Brote de diarrea nosocomial por Clostridium difficile enun servicio de medicina interna

1998 
BACKGROUND: Clostridium difficile (DCD) is the main etiologic agent of nosocomial diarrhea of infectious origin. Most of the cases of DCD have been detected in a hospital environment. PATIENTS, MATERIAL AND METHODS: From October to November 1996 five cases of nosocomial diarrhea were detected with the presence of the toxin A of Clostridium difficile being observed in the stools. These patients were compared with a group of 19 patients without diarrhea (controls) who were admitted to the same ward during the same period as the patients with DCD. RESULTS: The hospital stay of the cases was greater (25 +/- 8 days) than that of the controls (14 +/- 10 days; p 0.05). The length of antibiotic treatment prior to the onset of the symptoms was 8 +/- 3 days (range 7-11 days). The type of antibiotic administered was similar in both groups. More of the cases with DCD (60%) had vesicle catheterization than the controls (11%, p < 0.05). All the patients with DCD presented abdominal pain and several liquid stools per day without blood or pus (3.2 +/- 0.45 stools per patient) and 2 (40%) fever. The mean length of diarrhea was 5.6 +/- 3.6 days. The serum albumin concentration on the first day of admission was significantly lower in the cases of DCD (2.9 +/- 0.4 mg/dl) than in the controls (3.3 +/- 3.4 mg/dl, p < 0.05). All the cases received antibiotic treatment for Clostridium difficile (oral metronidazol or vancomycin) with good clinical evolution. CONCLUSIONS: The patients with DCD had more often had vesicle catherization and presented a lower serum albumin concentration than the controls.
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