Clostridium Difficile (C. Diff) (2024)

Overview

Think of the trillions of bacteria, viruses, and fungi as a community (called your microbiome) that works together to keep your body functioning well. Most of these organisms are beneficial, with specific jobs to do, such as helping your body digest food and distribute nutrients. A healthy person’s microbiome also contains a small number of bacterium that aren’t so friendly.

When your microbiome is in a state of balance, the good guys keep the bad ones under control. If the balance is disrupted—either because the helpful bacteria are eradicated (as can happen when you take antibiotics) or because the harmful community overgrows—your health can suffer. In recent years, one type of bacterium, called Clostridium difficile (C. diff), is presenting particularly difficult challenges, because it causes one of the most common health care-associated infections in the United States. What’s more, about 20%of patients have recurrent infections.

A C. diff infection causes diarrhea, which can range from mild to severe, and in rare cases, can lead to serious complications. The infection most often enters the body after someone touches a surface contaminated with feces from a person infected with C. diff and then touches his or her mouth.

Even if C. diff enters your body, in most cases, it doesn’t make you sick. But recent antibiotic use and a stay in a hospital or long-term care facility can make you more susceptible to becoming infected. There are several reasons why this is so. In such settings, many patients are taking antibiotics, and they are often older (another risk factor) and sicker (yet another—it can do more damage in someone whose immune system is already suppressed and is therefore less able to fight it off). Also, C. diff is resistant to some disinfectants and health care workers tend to many patients, one after the next, so the likelihood of transmission is high as well.

What is C. diff?

Clostridium difficile (C. diff) is a bacterium commonly found in the soil, air, and water. It is present in small amounts in the bodies of 1 to 3% of the U.S. population. Under normal circ*mstances, it doesn’t cause any harm. But it is opportunistic, and if given room to grow, it multiplies and crowds out the beneficial bacteria in the gut. This can happen during or after a course of antibiotics, which are meant to kill bacteria that cause infections, but also end up wiping out the helpful bacteria.

When a C. diff infection takes hold, it releases toxins that inflame the lining of the colon, causing symptoms ranging from slightly loose stools to severe diarrhea, as well as fever and abdominal pain.

What are risk factors for C. diff?

An estimated two-thirds of C. diff infections originate in hospitals, long-term care facilities, or other health care settings. Often, a C. diff infection develops once the patient is home. And cases acquired solely in the community (not in a hospital or similar setting) have also been on the rise.

People are seven to 10 times more likely to get C. diff while taking antibiotics and for up to one month after, according to the CDC. For some people, an infection may occur several months after completing a course of antibiotics. However, antibiotic use alone does not mean a person who is exposed to the bacteria will necessarily get an infection, or a bad one at that.

Also, C. diff bacteria can survive for months and aren’t easily eradicated by all disinfectants (including alcohol-based hand sanitizers). Only cleaners such as bleach can kill the spores. Thoroughly washing your hands with soap and water can remove spores from hands.

Other risk factors include the following:

  • Immunosuppressive medications: People who are undergoing chemotherapy and other treatments that suppress the immune system are less able to defend themselves against C. diff.
  • People over age 65: Almost half of infections are in people younger than 65, but more than 90 percent of C. diff-related deaths are in people over age 65.
  • Use of proton inhibitor pumps: Medications that decrease acid in the stomach can make you more susceptible to C. diff.

What are the symptoms of C. diff?

Symptoms vary based on how inflamed the colon has become, but can range from slightly loose stools to more than two dozen episodes of diarrhea a day. Abdominal pain and fever can also occur.

In severe cases, C. diff infection can lead to life-threatening dehydration (from loss of fluids due to diarrhea), low blood pressure, a condition called toxic megacolon (an acutely distended colon that requires surgery), and colon perforation.

How is C. diff diagnosed?

Doctors will suspect C. diff infection when a person develops diarrhea within two months of using an antibiotic. A lab test confirms the diagnosis by looking for one of the toxins produced by C. diff in a stool sample.

Imaging tests such as abdominal X-rays or computed tomography may be done if a serious complication (toxic megacolon or colon perforation) is suspected.

How is C. diff treated?

C. diff is treated with the very thing that most often causes it—antibiotics. However, if you contract C. diff while on antibiotics, your doctor will likely have you stop the medication you are taking and try a different type.

Many infections respond to treatment—typically with a 10-day course, although some people may need longer. Though it’s not common, surgery to remove the affected portion of the colon may be required to treat complications of serious infections.

Unfortunately, C. diff reinfection is fairly common, occurring in about 20 percent of patients. For those patients, a stronger type of antibiotic may be necessary, or a fecal transplant (using stool transferred from a healthy patient). This method, says Matthew Grant, MD, a Yale Medicineinfectious diseases specialist, is often more effective than antibiotics.

How can C. diff be prevented?

To prevent a C. diff infection, you can do the following:

  • Avoid the unnecessary use of antibiotics.
  • Wash your hands thoroughly for at least 20 seconds with soap and water.
  • Clean infected surfaces with disinfectants such as bleach in places where someone is known to have C. diff.
  • If you have C. diff, close the lid when flushing the toilet, as the spores can travel through the air.

What stands out about Yale Medicine’s approach to C. diff?

At Yale Medicine, our physicians are at the forefront of preventing C. diff infections. “We have rolled out a new initiative to prevent the unnecessary prescribing of antibiotics for hospitalized patients, and we are starting to use an antibody that reduces the risk of C. diff relapse,” says Dr. Grant.

Clostridium Difficile (C. Diff) (2024)

FAQs

How does a person get Clostridium difficile? ›

C. diff germs spread from person to person in poop (stool), but the bacteria are often found in the environment.

What does Clostridium difficile stool look like? ›

Frequent, foul smelling, watery stools characterize mild cases of C. difficile disease. More severe symptoms, indicative of pseudomembranous colitis, include diarrhea that contains blood and mucous and abdominal cramps.

What is the leading cause of C. diff? ›

Any antibiotic can cause C. difficile infection. But the antibiotics that most often lead to C. difficile infection include: Clindamycin. Cephalosporins.

Does C. diff ever go away? ›

People with Clostridium difficile infections typically recover within two weeks of starting antibiotic treatment. However, many people become reinfected and need additional therapy. Most recurrences happen one to three weeks after stopping antibiotic therapy, although some occur as long as two or three months later.

What kills Clostridium difficile? ›

An EPA-approved disinfectant (EPA: LIST K: EPA's Registered Antimicrobial Products Effective against Clostridium difficile Spores) or 1:10 dilution of 5.25% sodium hypochlorite (household bleach) and water freshly mixed daily should be used to disinfect the rooms of those residents with symptomatic (e.g., diarrhea) ...

How contagious is C. diff to a healthy person? ›

People can get infected if they touch surfaces contaminated with feces, and then touch their mouth. Healthcare workers can spread the bacteria to their patients if their hands are contaminated. For healthy people, C. difficile does not pose a health risk.

Why is C. difficile so bad? ›

In severe cases, C. diff infection can lead to life-threatening dehydration (from loss of fluids due to diarrhea), low blood pressure, a condition called toxic megacolon (an acutely distended colon that requires surgery), and colon perforation.

How to tell if someone has a C. diff? ›

The most common symptoms are:
  1. watery diarrhoea, which can be bloody.
  2. painful tummy cramps.
  3. feeling sick.
  4. signs of dehydration, such as a dry mouth, headaches and peeing less often than normal.
  5. a high temperature (fever) of above 38C (100.4F)
  6. loss of appetite and weight loss.
May 29, 2023

What does C. diff smell like? ›

Many people have noticed a distinctive odor with C. diff diarrhea. They describe it as unusually strong and oddly sweet.

What not to eat with C. diff? ›

diff infection may want to avoid or limit the following foods: whole milk or foods made from whole milk, as the person may become sensitive to lactose during the infection. acidic or spicy foods. greasy or fatty foods.

Can I kiss someone with C. diff? ›

difficile diarrhea, they should take precautions and wear gloves and wash hands afterward. If clothes or bedding become soiled, wash them in the washing machine with hot soapy water. May I kiss and hug my family and friends? Yes.

What are the end stages of C. diff? ›

Some who are infected develop serious problems with symptoms such as:
  • Abdominal pain.
  • Pseudomembranous colitis.
  • Toxic megacolon.
  • Colon perforation.
  • Dehydration from diarrhea.
  • Sepsis.
  • Organ failure due to septic shock.
  • Death.

Who is most likely to get Clostridium difficile? ›

People over age 65: Almost half of infections are in people younger than 65, but more than 90 percent of C. diff-related deaths are in people over age 65. Use of proton inhibitor pumps: Medications that decrease acid in the stomach can make you more susceptible to C. diff.

Is Clostridium difficile airborne or contact? ›

Diff spores are mainly present on touch surfaces, there is evidence of these spores traveling through the air and infecting a wider range of surfaces than previously thought.

What is the common mode of transmission of Clostridium difficile? ›

difficile spores. Mode of Transmission: C. difficile is spread through the fecal-oral route.

Can you get Clostridium difficile from food? ›

difficile can be caused by transmission on food. Spores of C. difficile, like those of C. perfringens, can occur in meat and survive temperatures and times recommended for cooking.

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