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Clostridium difficile colitis: correlation of CT findings with severity of clinical disease.

Clinical records and abdominal CT scans from 64 patients with documented Clostridium difficile disease were reviewed to determine if any correlation existed between CT findings of colitis and severity of clinical disease. Clostridium difficile disease was documented with stool toxin titre levels and CT scans were performed within 3 days of stool sample. Clinical disease severity was estimated by tabulating the degree of fever, WBC count, frequency and duration of diarrhoea. Thirty-nine of 64 patients showed CT evidence of colitis of which 28/39 showed evidence of focal colitis and 11/39 had pancolitis. CT findings suggesting colitis included colonic wall thickening (39 patients), nodular mucosal thickening (11 patients), the 'accordion pattern' (3 patients), pericolonic oedema (27 patients) and ascites (10 patients). Twenty-five of 64 patients showed no CT evidence of colitis. The clinical severity of disease did not statistically differ (P < 0.05) between patients with CT evidence of colitis and those without colitis. The only CT finding that correlated with clinical severity of disease was nodular mucosal thickening which was found with significantly (P < 0.05) more frequency in patients with a WBC count > 11,000 mm3. CT changes with Cl. difficile disease correlate poorly with the clinical severity. This and negative findings do not exclude the disease.

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