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Journal of Clinical Pathology 1985;38:445-451; doi:10.1136/jcp.38.4.445
Copyright © 1985 by the BMJ Publishing Group Ltd & Association of Clinical Pathologists.

Clostridium difficile in haematological malignancy.

A Rampling, R E Warren, P C Bevan, C E Hoggarth, D Swirsky, F G Hayhoe

Twenty patients with haematological malignancies who developed Clostridium difficile bowel infection or colonisation are described. All isolates of C difficile were toxigenic in vitro and faecal cytotoxin (toxin B) was detected in 20/26 episodes. Ten of 20 episodes with detectable faecal cytotoxin were associated with typical antibiotic associated diarrhoea. In the other 10 episodes (nine patients), there was a severe unusual illness which was associated with detection of C difficile. The unusual features of the illness were pronounced jaundice (total bilirubin greater than or equal to 44 mumol/l), abdominal pain and distension, and initial constipation followed either by diarrhoea or by large bowel stasis. Four of these patients died within seven days. Bacteraemia was often a presenting feature in neutropenic patients subsequently shown to have C difficile. This was not the case in non-neutropenic patients. Bacteraemia was commonly polymicrobial and in two cases C difficile was isolated from blood culture. The clinical implications of recognition of this atypical C difficile associated syndrome are discussed.


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  • Cid, A., Juncal, A. R., Aguilera, A., Regueiro, B. J., González, V. (1998). Clostridium difficile Bacteremia in an Immunocompetent Child. J. Clin. Microbiol. 36: 1167-1168 [Full Text]  
  • Weinberger, M., Hollingsworth, H., Feuerstein, I. M., Young, N. S., Pizzo, P. A. (1993). Successful Surgical Management of Neutropenic Enterocolitis in Two Patients With Severe Aplastic Anemia: Case Reports and Review of the Literature. Arch Intern Med 153: 107-113 [Abstract]  

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