We do not know how Larry contacted it. The logical place would be in the hospital or one of the Dr's offices bathrooms. It is also possible that with his body being so immune compromised, it occurred all on its own. I do know that it has complicated his situation this past month so that he was not given a fair chance to slow down his cancer. We are both hoping that this week brings better results.
What is C. Diff / Clostridium
Difficile?
C. Diff is a very
tough bacteria that exists naturally in the world, but is usually associated
with being prevalent in health-care settings. If the bacteria is ingested, the
good flora in the intestines usually fights it off. However, if you
are immune compromised, or if you are currently on antibiotics (or were
recently), you may not have enough good flora in your gut to fight off
the bacteria. Given this environment, the bacteria can take hold
and multiply in the intestines. This bacteria releases toxins which can result in very serious illness. C. Difficile is
also very smart. When the bacteria is in a hostile environment (like when
C diff treatment begins), it can form a hard shell and become a spore.
This spore can then lie dormant in the intestines until the next
opportunity arises to thrive and multiply.
C. Diff Symptoms
Not everyone will
necessarily have the same symptoms. Some may experience episode after episode
of watery diarrhea, with or without mucous. Others will experience
colitis symptoms and may expel blood, and can also have intense abdominal pain
and fever along with the diarrhea. Quite often, ingesting food or water
will almost immediately cause the patient to race to the bathroom as the body
is always trying to expel the toxins, and anything else that exists in the
intestines.
If you ever get stomach
flu symptoms after taking antibiotics, get to the doctor, and do not take any
medicines that will slow down the digestion process. Immodium and other
anti-diarrhea OTC products just trap the
bacteria and toxins in your system even longer.
Keep in mind not
every case of stomach pain/diarrhea is caused by C. Diff. Yet if it is persistant you will want it
diagnosed ASAP. Wherever you go for
diagnosis, make sure you tell them you have been taking an antibiotic, even if
it was 2 months prior, so they know to test for C. Diff. As a warning,
much of the medical community is not real familiar with C.diff, so don’t let
the doctor dismiss you by saying you are too young or too healthy. C.
Diff does not discriminate! A stool test is not the most fun test to
take, but a proper diagnosis is crucial to get Clostridium Difficile under
control, before damage is done to your colon. Be sure that you get a PCR Assay test done on only the watery portion of your stool. This is the most current accurate way of testing in 2012.
Examples Of C. Diff Events
A Dr. prescribes you some Clindamycin (a MAJOR
offender when it comes to C. Diff.- Dentists love to dispense it ) to prevent infection. You take the antibiotic for 7 days and the next thing you know, your intestines are suddenly revolting
against you. You may or may not get a fever, along with any combination of the
symptoms that were listed above. At first you might think you are coming
down with stomach flu. However, it is a flu like you have never had
before. All you know is that you are in misery, getting dehydrated, and losing
weight. What you didn’t know was there was a war going on behind the scenes
in your intestinal tract. That Clindamycin was destroying all your
wonderful, good bacteria in your gut, and at the same time, you were
unknowingly exposed to C. Diff somewhere out there in the world. C. Diff
had no natural enemies in your gut, and since it is an opportunist, it took
over and started multiplying, releasing those toxins along the way.
Doctors offices/Hospitals are the highest risk
areas. High touch surfaces-including door knobs, toilet handles, faucet
handles, blood pressure cuffs can contain spores. In the hospital-bedrails, call buttons,
remotes, phones, flow control devices for IV's can all be contaminated. In one
study spores were found in 49% of rooms occupied by patients(CDI,apic, 2008). It
is important to understand the persistence of C. Diff in the environment.
Several studies found that spores can remain on hard surfaces, which have not
been cleaned properly, for as long as five months.
C Diff Prevention Tips:
1.
Avoid antibiotics if
at all possible. Make sure what you have is a bacterial infection, as
antibiotics do nothing against viruses. (NOTE: This includes topical
antibiotics, especially clindamycin-based creams.)
2.
Altering the acidity
of the stomach and GI tract can kill off good bacteria, allowing C-Diff to grow
out of control. Proton Pump Inhibitors (PPIs) such as Prilosec and Nexium are
now thought to put people at more risk for developing C Diff. http://www.fda.gov/safety/medwatch/safetyinformation/safetyalertsforhumanmedicalproducts/ucm290838.htm
3.
Wash your hands
constantly, and make sure you wash for 20-30 seconds, being sure to scrub under the fingernails. There
is also a very small percentage of adults that naturally carry the bacteria,
but are asymptomatic. These carriers may be leaving C. Diff bacteria just
about anywhere (like on shopping cart handles), so vigorous hand washing is
crucial no matter where you are.
4.
As a follow-up to
point number 3, do not put your fingers in your mouth. Do not bite your
fingernails. Do not make it easy for the bacteria to get into your
system.
5.
Change toothbrushes after every illness.
6.
Take probiotics every
single time you take antibiotics, and also eat some yogurt or kefir. Lifeway
makes a Kefir smoothie product that tastes much like yogurt and is loaded with
great probiotics. Just be sure to purchase kefir/greek yogurts with no sugar.
Add your own cinnamon, fruit or stevia. Also, oats contain beta glucans and are
highly beneficial in helping to re-establish the gut flora. Purchase organic
when possible.
7.
There are 2 probiotics
that have been found to help fight C. Diff: Saccharomyces Bboulardii and Lactobacillus GG. SB is a yeast-based probiotic which is unaffected by the
bacteria-killing affects of antibiotics, so it can be taken any time of day.
Lactobacillus GG is a bacteria-based probiotic. It is best if you take your
bacteria-based probiotic 2 hours or so after you take your antibiotic, so the
antibiotic does not destroy the good bacteria in the probiotic .Continue to
take the probiotics for a couple months after you finish your antibiotic to
help keep building up that gut flora.
8.
If you are ever hospitalized, bring your own
cleaning solution and wipe down that room. The ONLY thing that may kill the C. Diff bacteria is bleach.
Bring a spray bottle with a 10:1 bleach/water solution and wipe down the
bed rails, the phone, remote, etc. Regular wipes will not work. In
addition, make sure your hospital roommate does not have symptoms of C. Diff.
Patients with C. Diff should be placed in isolation, but hospitals do not
always take the illness seriously enough, or recognize it quickly.
9.
Insist that health
care workers wash their hands before treating you, or ask them to put on
gloves. Do not settle for them to rub a little hand sanitizer on their
hands, that does nothing to kill C. Diff. It is the vigorous hand-washing
that will get Clostridium Difficile bacteria off the hands, along with good
paper-towel drying.
10.
There is much
conflicting advice on effective treatments against the spores. Alcohol based
cleaners are not effective yet are still being used. Soap and water can help remove
spores but does not kill them. It just washes them away. Yet this is still one
of the best methods of prevention. Spores have shown to still be active after
10 minutes of washing with bleach. Yet this cleaning method is the only method
cited as a factor in reducing the incidence of C. Diff. in hospitals. However
the study that sites this also notes that the results were not constistent.
11.
C. Diff can strike up
to 60 days after completion of an antibiotic, so don’t dismiss the possibility
of C. Diff just because you didn’t take antibiotics in the last couple of
weeks.
What If You Need Antibiotics
Overuse of antibiotics has become a real
problem as bacteria mutates and the drugs become less effective. Doctors have
over-prescribed for decades and now they are becoming much less effective. Unfortunately, most people will need an antibiotic at some point
in their future. Assuming you have a bacterial infection and you have no
choice but to take an antibiotic. If you feel yourself getting sick, start
taking probiotics to try to build up the gut flora.
Ask for sputum cultures if you have a
sinus/respiratory infection. That way you
will know if the illness is viral or bacterial. If you have a Urinary Tract
Infection (UTI), make sure the bacteria is cultured so that the doctor knows
what type of antibiotic will kill the bacteria instead of just guessing with a
broad-spectrum antibiotic. If you must take an
antibiotic, ask your doctor for the most narrow spectrum antibiotic you can use
that will still kill the infection. The following is breakdown of how ‘safe’
different antibiotics are.
Following List is compliments of Cdiffsupport.org. This website provides a wealth of information and is a
great resource for anyone who needs C. Diff support.
MOST LIKELY TO CAUSE C. DIFFICILE:
Clindamycin (aka Cleocin)
Keflex
Ceftin
Ceclor
Cipro (this was just moved to high-offender from medium)
All other cephalosporins
Amoxicillin
Augmentin
Penicillin VK
Keflex
Ceftin
Ceclor
Cipro (this was just moved to high-offender from medium)
All other cephalosporins
Amoxicillin
Augmentin
Penicillin VK
MIDDLE OF THE ROAD:
Levoflex (also Levaquin)
Tequin
Avelox
Bactrim
Doxycycline
Erythromycin
Biaxin
Zithromax
Levoflex (also Levaquin)
Tequin
Avelox
Bactrim
Doxycycline
Erythromycin
Biaxin
Zithromax
SAFER TO TAKE:
(Remember, no antibiotic is 100 percent ‘safe’ when it comes to C Diff)
Macrodantin (Macrobid)
Sulfa
Tetracycline
Aminoglycoside
Flagyl (metronidiazole)
Oral and IV Vancomycin
Macrodantin (Macrobid)
Sulfa
Tetracycline
Aminoglycoside
Flagyl (metronidiazole)
Oral and IV Vancomycin
Tips
For Dealing With C Diff:
If you do get C. Diff, consider combining your treatment with
the above mentioned probiotics. Drug treatment does work but not for
everyone. It can suppress the infection but not eradicate it. About 20
percent of people will relapse within a couple months or so of ending
treatment, and it can be a very difficult bug to kill if you have repeated
relapses. So, build up that gut flora as much as possible so you create
as hostile an environment in your intestines as possible to keep the C. Diff
away. Also, if you are infected, clean the bathroom with a bleach/water
solution, and always close the lid of the toilet before flushing to prevent any
bacteria from being propelled out of the toilet bowl. (Closing the lid of
the toilet before flushing is a good idea regardless.) If you have a
second bathroom make sure rest of family members use that bathroom, and you use
your own, if you use good techniques your family will be spared. Again,
hand washing is very important. Also, try to eat a variety of foods if
your stomach can tolerate it, and eat yogurt and/or kefir daily to help build
up the intestinal flora.
C Diff Treatment of Vancomycin
The first treatment is usually for 14 days. If diarrhea is
not under control, the doctor may
consider prescribing 6 weeks or so of tapering/pulsing the Vancomycin
Week 1: 125 mg 4x/day
Week 2: 125 mg 2x/day
Week 3: 125 mg 1x/day
Week 4: 125 mg once every other day
Weeks 5 and 6: 125 mg once every third day
The reason for the pulse/taper method is so that the body has a
chance to rebuild the flora as the amount of medicine is decreased. Doses are
later given on alternating days to attack any spores that hatch back into
bacteria, in hopes of killing off the remaining spores.
If Vancomycin does not work, there are other
drugs that can be considered. Dificid (Fidaxomicin) is a drug that came
out on the market in 2011 that is said to have a lower relapse rate than
Vancomycin. However, most insurance companies will not cover this as a first drug.
Treatments on the Horizon For CDiff
C Diff has gotten a
lot of attention in recent years, mainly because there have been an increasing
amount of cases each year. However, there is a lot of research going on
regarding C Diff, which will hopefully lead to more successful treatments in
the future.
A few of the
treatments currently in development are as follows:
1.
Monoclonal antibodies. This therapy would still require
standard antibiotic (vanco/flagyl, etc) treatment. However, monoclonal
antibodies would be injected via IV during antibiotic treatment in the hopes of
preventing relapse. This treatment is currently in phase III clinical
trials.
2.
Vaccine. There
are two different companies that have a vaccine in progress. Intercell just completed a phase I trial and Sanofi-Aventis is in phase II trial for C diff prevention (as
of Feb, 2012).
3.
Non-toxigenic C Diff treatment. Viropharma is in phase II trials for their c diff treatment,
which actually uses C diff against itself in a sense. The patient would still
take standard C diff antibiotic treatments such as vanco, dificid, etc.
After completion of treatment, a two week oral dose of the non toxigenic
strain of C diff called VP 20621 would be taken. In this case, the
non-toxigenic c diff bacteria would multiply and take over the intestine, which
would crowd out and not allow for toxigenic C diff to take hold. Over
time, normal gut flora would develop and repopulate, but while that is in
progress, the VP 20621 would prevent toxic C diff from recurring.
Hi Melody,
ReplyDeleteI was a student of Professor Metzger's at Loyola and I just finished in May. I heard about his cancer and your blog from a friend. My deepest heartfelt warm wishes and prayers are with you and your family in this time of need. I read most of the blog and felt so upset. I can barely imagine how Larry, you, or the children must feel. Professor Metzger was one of the best professors I had the distinguished honor of learning under while at Loyola. Myself and other MSA students are besides ourselves. I was wondering if you were accepting donations or visits to help out in your time of need? Let me know if there is anything you think his students can do to help, I'd be happy to try to put something together. I tried to find your email address off this site but couldn't find it. Please feel free to email me at katherine.rhead@gmail.com.
With love,
Katherine Rhead
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