Internal Medicine

(Wang) #1

P1: SBT


0521779407-03 CUNY1086/Karliner 0 521 77940 7 June 7, 2007 19:6


Anorexia Nervosa Antibiotic-Associated Colitis 133

Prognosis
■Treatment success rate: <50% of pts fully recover from disorder
■Vocational functioning often preserved
■Mortality: 5–15%:
➣50% due to suicide, others to starvation & electrolyte abnormal-
ities

Antibiotic-Associated and Pseudomembranous Colitis.........


MARTA L. DAVILA, MD


history & physical
History
■Diarrhea a frequent adverse effect of antibiotics; can develop from a
few hours up to 2 months after antibiotic intake
■Only 10–20% of all cases of antibiotic-associated diarrhea caused by
infection with C. difficile
■Other infectious organisms: C. perfringens, Staphylococcus aureus,
Klebsiella oxytoca, Candida species, and Salmonella species

Signs & Symptoms
■Acute watery diarrhea, lower abdominal pain, fever and leukocytosis
■Reactive arthritis a rare complication of C. difficile infection
■Asymptomatic carrier state: 2/3 of infected hospitalized patients
asymptomatic; carrier state eliminated by treatment with van-
comycin
■Diarrhea without colitis: symptoms usually mild and resolve when
the initiating antibiotic discontinued
■Colitis without pseudomembrane formation: more serious illness
with systemic manifestations such as fever, malaise, anorexia and
leukocytosis; sigmoidoscopic examination – nonspecific erythema
without pseudomembranes
■Pseudomembranous colitis: sigmoidoscopy-classic pseudomem-
branes, which appear as raised yellow or off-white plaques covering
the mucosa
■Atypical or rare presentations: fulminant colitis with or without
megacolon, pseudomembranous colitis with protein-losing entero-
pathy, relapsing infection
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