It seemed to come out of nowhere a virulent strain of bacteria called Clostridium difficile. It picked up that name because when it was first discovered, it was difficult to grow in the lab.
C. difficile is not an uncommon bacterium but it had some infectious disease specialists worrying that it has become the most dangerous superbug to hit North American hospitals in a decade. In October 2004, researchers found that 7,000 people had been infected with C. difficile in Montreal since 2003, and at least 600 of them died. Hospitals in Ottawa and Calgary have also experienced periodic outbreaks.
What is C. difficile?
C. difficile bacteria grow in the large bowel. They thrive in the stool compressed inside the colon.
The bacteria produce two toxins that cause diarrhea and damage the cells lining the bowel. However, not all strains of C. difficile produce toxin. These strains are unlikely to cause disease and patients colonized by them remain healthy.
In severe cases, C. difficile can cause critical illness and death in elderly or very sick patients.
Why are health care officials concerned?
The experts investigating the outbreak say the bacterium appears to have mutated into a highly contagious and lethal strain and they don't know why. It has caused almost four times the usual number of cases of severe diarrhea in hospitals, and can persist in the body for months despite repeated antibiotic treatments.
Doctors know C. difficile flourish after patients take certain antibiotics. Now it seems any antibiotic can bring on the disease.
"Something happened 18 to 24 months ago, where the use of particular antibiotics didn't seem to matter anymore," said Dr. Mark Miller, chief of infectious diseases at Montreal's Jewish General Hospital.
How do I get it?
The bacteria are almost exclusively picked up in hospital. Infections tend to arise when a hospitalized patient who has been unwittingly colonized by the bug is given antibiotics for another condition.
Your risk of contracting the bacteria rises if you're undergoing chemotherapy, have abdominal surgery or have other stomach or intestine problems.
C. difficile bacteria also make spores that can be found in the environment on toilet seats or doorknobs, for instance.
How does it spread?
If you get diarrhea from C. difficile infection, you can spread the bacteria by touching something like a doorknob if you haven't washed your hands. The spores produced by C. difficile can withstand the effects of drying and direct sunlight and survive on surfaces for weeks.
When someone else comes in contact with those spores and touches their hand to their face, for instance, the spores can get into the gastro-intestinal tract and cause diarrhea.
How is it treated?
Even though the bacteria are sometimes triggered when a patient takes antibiotics, the most effective treatments are certain antibiotics. Short courses three to five days of antibiotics such as flagyl and vancomycin are most common. In some cases, doctors also inject patients with immunoglobulins to boost their immune systems.
How is the spread of C. difficile controlled?
Infected patients are often separated from non-affected patients. Hospital staff who deal with infected patients will wear disposable gloves and aprons.
Areas that patients come in contact with are rigorously cleaned with warm water and detergent to remove spores that can spread the condition.
The most efficient way to prevent person-to-person spread of C. difficile is to thoroughly wash your hands before and after patient contact.
What should I do if I'm caring for someone affected by C. difficile?
Wash your hands often:
- Before you eat or prepare food.
- After you use the toilet or handle a bedpan.
- Before and after you touch a person with C. difficile.
More tips:
- If you must handle stool, wear rubber gloves.
- Clean the washroom daily.
- Put disposable wastes like diapers into plastic bags, tie them and discard with the rest of the trash.
- If clothes are heavily soiled with stool, wash them separately with detergent and bleach. Do not mix with the rest of your laundry.
Related
Media
- Erica Johnson reports on 'Dirty Doctors'
- (Runs 3:04)
CBC stories
- Dirty Doctors
- CBC-TV Marketplace
- Coroner concludes review into C. difficile deaths
- Jan. 31, 2007
- Staph bacteria cause deadly pneumonia
- Jan. 15, 2007
- Treatment to rid colonized patients of MRSA effective, could lower infection rates
- Jan. 18, 2007
- Superbug at Canada's doorstep
- Jan. 2, 2007
- Superbugs growing threat in Canadian hospitals: report
- Sept. 13, 2006
- Quebec vows to cut hospital infections
- June 22, 2005
- Bedside Bibles returning to hospital
- May 13, 2005