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Printable Handouts
Navigable Slide Index
- Introduction
- Koch's postulates (1882)
- Case
- Clostridium difficile (1)
- Clindamycin associated colitis due to C. difficile
- Clostridium difficile (2)
- C. difficile and the gastrointestinal microbiota
- "Community thinking"
- How to study the gut microbiota?
- 16S rRNA
- Antibiotic-associated diarrhea (AAD)
- Microbial ecology of AAD
- Microbial community associated with AAD
- The enterome and gastrointestinal homeostasis
- C. difficile and antibiotic-associated diarrhea
- Patients/clinical results
- Microbial ecology: diversity
- Collectors curves/rarefaction
- Initial and recurrent C. difficile rarefaction
- C. difficile colitis - microbial ecology insights
- How microbes defend and define us
- Resilience of gut microbial community structure
- Microbial communities in mice
- Microbial response to antibiotic stress (1)
- Microbial response to antibiotic stress (2)
- Microbial community diversity and antibiotics
- C. difficile in model systems
- C. difficile associated disease -a mouse model(1)
- C. difficile associated disease -a mouse model(2)
- Dissecting role of antibiotics
- Two groups of C. difficile treated mice
- A normal mouse colon
- A colon from an animal affected by c. difficile (1)
- An infected animal with a benign response
- A colon from an animal affected by c. difficile (2)
- Colon histopathology difference
- Vero cell cytotoxin assay on tissue
- C. difficile load in tissues
- Differences in microbial communities
- Cefoperazone treatment (1)
- Cefoperazone treatment (2)
- Microbial ecology in cefoperazone treated mice
- Survival in cefoperazone treated mice
- Model
- Summary
- Acknowledgements
Topics Covered
- C. difficile and the antibiotic-associated colitis
- Changes in the microbiota due to antibiotics predisposed to C. difficile infection
- Use of culture-independent techniques to study the gut microbiota
- Antibiotics can have reproducible effects on the gut microbiota
- Animal models and human studies provide insight into the role of the gut microbiota in mediating colonization resistance against C. difficile infection
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Talk Citation
Young, V. (2011, September 27). The microbiota in the development of colitis due to Clostridium difficile infection [Video file]. In The Biomedical & Life Sciences Collection, Henry Stewart Talks. Retrieved November 10, 2024, from https://doi.org/10.69645/KKOJ8915.Export Citation (RIS)
Publication History
Financial Disclosures
- Dr. Vincent Young has not informed HSTalks of any commercial/financial relationship that it is appropriate to disclose.
The microbiota in the development of colitis due to Clostridium difficile infection
Published on September 27, 2011
41 min
A selection of talks on Clinical Practice
Transcript
Please wait while the transcript is being prepared...
0:00
Hello, My name is
Vincent Young and
I'm at the University
of Michigan, Ann Arbor.
Today I will be discussing
the relationship between the
indigenous microbiota of
the gastrointestinal tract and
the development of colitis
due to infection with
Clostridium difficile.
0:17
When discussing
infectious diseases it is
important to reconsider
Koch's postulates
which were formulated over
100 years ago to prove
causality of a microorganism
with an infectious disease.
According to Koch,
a pathogen must be found
in all cases of disease.
This pathogen has to be isolated
from an infected host,
grown in pure culture,
and then recreate disease
when given experimentally
to a susceptible host.
The susceptible host will
then develop the disease
and the pathogen
can be re-isolated.
0:52
As an illustration of
an infectious disease
for which Koch's postulates
have been fulfilled,
it is important to consider
the following case.
This is the case of
an elderly gentleman
who has chronic obstructive
pulmonary disease.
He is admitted with an
acute exacerbation of
his chronic bronchitis and is
treated with a
broad-spectrum antibiotic.
In this case, piperacillin
and tazobactam.
The patient
who is admitted for a
pulmonary complication
improves from a
pulmonary standpoint.
However, by hospital day three,
the patient develops
abdominal pain, diarrhea,
and hypotension and is
transferred to the
intensive care unit.
1:34
This is an example
of a severe case of
what most clinicians would
recognize as colitis
caused by Clostridium
difficile infection.
As seen in the left-hand figure,
if patients they receive an
endoscopic examination of
their colon they will have
yellow pseudomembranes on
their mucosal surface.
In severe cases, this
can lead to perforation
as is seen on the gross
pathologic specimen on the right.
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