Chronic diarrhea causes: Difference between revisions

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*'''Drug-induced diarrhea''': If diarrhea is osmotic consider [[magnesium]], [[phosphates]], [[sulfates]], and [[sorbitol]]. If hypermotility consider stimulant [[laxatives]] or malabsorption [[acarbose]], [[orlistat]]. Elimination of offending agent is often curative.  
*'''Drug-induced diarrhea''': If diarrhea is osmotic consider [[magnesium]], [[phosphates]], [[sulfates]], and [[sorbitol]]. If hypermotility consider stimulant [[laxatives]] or malabsorption [[acarbose]], [[orlistat]]. Elimination of offending agent is often curative.  


*'''Endocrine diarrhea''': Secretory diarrhea e,g [[Addison's disease|Addison disease]], [[carcinoid tumors]], [[VIPoma|vipoma]], [[gastrinoma]] ([[Zollinger-Ellison syndrome]]), and [[mastocytosis]]  or increased motility ([[hyperthyroidism]]). Tests that can be ordered included [[thyroid-stimulating hormone]] level, serum peptide concentrations, urinary [[histamine]] level.
*'''Endocrine diarrhea''': Secretory diarrhea e,g [[Addison's disease|Addison disease]], [[carcinoid tumors]], [[VIPoma|vipoma]], [[gastrinoma]] ([[Zollinger-Ellison syndrome]]), and [[mastocytosis]]  or increased motility ([[hyperthyroidism]]). Tests that can be ordered include [[thyroid-stimulating hormone]] level, serum peptide concentrations, urinary [[histamine]] level.


*'''[[Giardiasis]]''': Patients presents with excess gas, [[steatorrhea]] (malabsorption). [[Giardia lamblia infection|Giardia]] fecal antigen test is diagnostic.
*'''[[Giardiasis]]''': Patients presents with excess gas, [[steatorrhea]] (malabsorption). [[Giardia lamblia infection|Giardia]] fecal antigen test is diagnostic.

Revision as of 12:09, 3 July 2017

Chronic diarrhea Microchapters

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Overview

Historical Perspective

Classification

Pathophysiology

Causes

Differentiating Chronic diarrhea from other Diseases

Epidemiology and Demographics

Risk Factors

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Natural History, Complications and Prognosis

Diagnosis

History and Symptoms

Physical Examination

Laboratory Findings

Electrocardiogram

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Treatment

Medical Therapy

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Primary Prevention

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Cost-Effectiveness of Therapy

Future or Investigational Therapies

Case Studies

Case #1

Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1]; Associate Editor(s)-in-Chief: Omodamola Aje B.Sc, M.D. [2]

Overview

Depending on the socio economic status of the population, chronic diarrhea can be caused by several factors. In a developing nation, the most likely causes of chronic bacteria include; mycobacterial and parasitic infections and less likely to include functional disorders such as malabsorption and inflammatory bowel diseases. In a developed nation however, the most likely cause of diarrhea include; irritable bowel syndrome (IBS), inflammatory bowel disease, malabsorption syndromes (such as lactose intolerance and celiac disease), and chronic infections (particularly in patients who are immunocompromised).

Causes

Major causes

  • Malabsorption: Malabsorptive and maldigestive diarrhea result from impaired nutrient absorption and impaired digestive function respectively. Cystic fibrosis, celiac disease, disaccharidase deficiency (eg, lactase deficiency due to infectious diarrhea), can all cause loss of absorptive capacity. Absent pancreatic enzymes or bile acids can cause maldigestion. Classic symptoms include abdominal distention with foul-smelling, large, floating, pale, fatty stools (steatorrhea) and weight loss.
  • Irritable bowel syndrome: Patients present with stool mucus, crampy abdominal pain, altered bowel habits, watery functional diarrhea after meals, exacerbated by emotional stress or eating. It is twice as common in women than men. All laboratory test results are normal. Increased fiber intake, exercise, dietary modification should be recommended.
  • Inflammatory bowel disease:May manifest as either crohn disease or ulcerative colitis, patients present with bloody inflammatory diarrhea, abdominal pain, nausea, vomiting, loss of appetite, family history, eye findings (e.g., episcleritis), perianal fistulae, fever, tenesmus, rectal bleeding, weight loss. Tests include complete blood count, fecal leukocyte level, erythrocyte sedimentation rate, fecal calprotectin level. Characteristic intestinal ulcerations are seen on colonoscopy.
  • Microscopic colitis: Patients present with watery, secretory diarrhea affecting older persons. Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug association is possible. There is usually no response to fasting; nocturnal symptoms present. Colon biopsy is recommended.

Minor causes

  • Gastrointestinal infections; such as viruses, bacteria and parasites.
  • Non-gastrointestional infections (parenteral diarrhea); systemic infections, staphylococcal toxic shock syndrome, urinary tract infections and other systemic infections.
  • Anatomic abnormalities; Intussusception, hirschsprung disease (± toxic megacolon) partial bowel obstruction, blind loop syndrome (also in patients with dysmotility), Intestinal lymphangiectasis, short gut syndrome.
  • Immunodeficiency; Severe combined immunodeficiencies and other genetic disorders, HIV
  • Infectious enteritis or colitis (diarrhea not associated with C. difficile): Examples include bacterial gastroenteritis, viral gastroenteritis, amebic dysentery. Patients present with inflammatory diarrhea, nausea, vomiting, fever, abdominal pain, a positive history of travel, camping, infectious contacts, day care attendance, increased fecal leukocyte level, elevated erythrocyte sedimentation rate. Cultures or stained fecal smears for specific organisms are more definitive.

Drugs that commonly cause diarrhea[1]

References

  1. Branski D, Lerner A, Lebenthal E (1996). "Chronic diarrhea and malabsorption". Pediatr Clin North Am. 43 (2): 307–31. PMID 8614603.

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