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Also, the diarrhea that came out of me is the worst thing I’ve ever smelled in my life.
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C-Diff is the worst. 100 percent do not visit that house. If you do end up visiting load up on probiotics.
I had C-Dif last year and couldn’t shake it for 3 months. It drains your soul and has something like a 6 percent death rate. Makes Rone look like nothing. I am s dealing with the side effects of c-did 18 months later. The only thing that kills c-dif spores is bleach. |
Yes that is basically what killed my mom. She got it in the nursing home and it turned into toxic megacolon. Don't think she ever got rid of the c diff we brought her home and I took care of her until she passed. I wore gloves and It did smell bad obviously and very running,
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You would think the mother would cancel the trip? If I had something as horrible as this sounds, I would tell my kids to stay the **** away from me until I was sure it was gone. Obviously, an end of life scenario like dirk was describing would be different, but a holiday trip or whatever? Nope.
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Until this thread, I didn't know something like this existed. After researching it, it doesn't sound fun.
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That's really more of an invasion than an infection |
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With that said, note to self, avoid. |
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also https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/20415567/ BACKGROUND. The high transmissibility and widespread environmental contamination by Clostridium difficile suggests the possibility of airborne dissemination of spores. We measured airborne and environmental C. difficile adjacent to patients with symptomatic C. difficile infection (CDI). METHODS. We conducted air sampling adjacent to 63 patients with CDI for 180 h in total and for 101 h in control settings. Environmental samples were obtained from surfaces adjacent to the patient and from communal areas of the ward. C. difficile isolates were characterized by ribotyping and multilocus variable-number tandem-repeat analysis to determine relatedness. RESULTS. Of the first 50 patients examined (each for 1 h), only 12% had positive air samples, most frequently those with active symptoms of CDI (10%, vs 2% for those with no symptoms). We intensively sampled the air around 10 patients with CDI symptoms, each for 10 h over 2 days, as well as a total of 346 surface sites. C. difficile was isolated from the air in the majority of these cases (7 of 10 patients tested) and from the surfaces around 9 of the patients; 60% of patients had both air and surface environments that were positive for C. difficile. Molecular characterization confirmed an epidemiological link between airborne dispersal, environmental contamination, and CDI cases. CONCLUSIONS. Aerosolization of C. difficile occurs commonly but sporadically in patients with symptomatic CDI. This may explain the widespread dissemination of epidemic strains. Our results emphasize the importance of single-room isolation as soon as possible after the onset of diarrhea to limit the dissemination of C. difficile. |
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https://www.cdc.gov/hai/pdfs/cdiff/cdiff_tagged-bw.pdf |
This is a poop thread to end all poop threads!
The King of Poop! :eek: https://musicart.xboxlive.com/7/e22f...?w=1920&h=1080 https://i5.walmartimages.com/asr/c4f...2&odnBg=FFFFFF |
Alcohol based cleaners don't kill the spores, so you must wash your hands. Bleach and peroxyacetic acid kill it. The antibiotics must likely to lead to C. diff are clindamycin, then fluoroquinolones. Treatment consists of oral vancomycin or fidaxomicin. Metronidazole is no longer used unless it is fulminant.
Have fun. |
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