DIARREAHA Dr. Maha Arafah.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Medical Parasitology Lab.
Advertisements

Diarrhea( >3 loose/liquid stools per day) depletes the body of needed fluids and salts leading to dehydration.
DIARRHEA. definition διάρροια; literally meaning "through-flowing" διάρροια; literally meaning "through-flowing" Stool looses its normal consistence Stool.
DIARRHEA Diarrhea is a common symptom that can range in severity from an acute, self-limited annoyance to a severe, life-threatening illness. Patients.
Diarrhea Dr.K.S.Sunil MBBS, MD, PGDGM. Increase in frequency, size or loosening of bowel movements. Differentiate from fecal incontinence or functional.
Diarrhea. Defined as bowel movements which are excessive in volume, frequency, or liquidity. Frequency & consistency of fecal discharge are variable among.
Infectious Diarrhea. Definition Of Diarrhea Increase in stool frequency or a decreased stool consistency Usual stool fluid content: 10 ml/kg/d in an infant.
CLINICAL PRESENTATION n Small bowel diarrheas –large, loose stools –periumbilical or RLQ pain n Large bowel diarrheas –frequent, small, loose stools –crampy,
Difficult Diarrheas Arnold Wald, M.D., AGA-F Professor of Medicine University of Wisconsin School of Medicine & Public Health, Madison, WI.
Diarrhea A messy subject.
Acute Diarrhoea Definition Increased frequency and water content of stools than is normal for the individual Usually: > 3 stools per day Descriptive Watery,
Diarrhea By: Rahul Malhotra. What is Diarrhea? Diarrhea is loose, watery stools. Having diarrhea means passing loose stools three or more times a day.
Large Intestine Afflictions APPENDICITS Inflamed appendix causes severe pain. Very common in children and adolescents. Other symptoms include fever,
Gastrointestinal Block Pathology lecture Nov 28, 2012 Dr. Maha Arafah Dr. Ahmed Al Humaidi Diarrhea.
HAFIZ USMAN WARRAICH Roll#17-C Diarrhea and Dehydration Dr Shreedhar Paudel 25/03/2009.
DIARRHEA A pathophysiological Approach to Diagnosis and Treatment Prof. J. Zimmerman Gastroenterology Hadassah-Hebrew University Medical Center.
Diarrhea A child with diarrhea.
MALABSORPTION SYNDROME
Gastrointestinal Block Pathology lecture 2013 Dr. Maha Arafah Dr. Ahmed Al Humaidi Diarrhea.
This lecture was conducted during the Nephrology Unit Grand Ground by Medical Student rotated under Nephrology Division under the supervision and administration.
8 LECTURES Gastro-esophageal reflux disease Peptic Ulcer Disease Inflammatory bowel disease-1 Malabsorption Diarrhea Colonic polyps and carcinoma-1 Inflammatory.
8 LECTURES Gastro-esophageal reflux disease Peptic Ulcer Disease
Antidiarrheal Drugs. Normal bowel movement: An average, healthy person has anywhere from three bowel movements a day to three a week, depending on that.
Chronic Diarrheal Diseases Mohammed al-matrafi. Diarrhea more than 2 weeks.
Dr. Adnan Hamawandi Professor of Pediatrics
The Gastrointestinal System The Virtual Autopsy. The Gastrointestinal System ~A Major part of the Digestive System~ -Digestion -Absorption -Excretion.
Chronic Diarrhea. Diarrhea Loosely defined as passage of abnormally liquid or unformed stools at an increased frequency. Adults (typical western diet)
Raneen Omary. Contents Definition Pathogenesis Epidemiology Acute Radiation Enteritis Chronic Radiation Enteritis Risk Factors Diagnosis DD Medical Management.
DIARRHEA WHAT TO ORDER.
Diabetic Ketoacidosis DKA)
Diarrhea Definition increase in the frequency of bowel movements increase in the frequency of bowel movements increase in stool liquidity increase in stool.
Malabsorption 9/14/ CONDITIONS OF MALABSORPTION Malabsorption: is the inability of the digestive system to absorb one or more of The major vitamins(
Lec 9 rad240 pathology G I T Pathology continuation.
A B Fasting improve the condition inflammatory bowel diseases
BY DR.RANDA AL-GHANEM PEDIATRIC GI CONSULTANT DIARRHEA.
Diarrhoea Revision PBL. Definition Diarrhoea is defined as: – >3 bowel motions per day – Looser than normal stools – Stool volume > 300g – May be associated.
Infectious Diarrheas - Overview Greatest cause of morbidity and mortality worldwide Scope of disease: 1993, E.coli 0157:H Cyclospora 1998.
Cholera: the simplified version. Symptoms Symptoms Acute diarrhea duration less than 2 weeks.
ACUTE DIARRHEA WORLD WIDE 1 BILLION EPISODE/YEAR AGE & SEX EQUAL 3-5 MILLION DEATHS/YEAR SPREAD PERSON TO PERSON-CONTAMINATED FOOD & WATER.
Gastrointestinal Block Pathology lecture 2014 Dr. Maha Arafah Dr. Ahmed Al Humaidi Diarrhea.
W ATER T RANSPORT AND D IARRHEA Anson Lowe September 25, 2015 Medicine/Gastroenterology.
Diarrhea. Defined as bowel movements which are excessive in volume, frequency, or liquidity. Frequency & consistency of fecal discharge are variable among.
Faeces. Composed of Undigested and unabsorbed food residues. Intestinal secretions. Minerals such as calcium and iron Bacterias and their metabolic wastes.
Chronic Diarrhea: Approach to the Patient
 Diarrhea -working definition is:  three or more loose or watery stools per day or  definite decrease in consistency and increase in frequency based.
Acute Diarrhoea and Gastroenteritis in Childhood By: Afifah binti Othman Masrina binti Hj. Mhmad Tahar Current Health Problems in Students’ Home Countries.
Disorders of Malabsorption. Malabsorption It is a descriptive term of many diseases and is not a diagnosis It is a descriptive term of many diseases and.
Approach To The Patient with Chronic Diarrhea Eric M. Osgard MD FACG Gastroenterology Consultants Reno, NV.
Case Presentation Mohammad Wazzan Ahmad Al Siari Supervised by : Dr. Hind Fallatah.
Approach To The Patient with Chronic Diarrhea Eric M. Osgard MD FACG Gastroenterology Consultants Reno, NV.
Gastrointestinal Block Pathology lecture 2015 Dr. Maha Arafah Dr. Ahmed Al Humaidi Diarrhea.
Date of download: 5/28/2016 Copyright © 2016 McGraw-Hill Education. All rights reserved. Clinical algorithm for the approach to patients with community-acquired.
Dr.a.khaleghjoo MD pediatrics. Diarrhea is the passage of loose or watery stools at least three times in a 24 hour period. Diarrheal illness is the second.
Diarrhea A messy subject. Case A 1 year old girl is brought to clinic with 3 days of watery brown diarrhea and irritability. On exam the child is lethargic,
8 LECTURES Gastro-esophageal reflux disease Peptic Ulcer Disease Inflammatory bowel disease-1 Malabsorption Diarrhea Colonic polyps and carcinoma-1 Inflammatory.
Clinical algorithm for the approach to patients with community-acquired infectious diarrhea or bacterial food poisoning. Key to superscripts: 1. Diarrhea.
Presented by Dr. Rabeea Zaki
Cholera Cholera is a disease caused by infection with the gram-negative bacterium Vibrio cholerae.
Clinical features and diagnosis of malabsorption
Clinical algorithm for the approach to patients with community-acquired infectious diarrhea or bacterial food poisoning. Key to superscripts: 1. Diarrhea.
Clinical algorithm for the approach to patients with community-acquired infectious diarrhea or bacterial food poisoning. Key to superscripts: 1. Diarrhea.
Gastrointestinal Block Pathology lecture
Approach to patients with Diarrhea
8 LECTURES Gastro-esophageal reflux disease Peptic Ulcer Disease
GROUP 1+GROUP 4.  Alteration in normal bowel movement characterized by an increase in the water content,volume or frequency  Diarrhea range in severity.
IRRITABLE BOWEL SYNDROME
Diagnosis and Treatment of Acute or Persistent Diarrhea
Diarrhea and Malabsorption
Pathophysiology and mechanisms of diarrhea
Gastrointestinal Block Pathology lecture 2018
Presentation transcript:

DIARREAHA Dr. Maha Arafah

Case A 1 year old girl is brought to clinic with 3 days of watery diarrhea, vomiting, and irritability. On exam the child is lethargic, afebrile, with sunken eyes and a weak pulse of 140/minute. Which of the following is the best management plan? Check CBC and stool tests for pathogens Prescribe oral rehydration solution Prescribe oral antibiotics Begin IV fluids and hospitalize

Why important? The loss of fluids through diarrhea can cause dehydration and electrolyte imbalances Easy to treat but if untreated, may lead to death especially in children

Why important? More than 70 % of almost 11 million child deaths every year are attributable to 6 causes: Diarrhea Malaria neonatal infection Pneumonia preterm delivery lack of oxygen at birth. UNICEF

Fluid and small intestine

DIARREAHA DEFINITION World Health Organization 3 or more loose or liquid stools per day Abnormally high fluid content of stool > 200-300 gm/day

CLASSIFICATION Acute Persistent Chronic

CLASSIFICATION Acute if 2 weeks, Persistent if 2 to 4 weeks, Chronic if 4 weeks in duration.

Is it diarrhea or not ? Two common conditions, usually associated with the passage of stool totaling 200 g/d, must be distinguished from diarrhea, as diagnostic and therapeutic algorithms differ. Pseudodiarrhea, or the frequent passage of small volumes of stool, is often associated with rectal urgency and accompanies the irritable bowel syndrome or anorectal disorders such as proctitis. Fecal incontinence is the involuntary discharge of rectal contents and is most often caused by neuromuscular disorders or structural anorectal problems.

Pathophysiology Categories of diarrhea Secretory Osmotic Exudative Motility-related

Secretory diarrhea There is an increase in the active secretion High stool output Lack of response to fasting Normal stool ion gap < 100 mOsm/kg Stool  osmotic gap =      Stool osmolality - 2 x (stool Na + stool K) Normal fecal fluid values:   Osmolality: ~290 mOsm/kg   Na+:  ~30 mmol/L   K+: ~75 mmol/L

Secretory diarrhea Causes The most common cause of this type of diarrhea is a bacterial toxin ( E. coli , cholera) that stimulates the secretion of anions. Hormonally mediated: VIPoma, carcinoid, medullary carcinoma of thyroid (calcitonin), Zollinger-Ellison syndrome (gastrin)      Factitious diarrhea (laxative abuse); phenolphthalein, cascara, senna      Villous adenoma      Bile salt malabsorption (ileal resection; Crohn's ileitis; postcholecystectomy)      Medications

PathophysiologyCholera Cholera toxin binds to membrane receptors on enterocytes, irreversibly activating G protein that leads to enhanced cAMP production. This: (1) inhibits apical electroneutral NaCl absorption (2) induces Cl- secretion by activating apical Cl- channels.

Pathophysiology Cholera No associated epithelial injury occurs, leaving intact apical Na+-coupled nutrient transporters (Na+-glucose, Na+-amino acid)

Osmotic diarrhea Excess amount of poorly absorbed substances that exert osmotic effect………water is drawn into the bowels……diarrhea Stool output is usually not massive Fasting improve the condition Stool ion gap is high, > 125 mOsm/kg Can be the result of Malabsorption in which the nutrients are left in the lumen to pull in water e.g. lactose intolerance 2. osmotic laxatives.

Osmotic diarrhea CLUES: Stool volume decreases with fasting; increased stool osmotic gap 1. Medications: antacids, lactulose, sorbitol 2. Disaccharidase deficiency: lactose intolerance 3. Factitious diarrhea: magnesium (antacids, laxatives)

Osmotic As stool leaves the colon, fecal osmolality is equal to the serum osmolality, ie, approximately 290 mosm/kg. Under normal circumstances, the major osmoles are Na+, K+, Cl–, and HCO3–.

Exudative Results from the outpouring of blood protein, or mucus from an inflamed or ulcerated mucosa Presence of blood and pus in the stool. Persists on fasting Occurs with inflammatory bowel diseases, and invasive infections.

Inflammatory conditions CLUES: Fever, hematochezia, abdominal pain 1. Ulcerative colitis 2. Crohn's disease 3. Microscopic colitis 4. Malignancy: lymphoma, adenocarcinoma (with obstruction and pseudodiarrhea) 5. Radiation enteritis

Motility-related Caused by the rapid movement of food through the intestines (hypermotility). 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

Motility disorders CLUES: Systemic disease or prior abdominal surgery Postsurgical: vagotomy, partial gastrectomy, blind loop with bacterial overgrowth      Systemic disorders: scleroderma, diabetes mellitus, hyperthyroidism      Irritable bowel syndrome

Aetiology Acute diarrhea? Approximately 80% of acute diarrheas are due to infections (viruses, bacteria, helminths, and protozoa). Viral gastroenteritis (viral infection of the stomach and the small intestine) is the most common cause of acute diarrhea worldwide. Food poisoning Drugs Others Rotavirus the cause of nearly 40% of hospitalizations from diarrhea in children under 5

Antibiotic-Associated Diarrheas Diarrhea occurs in 20% of patients receiving broad-spectrum antibiotics; about 20% of these diarrheas are due to Clostridium difficile

Aetiology Chronic diarrhea? Infection ----------- e.g.Giardia lamblia . AIDS often have chronic infections of their intestines that cause diarrhea. Post-infectious. Following acute viral, bacterial or parasitic infections Malabsorption Inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) Endocrine diseases Colon cancer Irritable bowel syndrome.

Complications Fluids ………………Dehydration Electrolytes …………….. Electrolytes imbalance Sodium bicarbonate……. Metabolic acidosis If persistent ……Malnutrition

Tests useful in the evaluation of diarrhea Acute diarrhea Fecal leukocytes Inflammatory Diarrhea Noninflammatory Diarrhea Fecal leukocytes are not present Fecal leukocytes are present Suggests a small bowel source caused by either Toxin-producing bacterium (enterotoxigenic E coli [ETEC], Staphylococcus aureus, Bacillus cereus, Clostridium perfringens) other agents (viruses, Giardia) that disrupt normal absorption and secretory process in the small intestine The presence of fever and bloody diarrhea (dysentery) indicates colonic tissue damage caused by invasion (shigellosis, salmonellosis, Campylobacter or Yersinia infection, amebiasis) or a toxin (C difficile, E coli O157:H7).

Diagnosis Chronic diarrhea 72 H Stool collection > 200 gm – indicates diarrhea >1000-1500gm – suggests Secretory diarrhea > 10 gm of fecal fat – malabsorption Stool pH …….5.5 or less indicates carbohydrate intolerance, which is usually secondary to viral illness and transient in nature. Stool anion gap …… osmolar > 100 > secretory 290 - [(Na+K) X 2].

Diagnosis Chronic diarrhea If osmotic gap and/or fecal fat increased If blood and/or WBC in the stool If symptoms and signs of endocrine diseases Infection Endocrine diseases. Malabsorption Inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) D-Xylose Test Colon cancer cortisol and thyroid hormone Bile salt breath test Stool culture Hydrogen breath test X-rays of the intestines Small intestine biopsy Irritable bowel syndrome. Endoscopy gluten autoantibodies Diagnosis of exclusion