Describe the approach to diarrhea.
Detailed history and physical examination
Supportive care: Start oral hydration (or IV fluids) and offer symptom relief.
Diagnostics: Obtain only when appropriate.
Directed therapy: Consider empiric or targeted therapy (e.g., antibiotics) based on clinical presentation and study results.
Though most patients with diarrhea have mild symptoms and can be managed as outpatients, some patients may present with severe and even life-threatening symptoms that require hospitalization.
In older adults, rule out fecal impaction, which can manifest atypically with paradoxical diarrhea (due to decreased rectal sensation) and nonspecific symptoms (e.g., functional decline, delirium).
Antibiotics should only be utilized for specific indications.
Describe the clinical assessment of diarrhea.
Key features of the disease presentation that facilitate efficient testing and prompt diagnosis include:
Duration of diarrheal illness
Acute diarrhea: duration ≤ 14 days
Persistent diarrhea: duration 15–30 days
Chronic diarrhea: duration > 30 days
Stool characteristics: watery, fatty, or bloody stools
Associated symptoms
Fever
Abdominal pain and cramping
Nausea and vomiting in cases of gastroenteritis
Signs of dehydration
Chronic cases: malnutrition and, in children, failure to thrive
Weight loss
Defecation urgency, tenesmus, and/or nocturnal symptoms
List risk factors for diarrhea.
Assess for the presence of risk factors for specific etiologies, including:
Recent travel : associated with traveler's diarrhea
Occupational or recreational exposure
May be associated with an infectious disease outbreak
Potential routes of exposure include:
Ingestion of contaminated food or beverages at a high-risk event (e.g., picnic, restaurant, buffet)
Daycare (e.g., in a daycare attendee, family member of attendee, or daycare staff member)
Direct contact with contaminated surfaces or objects
Direct contact with an infected individual (e.g., shaking hands, sharing food)
Animal contact
Recent hospitalization: associated with health care-associated infections (e.g., C. difficile infection)
Medication use
May cause medication-induced diarrhea
Medications commonly associated with diarrhea include: [14]
Broad-spectrum antibiotics (especially cephalosporins)
Antacids and PPIs
Surgery [15]
Cholecystectomy [16]
Bowel resection: may cause short bowel syndrome
Radiation therapy: may cause secondary enterocolitis
More than 700 medications can cause diarrhea and, therefore, the introduction of a new medication within 6–8 weeks of the onset of diarrhea should be considered as a potential cause. [14]
Chronic diarrhea is common after bariatric surgery.
What are red flags in diarrhea?
Acute or persistent diarrhea
Symptoms of inflammatory diarrhea (dysentery)
Systemic symptoms, e.g., fever, hypotension
Severe dehydration
Bloody stools
Severe abdominal pain
Patient characteristics that suggest an increased risk of severe disease
Chronic illness or immunocompromise
Age > 65 years
Recent antibiotic use
> 48 hours duration without improvement
Chronic diarrhea
Hypoalbuminemia
Symptoms wake the patient from sleep
Unintended weight loss
Family history of GI cancer
Symptom onset after 50 years of age
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