Gastro - Diarrhoea Flashcards
Define diarrhoea
No one definiition
WHO: passage of >3 loose or liquid stols per day
Brit Gastro Soc : passages of more than 200g stool per day
Bristol chart - passage of type 6 or 7
Incidence of diarrhoea in ICU
25-50%
Causes of diarrhoea?
Infective and non-infective
Infect
Bacterial - e.coli, salmonella, shigella, c.jejuni, c.diff
Viral - noro/rotaviruses
Fungal - candida
Protozoa - cryptospiridia, giardia
Non infect
IBD - chrohns, UC
Drugs - enteral feed, Abx, Mg, laxative, chemo, NSAIDS
Mesenteric ischeamia
Short gut
Intolerance - Coeliac, lactose Bacterial overgrowth - bile salt malabsorption
Post ileus
Types of diarrhoea
4 types:
Osmotic, Secretory, Inflammatory, Dysmotility
Osmotic
Failure to abosrb osmotically active solutes - water stays in gut Enteral feed
Secretory Increased secretion into the gut and reduced absorption —> large vol.
Enterotoxins, cholera, laxatives
Inflammatory Loss of integrityt of GI mucose due to inflammation, impaired absorption IBD
Dysmotility Rapid trasnsit time, water and electrolyte load oveywhelms absorption in colon
Recover from ileus
Issues with diarrhoea in ICU
Patient:
Infection
Pressure sores
Need for a flexi seal
Organisational
Workload
Infecton control to other patietns
What is c.diff
Anaeorobic
Spore forming
Gram positive
Bacillus
Makes two toxins
A: enterotoxin, causes fluid sequestriation in bowel
B: cytotoxin, detected in the CDT test
Common and serious nosocomial infection, usually when gut flora eradicated —> broad spec
spores not killed by alochol gel
Risk factors for CDT
Age > 60
Broad spec Abx use
Underlying malignancy
Albumin < 25g/L
Renal/pulmonary disease
PPI use
Approach to a patient testing positive for c.diff
Investigate and send samples
Isolate patient, tell ICT
Full barrier precautions, use soap and water
Tx. Oral or iv metronidazole or oral vanc
Progression of c.diff
Fulminant pseudomembranous colitis in 20%
Mortality here is 20%
Risk of toxic megacolon and perf
Managing patient with Diarrhoea
ABCDE etcHx and O/E —> travel hx, sources of infection, drug use, immuno, systemic feature abdominal pain
Ix - FBC, U&E, LFT, CRP, Coag, Blood gas, blood cultures
Stool sample - MC&S, CDT, Virology, cysts and parasites
Radiology - Abdo film, CXR erect, CT abdo pelcvis
Flexi sig/colon —> caution risk of perf
When is surgical review indicatedf
Immunosupressed patients
Significant tenderness
Raised WCC
Organ dysfunction
Treatment of diarrhoea?
Largely supportive
Maintain hydration, correct electrolytes and acid base
If approrpiate
- Abx
-Feed associated
- change of feed, add fibre
if infection excluded —> lopirimide
Flexi seal
Infection control measures
What are some of the causes of a Toxic Megacolon
Infective causes:
- Clostridium difficile infection
- Cytomegalovirus colitis (in immunosuppressed patients)
- Salmonella/shigella/campylobacter infection
Inflammatory bowel disease (e.g. ulcerative colitis)
Intra-luminal obstruction (e.g. tumour) with perforation and peritonitis (less likely in
the context of diarrhoea)