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  • Title: Antibiotic-associated colitis: always pseudomembranous?
    Author: Di Febo G, Milazzo G, Gizzi G, Biasco G, Miglioli M.
    Journal: Endoscopy; 1982 Jul; 14(4):128-30. PubMed ID: 7094898.
    Abstract:
    Among the 14 cases of antibiotic-induced colitis, endoscopic features were: in 9 cases typical pseudomembranes, in 4 cases petechiae or ecchymosis or suggillation-like redness with near-to-normal surrounding mucosa. In one case induced by Spiramycin, a macrolide that had never been previously indicated as being responsible for the disease, the endoscopic picture was 'atypical' and directed us towards a severe ulcerative colitis. These forms are very rare and usually limited to the right or transverse colon which suggests, if possible, a total colonoscopy. The nosographic picture of these cases is not quite clear, since they could represent both the most severe stages within 'non-pseudomembranous' antibiotic-induced colitis and autonomous forms whose evolution does not contribute in any way to the formation of pseudomembranes.
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