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A 66-year-old woman presents to the emergency department with loose, watery stools for 3 days, after completing a 10-day course of oral antibiotics for a sinus infection. The patient denies nausea or vomiting. A stool sample is positive for Clostridioides difficile toxin. Examination reveals soft, nondistended, and mild lower abdominal tenderness. The best next step in management is:
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Citation
"" ASCRS Question Bank, ASCRS U, www.ascrsu.com/ascrs/view/ASCRS-Question-Bank/3717163/all/Benign_Disease. Accessed 23 April 2026.
ASCRS Question Bank. https://www.ascrsu.com/ascrs/view/ASCRS-Question-Bank/3717163/all/Benign_Disease. Accessed April 23, 2026.
In ASCRS Question Bank https://www.ascrsu.com/ascrs/view/ASCRS-Question-Bank/3717163/all/Benign_Disease
[Internet]. In: ASCRS Question Bank. [cited 2026 April 23]. Available from: https://www.ascrsu.com/ascrs/view/ASCRS-Question-Bank/3717163/all/Benign_Disease.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - ELEC
T1 -
ID - 3717163
BT - ASCRS Question Bank
UR - https://www.ascrsu.com/ascrs/view/ASCRS-Question-Bank/3717163/all/Benign_Disease
DB - ASCRS U
DP - Unbound Medicine
ER -
ASCRS Question Bank

