Correct Answer: A - Clostridium difficile is toxin-mediated
The correct answer is A: Clostridium difficile causes diarrhea through a toxin-mediated mechanism, not through invasion of the intestinal mucosa. 1
Pathophysiologic Mechanisms by Pathogen
Clostridium difficile - Toxin-Mediated (CORRECT)
- C. difficile is not invasive and toxin production is the key to pathogenesis - non-toxigenic strains do not cause diarrhea 1
- The organism produces toxins A and B that bind to epithelial cells, causing internalization and subsequent cellular damage 1, 2
- These toxins function as glucosyltransferases that disrupt the cytoskeleton of colonocytes through glucosylation of Rho family GTPases, leading to cell death and colitis 1, 3, 2
- The toxins disrupt epithelial integrity via microtubules and cell-cell tight junctions, resulting in cytokine release (such as IL-8), promoting inflammatory infiltrate in the colonic mucosa, fluid shifts leading to diarrhea, and epithelial necrosis 1
Enterotoxigenic E. coli - NOT Preformed Toxin (INCORRECT)
- Option B is incorrect because ETEC produces toxins in vivo, not preformed toxins 1
- Preformed toxin producers include organisms like Staphylococcus aureus and Clostridium perfringens that cause foodborne outbreaks through toxins produced in contaminated food before ingestion 1
- ETEC causes secretory diarrhea through heat-labile and heat-stable enterotoxins produced after colonization of the small intestine
Salmonella - Invasive with Variable Inflammation (CORRECT mechanism but wrong answer choice)
- Salmonella is correctly described as an invasive enteropathogen causing variable inflammation 1, 4
- It penetrates intestinal epithelial cells and can cause systemic bacteremia 4
- Clinical presentation includes fever (58-100% of cases), bloody diarrhea (25-51% of cases), and prominent inflammatory signs 4
Vibrio cholerae - NOT Invasive (INCORRECT)
- Option D is incorrect because V. cholerae causes diarrhea through enterotoxin production, not mucosal invasion
- V. cholerae is the classical example of secretory diarrhea mediated by cholera toxin 5
- The organism remains in the intestinal lumen and does not invade the mucosa
Clinical Implications
The distinction between toxin-mediated and invasive mechanisms has important diagnostic and therapeutic implications:
- Toxin-mediated pathogens (C. difficile, V. cholerae, ETEC) cause watery diarrhea without significant mucosal inflammation 1, 5
- Invasive pathogens (Salmonella, Shigella, invasive E. coli) cause dysentery-like illness with fever, abdominal cramps, and bloody diarrhea 1, 4
- Testing strategies differ: C. difficile requires toxin assays, while invasive pathogens require stool cultures 1