Overview
- Editors:
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Jean-Claude Rambaud
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Service d’Hépato-Gastro-Entérologie, Hôpital Saint-Lazare, Paris Cedex 10, France
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J. Thomas LaMont
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Division of Gastroenterology, Beth Israel Hospital, Boston, USA
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About this book
Jean-Claude Rambaud The place occupied today in basic and clinical research by intestinal disease related to Clostridium difficile is such that it is hard to remember that this range of disorders was completely identified only in 1977-1978, even though pieces of the puzzle had been identified much earlier. A brief historical review of the discovery of the enteropathogenicity of C. difficile in man might thus be useful. The bacterium was described in 1935 in the stools of infants, using the name Bacillus difficilis [7]. Until 1977, the microorganism, renamed C. difficile, considered to be of endogenous origin, was isolated only in rare cases of abscess or infection, most often unrelated to the digestive tract. Its role in genito-urinary infections [6] was not confirmed. However, the frequency of infant healthy carriers was recognized from the outset [7, 13]. Pseudo-membranous colitis (PMC) was described in 1883 following a gastroenterostomy. Many cases of this condition were published subsequently before the antibiotic era, describing various risk factors [4]. However the disease began to flourish only with the increasingly wide use of antibiotics. Antibiotic associated PMC was first described as an enterocolitis, though with little pathological evidence. It was principally related to the use of chloramphenicol and tetracyclines and attributed to proliferation of Staphylococcus au reus [ 11], a concept strengthened by the spectacular therapeutic action of vancomycin.
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Article
Open access
03 April 2019
Table of contents (14 papers)
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- Soad Tabaqchali, Mark Wilks
Pages 63-71
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- Michel Delmée, Michel Warny
Pages 83-91
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- Frédéric Barbut, Jean-Claude Petit
Pages 93-104
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Editors and Affiliations
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Service d’Hépato-Gastro-Entérologie, Hôpital Saint-Lazare, Paris Cedex 10, France
Jean-Claude Rambaud
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Division of Gastroenterology, Beth Israel Hospital, Boston, USA
J. Thomas LaMont