Chronic diarrhea differential diagnosis

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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

Differential diagnosis

It is important to differentiate chronic diarrhea based on the kind of diarrhea that is produced. Chronic diarrhea can be subdivided into three major types; watery, fatty, inflammatory. Watery chronic diarrhea can then further be sub-divided into osmotic or secretory diarrhea. Below is a list of differential Diagnosis of Chronic Diarrhea by Stool Characteristics.[1]

Watery

  • Secretory (often nocturnal; unrelated to food intake; fecal osmotic gap < 50 mOsm per kg*)
    • Alcoholism
    • Bacterial enterotoxins (e.g., cholera)
    • Bile acid malabsorption
    • Brainerd diarrhea (epidemic secretory diarrhea)
    • Congenital syndromes
    • Crohn disease (early ileocolitis)
    • Endocrine disorders (e.g., hyperthyroidism [increases motility])
    • Medications (see causes section)
    • Microscopic colitis (lymphocytic and collagenous subtypes)
    • Neuroendocrine tumors (e.g., gastrinoma, vipoma, carcinoid tumors, mastocytosis)
    • Nonosmotic laxatives (e.g., senna, docusate sodium [Colace])
    • Postsurgical (e.g., cholecystectomy, gastrectomy, vagotomy, intestinal resection)
    • Vasculitis
  • Osmotic (fecal osmotic gap > 125 mOsm per kg*)
    • Carbohydrate malabsorption syndromes (e.g., lactose, fructose)
    • Celiac disease
    • Osmotic laxatives and antacids (e.g., magnesium, phosphate, sulfate)
    • Sugar alcohols (e.g., mannitol, sorbitol, xylitol)
  • Functional (distinguished from secretory types by hypermotility, smaller volumes, and improvement at night and with fasting)
    • Irritable bowel syndrome

Fatty (bloating and steatorrhea in many, but not all cases)

  • Malabsorption syndrome (damage to or loss of absorptive ability)
    • Amyloidosis
    • Carbohydrate malabsorption (e.g., lactose intolerance)
    • Celiac sprue (gluten enteropathy)–various clinical presentations
    • Gastric bypass
    • Lymphatic damage (e.g., congestive heart failure, some lymphomas)
    • Medications (e.g., orlistat [Xenical; inhibits fat absorption], acarbose [Precose; inhibits carbohydrate absorption])
    • Mesenteric ischemia
    • Noninvasive small bowel parasite (e.g., Giardia)
    • Postresection diarrhea
    • Short bowel syndrome
    • Small bowel bacterial overgrowth (> 105 bacteria per mL)
    • Tropical sprue
    • Whipple disease (Tropheryma whippelii infection)
  • Maldigestion (loss of digestive function)
    • Hepatobiliary disorders
    • Inadequate luminal bile acid
    • Loss of regulated gastric emptying
    • Pancreatic exocrine insufficiency

Inflammatory or exudative (elevated white blood cell count, occult or frank blood or pus)

  • Inflammatory bowel disease Crohn disease (ileal or early Crohn disease may be secretory)
    • Diverticulitis
    • Ulcerative colitis
    • Ulcerative jejunoileitis
  • Invasive infectious diseases
    • Clostridium difficile (pseudomembranous) colitis–antibiotic history
    • Invasive bacterial infections (e.g., tuberculosis, yersiniosis)
    • Invasive parasitic infections (e.g., Entamoeba)–travel history
    • Ulcerating viral infections (e.g., cytomegalovirus, herpes simplex virus)
  • Neoplasia
    • Colon carcinoma
    • Lymphoma
    • Villous adenocarcinoma
  • Radiation colitis

References

  1. Lacy, Brian E.; Mearin, Fermín; Chang, Lin; Chey, William D.; Lembo, Anthony J.; Simren, Magnus; Spiller, Robin (2016). "Bowel Disorders". Gastroenterology. 150 (6): 1393–1407.e5. doi:10.1053/j.gastro.2016.02.031. ISSN 0016-5085.


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