1. Diarrhea is defined as an increase in stool frequency and decrease in stool consistency resulting in a stool weight exceeding 200g in 24 hours.
2. Acute diarrhea lasts less than 2 weeks and is usually infectious in origin such as viral gastroenteritis, while chronic diarrhea lasts over 4 weeks and is often non-infectious such as irritable bowel syndrome.
3. A thorough history relating the diarrhea to the patient's medical history, medications, travel, diet and symptoms is important to determine the cause and guide evaluation and treatment.
2. Normal bowel motions :
3stools by 1day
(> 3 STOOLS /DAY DIARRHEA)
1stool by 3days
(1 STOOL
/ >3DAYS CONSTIPATION )
3. DIARRHEA
Diarrheal diseases represent one of the
five leading causes of death worldwide.
Diarrhea is both a symptom and a sign.
As a symptom, diarrhea is most often
reported as a decrease in stool
consistency and an increase in stool
volume.
As a sign, diarrhea is defined as a stool
weight (i.e., water content) that exceeds
200 g in 24 hours.
4. It is important to relate this symptom to
the patient’s history:
• Elderly (cancer, polyps, diverticular
disease, ischaemic colitis).
• Young/thin female (laxative abuse).
• Travel/local conditions (infection, post-
infectious irritable bowel syndrome).
• Previous episodes (inflammatory bowel
disease,irritable bowel syndrome).
• Medications (recent broad-spectrum
NSAIDs, proton-pump inhibitors,
fluoxetine, immunosuppressants, etc.).
5. • Recent-onset diabetes mellitus (pancreatic
cancer with insufficiency).
• Systemic features (inflammatory bowel
disease, ankylosing spondylitis).
• Previous surgery (vagotomy, Polya
gastrectomy, cholecystectomy, terminal
ileal resection).
• Family history (inflammatory bowel
disease, gluten enteropathy, colorectal
cancer/polyposis, multiple endocrine
neoplasia).
• Gluten enteropathy with recent
deterioration (lymphoma).
7. ACUTE DIARRHEA
Diarrhea lasting < 2 weeks
• Acute diarrhea is an extremely common
presenting problem, and mostly due to
infectious causes.
• It is self-limited, No evaluation is necessary
unless the stools are bloody and fever or
infection is suspected (e.g., from travel
history or a common source outbreak). If
these conditions exist, do not treat with
antimotility agents.
• Begin the evaluation with stool studies for
bacterial pathogens, ova, and parasites and
proctosigmoidoscopy.
11. Food poisoning
• Symptoms that begin within six hours
suggest ingestion of a preformed toxin of
Staphylococcus aureus or Bacillus cereus
• Symptoms that begin at 8 to 16 hours
suggest infection with Clostridium
perfringens
• Symptoms that begin at more than 16 hours
can result from viral or bacterial infection (eg,
E. coli).
12. Infectious acute diarrhea is usually
associated with abdominal colicky pain,
urgency, tenesmus,nausea and
vomiting, watery stools, with or without
blood or mucus.
Systemic symptoms such as fever and
myalgia may be present.
In severe cases of diarrhea, urgency of
defecation and fecal incontinence is a
common event.
13. Tenesmus :
A sensation of incomplete evacuation
often accompanied by abnormally
frequent desire to defecate with
involuntary painful straining , but little
bowel movement.
• Causes of tenesmus
1-inflammatory bowel disease
2-colorecteal cancer
3-amebiasis
4- shigellosis
5-diverticular disease
15. Fecal urgency:
the sudden, almost uncontrollable, need to
defecate.
Fecal incontinence :
complete inability to control the bowel
movements, resulting in the involuntary
passage of stool.
16. History should include recent consumption
of unsanitary food or water (raw or poorly
cooked foods such as eggs, meat, shellfish,
dairy products, fruits and vegetables, or
foods that may have been improperly
handled or stored)
EXCLUDE FOOD POISONING
17. Important features in history of acute diarrhea:
• Stool characteristics-frequency, consistency,
quantity, bloody, mucus-filled , purulent.
• Presence of dysentery—fever, tenesmus ,
blood, mucus, or both;
• Symptoms of dehydration—thirst , lethargy,
postural giddiness, decreased urination; and
• Presence of associated symptoms—nausea,
vomiting, abdominal cramps, and significant
upper or lower gastrointestinal bleeding (coffee
ground hematemesis,melena, hematochezia).
18. • Cholera may present very suddenly
with vomiting and acute watery
diarrhea with a “rice-water” appearance
of stool; but cholera not associated
with frank abdominal pain, tenesmus,
or Fever.
• shigellosis is typically characterized by
acute bloody diarrhea with or without
mucous associated with abdominal
cramps and tenesmus along with fever
and anorexia.
19.
20. Indications for diagnostic evaluation
• Profuse watery diarrhea with signs of hypovolemia
• Passage of many small volume stools containing
blood and mucus
• Bloody diarrhea
• Temperature ≥38.5ºC (101.3ºF)
• Passage of ≥6 unformed stools per 24 hours or a
duration of illness >48 hours
• Severe abdominal pain
• Hospitalized patients or recent use of antibiotics
• Diarrhea in the elderly (≥70 years of age)
• Systemic illness with diarrhea, especially in
pregnant women
22. treatment
• Watery diarrhea — Antimicrobial therapy
is not typically indicated for the treatment
of acute watery diarrhea in adults, as most
cases resolve spontaneously. An
important exception is the treatment of
severe cholera (doxycyclin,azithromycin,
ciprofloxacin)
• Bloody diarrhea — adults with bloody
diarrhea should be treated promptly with
an antimicrobial that is effective against
Shigella.(ciprofloxacin)
23. Infectious diarrhea that presents
with large volume (often
watery) stool, constitutional
symptoms, nausea and
vomiting, and often abdominal
cramps can be categorized as
gastroenteritis.
24. Infectious diarrhea:
gastroenteritis, causes:
1. Viral (most common)
2. Bacterial
a. Vibrio cholera
b. Escherichia coli
c. Shigella species
d. Salmonella species
3. Toxin-mediated
a. Staphylococcus aureus
b. Clostridium perfringens
c. Bacillus cereus
25. Infectious colitis presents with
fever, tenesmus, and dysentery
(stools with blood and mucus).
• Infectious diarrhea:
inflammatory colitis, causes
1. Shigella species
2. E coli
3. Campylobacter species
4. Salmonella species
5. Clostridium difficile
26. Noninfectious diarrhea, causes:
1. Medications and other ingestible
substances (some with osmotic
effect)
a. Sorbitol (gum) b. Mannitol
c. Fructose (fruits, soft drinks)
d. Fiber (bran, fruits, vegetables)
e. Lactulose
2. Magnesium-containing medications
a.Nutritional supplements
b. Antacids c. Laxatives
• inhibitor antidepressants
27. 3. Malabsorption
a. Lactose intolerance
b. Pancreatitis
4. Medications causing diarrhea
through nonosmotic means
a. Metformin
b. Antibiotics
c. Colchicine
d. Digoxin
e. Selective serotonin reuptake
28. Chronic diarrhea
Diarrhea lasting >4 weeks
• most cases of chronic diarrhea are
noninfectious—IBS being the leading
cause of chronic diarrhea
• Differentiate organic diarrhea from
functional diarrhea.
29. • IBS (Irritable Bowel Syndrome)-
Recurrent abdominal pain associated
with chronic diarrhea and improved
with defecation
• Large volume diarrhea, bloody
stools, nocturnal diarrhea, and
greasy stools are not associated
with IBS and suggest an organic
disease.
• Functional diarrhea — continuous
or recurrent passage of watery
stools without abdominal pain or
discomfort
30. Medical history:
AIDS, diabetes, cirrhosis, sickle cell disease,
cancer, endocrine – thyroid disease.
previous surgery (surgery for peptic ulcer,
cholecystectomy, and ileal resection),
irradiation,
31. Typical features of chronic diarrhea :
• Nocturnal diarrhea—autonomic neuropathy,
e.g. diabetes mellitus;
• Diarrhea alternating with constipation -TB
abdomen, laxative abuse, diverticulosis,
carcinoma of colon;
• Chronic bloody or melanotic stools with weight
loss - IBD, colonic malignancy;
• Pale, bulky, greasy, frothy, foul-smelling stools,
which float in toilet, and associated with
nutritional deficiency, weight loss-
malabsorption syndrome.