Warning Signs Of A C. Difficile Infection
Kidney Failure
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An individual affected by a C. difficile infection can lose a good amount of their blood volume because they are having between ten and fifteen episodes of diarrhea per day. When the volume of the blood becomes too low for the heart to compensate, blood cannot reach all parts of the body to provide the tissues with oxygen and other nutrients. The kidneys are one part of the body commonly affected by ischemia or lack of blood flow because of a hypovolemic state, which is a blood volume that is too low. The tissues of the kidney can become severely damaged and do not properly function when they do not receive enough oxygenated blood. When the kidneys are unable to filter the blood at an adequate rate or have lost at least half of their functionality, the individual is considered to be in kidney failure. Persistent and excessive diarrhea causes an individual with a C. difficile infection to develop sudden or acute failure or injury of the kidneys. Depending on the extent of the kidney damage, it may be able to be reversed.
Discover additional warning signs of a C. difficile infection now.