several known toxins, including enterotoxin (toxin A) and cytotoxin (toxin B), both of which are responsible for the diarrhoea and inflammation seen in infected patients another toxin, binary toxin, has also been described. [Pg.316]

Kushnaryov VM, Redlich PN, Sedmak JJ, et al. (1992) Cytotoxicity of Clostridium difficile toxin A for human colonic and pancreatic carcinoma cell lines. In Cancer Res. 52 5096-5099. [Pg.156]

Riegler M, Sedivy R, Pothoulakis C, etal. (1995) Clostridium difficile toxin B is more potent than toxin A in damaging human colonic epithelium in vitro. In J. Clin. Invest 95 2004-2011. [Pg.157]

Mahida YR, Galvin A, Makh S et al. Effect of clostridium difficile toxin A on human colonic lamina propria cells early loss of macrophages followed by T-cell apoptosis. Infect Immun 1998 ... [Pg.10]


See other pages where Clostridium difficile human colonization is mentioned: [Pg.112]    [Pg.264]    [Pg.339]    [Pg.56]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.62 ]




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