Diarrhea Flashcards

1
Q

Where is 90% of fluid absorbed in healthy individuals?

A

Small intestine

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2
Q

What is the definition of diarrhea?

A

loose/watery stools or

increased frequency accompanied by abnormal increase in daily weight

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3
Q

What is Acute, Persistent, Chronic Diarrhea?

A

Acute - dx within 14 days of onset
Persistent - 2-4 weeks
Chronic - Lasting > 14 days

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4
Q

What are the 3 types of Chronic Diarrhea?

A

watery, fatty, inflammatory

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5
Q

What is the most common cause of acute diarrhea?

A

Viral infections

norovirus, rotavirus, adenovirus

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6
Q

What are bacterial infection related diarrhea related to?

A

travel, foodborne illnesses

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7
Q

What are indications for diagnostic testing for diarrhea?

A
>3 days of Sx
bloody diarrhea
international travel
old or immunocompromised
recent Abx usage
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8
Q

What are characteristics of noninflammatory vs Inflammatory Diarrheal syndrome?

A

Noninflammatory:
mild Sx, large/watery diarrhea, no blood, little urgency, no tenesmus = SMALL BOWEL Involvement

Inflammatory:
low volume, dysenteric stools (bloody/mucous), urgency, tenesmus = LARGE BOWEL Involvement

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9
Q

What are most likely causes of Noninflammatory Diarrhea?

A

Viruses (rotavirus, Norwalk virus)
Enterotoxigenic E. Coli (traveler’s diarrhea)
Vibrio cholerae
Toxins (S. aureus, C. perfringen, B. cereus)
Giardia

infect small bowel, adhere to mucos without invasion
toxins cause bowel EXCRETIONS

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10
Q

What are common sources of the following bacterial food poisoning:

  1. Bacillus cereus
  2. Clostridium perfringens
  3. Staphylococcal
  4. Listeria
A
  1. Rice, incubation: 6-14 hours
  2. Clostridium perfringens - rewarmed cooked food (incubatioon 7-16 hours)
  3. Staphylococcal: incubation 1-6 hours
  4. Listeria - raw milk, cheese, hotdogs
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11
Q

What are additional Sx of inflammatory Diarrhea?

A
  1. pts appear toxic and usually febrile
  2. Abdominal cramping, fecal urgency, tenesmus
  3. Invasive, elaborate cytotoxins
  4. see RBC and WBCs in stool
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12
Q

What are Sx of Shigella infection?

A

Invasion of colonic epithelium, able to survive acidic conditions

Severe mucosa inflammation, a/w reactive arthritis, Hemolytic uremic syndrome (HUS), colonoscopy similar to ulcerative colitis

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13
Q

Enterohemorrhagic E. coli is most a/w what kind of food?

A

undercooked ground beef, unpasteurized apple juice, milk

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14
Q

What are Sx and lab findings of EHEC?

A

10-12 watery stools w progression to bloody stools
Severe abdominal pain, cramps, nausea, vomiting, abd distention and diffuse pain

Labs: microangiopathic hemolysis, low platelets, renal insufficiency (HUS)

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15
Q

What is the criteria for Stool osmotic gap (high/low) and how does that affect Tx?

A

Stool osmotic gap = 290-2*(stool Na + stool K)
High osmotic gap (>50mosm/kg) = osmotic diarrhea
Low osmotic gap (<50mosm/kg) = secretory diarrhea

osmotic - improves w fasting
secretory - continues w fasting`

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16
Q

What are causes of osmotic diarrhea?

A

artificial sweeteners

Mg, Phosphate, Sulfate in laxatives or antacids

17
Q

What are 4 common causes of fatty malabsorption diarrhea syndromes?

A
  1. Mucosal disease - celiac
  2. Giardia
  3. Whipple’s Disease
  4. Tropical Sprue
18
Q

What are characteristics of Giardia lamblia

A

protozoal infection - campers, daycares (cysts in contaminated water)

  • sudan stain (spot check for fat in stool)
  • B12, folate deficiency seen
  • Tx w/ flagyl
19
Q

What are characteristics of Whipple’s disease?

A

chronic bacterial infection - actinobacter (T. whippleii)
occurs mainly in older white males
protein losing enteropathy w/ hypoalbuminemia + edema

Small bowel infiltrate w/ foamy macropages containing PAS positive material which distorts villi