Excerpt
Of the anaerobes that infect humans, the clostridia are the most widely studied. They
are involved in a variety of human diseases, the most important of which are gas
gangrene, tetanus, botulism, pseudomembranous colitis and food poisoning. In most
cases, clostridia are opportunistic pathogens; that is, one or more species
establishes a nidus of infection in a particular site in a compromised host. All
pathogenic clostridial species produce protein exotoxins (such as botulinum and
tetanus toxins) that play an important role in pathogenesis. Most generalizations about Clostridium have exceptions. The
clostridia are classically anaerobic rods, but some species can become aerotolerant
on subculture; a few species (C carnis, C histolyticum, and
C tertium) can grow under aerobic conditions. Most species are
Gram-positive, but a few are Gram-negative. Also, many Gram-positive species easily
lose the Gram reaction, resulting in Gram-negative cultures. The clostridia form characteristic spores, the position of which is useful in species
identification; however, some species do not sporulate unless exposed to exacting
cultural conditions. Many clostridia are transient or permanent members of the
normal flora of the human skin and the gastrointestinal tracts of humans and
animals. Unlike typical members of the human bacterial flora, most clostridia can
also be found worldwide in the soil. Because clostridia are ubiquitous saprophytes, many isolated from clinical specimens
are accidental contaminants and not involved in a disease process. Because these
organisms are normally found on the skin, even a pure culture of clostridia isolated
from blood may have no clinical significance. In determining the importance of a
clinical isolate of clostridia, the clinician should consider the frequency of
isolation of the species, the presence of other microbes of pathogenic potential,
and the clinical symptoms of the patient. Many clostridial infections can be
controlled by antibiotic therapy (e.g., penicillin, chloramphenicol, vancomycin,
metronidazole) accompanied, in some cases, by tissue debridement. Antitoxin therapy
and toxoid immunization are clearly useful in some clostridial infections, such as
tetanus.
Copyright © 1996, The University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston