Originally published February 16 2006
Bacterial infection baffles doctors with its sudden rise
by Mike Adams, the Health Ranger, NaturalNews Editor
Clostridium difficile, a bacterial infection, can prove fatal, and health authorities like L. Clifford McDonald of the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention are left puzzled by the bacteria's sudden spread and emergence as a threat to public health.
Shultz is one of a growing number of young, otherwise healthy Americans who are being stricken by the bacterial infection known as Clostridium difficile -- or C. diff -- which appears to be spreading rapidly around the country and causing unusually severe, sometimes fatal illness.
That is raising alarm among health officials, who are concerned that many cases may be misdiagnosed and are puzzled as to what is causing the microbe to become so much more common and dangerous.
We know it's happening, but we're really not sure why it's happening or where this is going."
It may, however, be the latest example of a common, relatively benign bug that has mutated because of the overuse of antibiotics.
"This may well be another consequence of our use of antibiotics," said John G. Bartlett, an infectious-disease expert at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore.
"It's another example of an organism that all of a sudden has gotten a lot meaner and nastier."
In addition, new evidence released last week suggests that the enormous popularity of powerful new heartburn drugs may also be playing a role.
The antibiotics Flagyl (metronidazole) and vancomycin still cure many patients, but others develop stubborn infections like Shultz's that take over their lives.
Some resort to having their colon removed to end the debilitating diarrhea.
A small but disturbingly high number have died, including an otherwise healthy pregnant woman who succumbed earlier this year in Pennsylvania after miscarrying twins.
The infection usually hits people who are taking antibiotics for other reasons, but a handful of cases have been reported among people who were taking nothing, another unexpected and troubling turn in the germ's behavior.
As the drugs kill off other bacteria in the digestive system, the C. diff microbe can proliferate.
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