Approach To A Patient With Diarrhea Dr. Mohamed Abu Hmaid
Approach To A Patient With Diarrhea Dr. Mohamed Abu Hmaid
Approach To A Patient With Diarrhea Dr. Mohamed Abu Hmaid
diarrhea
Dr. Mohamed Abu Hmaid
DIARRHEA
Diarrhea is a common symptom that
can range in severity from an acute,
self-limited complaint to a severe,
life-threatening illness. Patients may
use the term "diarrhea" to refer to
increased frequency of bowel
movements, increased stool liquidity,
a sense of fecal urgency, or fecal
incontinence
Definition
In the normal state, approximately 10 L of
fluid enter the duodenum daily, of which all
but 1.5 L are absorbed by the small
intestine. The colon absorbs most of the
remaining fluid, with only 100 mL lost in
the stool. diarrhea is defined as a stool
weight of more than 200 g/24 h
Diarrhea can be considered an increase in
stool frequency (3 or more stools/day)
and/or the presence of loose or liquid stools
It is helpful to distinguish acute from
chronic diarrhea, as the evaluation and
treatment are entirely different
Mechanisms of Diarrhea
1) Osmotic load within the intestine resulting in
retention of water within the lumen
2) Excessive secretion of electrolytes and
water into the intestinal lumen
3) Exudation of fluid and protein from the
intestinal mucosa
4) Altered intestinal motility resulting in rapid
transit through the colon
Types of diarrhea
Watery diarrhea
-osmotic diarrhea
-secretory diarrhea
Inflammatory diarrhea
Fatty diarrhea
Types of watery diarrhea
Osmotic diarrhea
Osmotic contents
Response to fasting
St. osm > 280 mo/l
Stool Na > 100 mos
increase volume
Secretory diarrhea
Dec.Na.absorption
No response
St. osm < 280 mo/l
Stool Na < 100 mos
Very large volume
Osmotic Diarrhea
Occurs when poorly absorbed material
retains fluid within the intestinal lumen
Occurs in patients with malabsorption or
lactose intolerance in which undigested
sugars accumulate in the intestinal lumen
exerting a considerable osmotic load
Magnesium-containing laxatives and antacids
(Maalox) probably produce diarrhea through
a similar mechanism
Secretory Diarrhea
The intestinal mucosa secretes . amounts of water
and electrolytes under the stimulation of a variety of
substances
Cholera and enterotoxigenic E. coli
Bile acids and long chain fatty acids (postileal
resection, Crohn s disease, malabsorption
syndromes)
Gastrointestinal hormones (VIPoma, gastrinoma,
carcinoid)
Anthraquinone laxatives
Mechanism: Agents . intracellular cAMP.
.secretion (Na+K)+ ATPase is also inhibited)
inflammatory Diarrhea
Results from the outpouring of blood protein,
or mucus from an inflamed or ulcerated
mucosa
Ulcerative colitis
Crohn s disease
Invasive infections
Infiltrative disorders like Whipple s disease
Lymphoma
Motility Disorders
May or may not lead to diarrhea
Irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) a motor
disorder that causes abdominal pain and
altered bowel habits with diarrhea
predominating
Diabetes mellitus neurogenic dysfunction
Scleroderma stasis of the bowel with
resultant bacterial overgrowth, steatorrhea
and diarrhea
ACUTE DIARRHEA
Diarrhea that is acute in onset and
persists for less than 3 weeks is most
commonly caused by infectious agents,
bacterial toxins (either ingested
preformed in food or produced in the
gut), or drugs
Causes of acute infectious
diarrhea
Noninflammatory Diarrhea
1.Viral-Norwalk virus, Norwalk-like virus, Rotavirus
2.Protozoal-Giardia lamblia, Cryptosporidium
3.Bacterial-Preformed enterotoxin production
1. Ulcerative colitis
2. Crohn's disease
3. Microscopic colitis
4. Malignancy: lymphoma, adenocarcinoma
(with obstruction and pseudodiarrhea)
5. Radiation enteritis
Malabsorption syndromes
Weight loss, abnormal laboratory values; fecal fat
> 7-10 g/24 h,