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Pseudomembranous Colitis (PMC)
Etiology

The etiology of PMC in the preantibiotic era associated with a variety of conditions is unknown
Currently, most cases of PMC are associated with antibiotic use and overgrowth of the commensal anaerobe C.difficile
Pathogenesis

Antibiotic associated C.difficile PMC does not appear to arise in antibiotic resistant strains of C.difficile
Antibiotic disturbance of the normal anaerobic gut flora appears to allow overgrowth of toxigenic strains of C.difficile
The clinical and pathologic effects are caused by the production of Toxin A and Toxin B by C.difficile
Toxin A is mildly cytopathic but induces large fluid shifts and mucosal inflammation. Toxin B is intensely cytopathic,
Epidemiology

The incidence of C.difficile colonization is 2-3% in a normal healthy population
The presence of C.difficile colonization, presence of C.difficile toxin in stool and the incidence of PMC also increase with age
The antibiotics most commonly associated with C.difficile PMC are: Ampicillin or Amoxicillin, Clindamycin, and the Cephalosporins
Asymptomatic C.difficile carriers, bedpans, toilets and floors have been implicated in nosocomial mini-epidemics of PMC
General Gross Description

The lesions of Pseudomembranous Enterocolitis(PMC) when secondary to antibiotic usage with C.difficile toxin production are usually restricted to the colon, with non-antibiotic associated cases often involving the small intestine
Early lesions appear as discrete plaques of yellow white exudate <10mm separated by normal or mildly hyperemic mucosa
Lesions may progress to form an exudative membrane covering most of the surface of the colon
Rarely, severe untreated cases progress to broad ulceration of the mucosal surface
•Examples:
Pseudomembranous Colitis Pseudomembranous Colitis - Endoscopy Pseudomembranous Colitis - Mucosal Surface
General Microscopic Description

The earliest lesion is punctate necrosis of the surface epithelium with an overlying accumulation of fibrin, polys, mucous and necrotic epithelial cells(summit lesion). The lamina propria adjoining the area of necrosis has an infiltrate of polys and eosinophils
The second stage lesion has necrosis of superficial crypts with a heavier infiltrate of polys and a plaquelike pseudomembrane of polys, fibrin and cellular debris which is plastered against the mucosal surface
The hallmark of most lesions is their involvement of the superficial mucosa only
Rarely, progressive necrosis of deeper layers of the mucosa occur producing deep denuding ulcerations
•Examples:
Pseudomembranous Colitis
Clinical Correlation

Most cases of PMC are associated with antibiotic use, with 2/3rds of patients experiencing watery diarrhea during therapy and 1/3rd afterwards
Other frequent symptoms are abdominal pain, left lower quadrant tenderness, low grade fever and occasionally signs of sepsis
While PMC in the preantibiotic era was often a fulminating disease, most current cases are associated with antibiotic use, are diagnosed early in the course of the disease and are cured with appropriate antibiotic therapy
Relapses occur in 20% of cases
References

Cotran RS, Kumar V, Robbins SL: Robbins Pathologic Basis of Disease. 5th ed. Philadelphia, W.B. Saunders, 1994, pp. 795
Sleisenger MH, Fordtran JS. Gastrointestinal disease. 5th ed. Philadelphia: Saunders, 1993, pp. 1174-1189

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Pseudomembranous Colitis (PMC)
Synopsis by: Martin Nadel M.D. (T67000M40590)[210]
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