Clostridium perfringens: Difference between revisions
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Clostridium perfringens
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*Often encapsulated short Gram-variable bacilli of varying length |
*Often encapsulated short Gram-variable bacilli of varying length |
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*Found in soil and |
*Found in soil and human (and animal) [[Gut microbiota|gut flora]] |
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*Makes necrotizing extracellular toxins |
*Makes necrotizing extracellular toxins |
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*Multiple types, based on production of major toxins, though only type A (and rarely type C) cause disease in humans |
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*Four types: |
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**Toxins include alpha-toxin (CPA), beta-toxin (CPB), epsilon-toxin (ETX), iota-toxin (ITX), enterotoxin (CPE), and necrotic enteritis B-like toxin (NetB) |
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{| class="wikitable" |
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!Type |
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!Toxins |
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!Clinical Notes |
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|A |
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|CPA only |
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|C |
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|CPA and CPB ±CPE |
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|all others |
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|Various |
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=== Epidemiology === |
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* Spores can survive cooking at normal temperatures |
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* Foodborne illness is usually associated with improperly heated or reheated gravy, beef, poultry, or other meat |
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== Clinical Manifestations == |
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* Acute infectious diarrhea |
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* Abdominal sepsis |
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* Cellulitis and myonecrosis |
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== Management == |
== Management == |
Latest revision as of 14:15, 22 June 2023
Background
Microbiology
- Often encapsulated short Gram-variable bacilli of varying length
- Found in soil and human (and animal) gut flora
- Makes necrotizing extracellular toxins
- Multiple types, based on production of major toxins, though only type A (and rarely type C) cause disease in humans
- Toxins include alpha-toxin (CPA), beta-toxin (CPB), epsilon-toxin (ETX), iota-toxin (ITX), enterotoxin (CPE), and necrotic enteritis B-like toxin (NetB)
Type | Toxins | Clinical Notes |
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A | CPA only | foodborne illnesses associated with poorly heated food and meat; gas gangrene in patients with necrotic bowel |
C | CPA and CPB ±CPE | pork product ingestion followed by enteritis necroticans (hemorrhagic necrosis of the jejunum), particularly in Papua New Guinea |
all others | Various | do not cause disease in humans |
Epidemiology
- Spores can survive cooking at normal temperatures
- Foodborne illness is usually associated with improperly heated or reheated gravy, beef, poultry, or other meat
Clinical Manifestations
- Acute infectious diarrhea
- Abdominal sepsis
- Cellulitis and myonecrosis
Management
- For gas gangrene, typically requires surgical debridement and penicillin G
- Consider adding clindamycin for theoretical decreased toxin production in toxic shock syndrome
- Otherwise, generally susceptible to erythromycin, chloramphenicol, cefazolin, cefoxitin, ceftriaxone, piperacillin, carbapenems, metronidazole, vancomycin, and linezolid