BSG Guidelines for the Investigation of Chronis Diarrhoea - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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BSG Guidelines for the Investigation of Chronis Diarrhoea

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Title: BSG Guidelines for the Investigation of Chronis Diarrhoea


1
BSG Guidelines (2003) for the Investigation of
Chronic Diarrhoea
2
Definition
  • Chronic diarrhoea may be defined as the abnormal
    passage of three or more loose or liquid stools
    per day for more than four weeks and/or a daily
    stool weight greater than 200 g/day.

3
Prevalence
  • Talley et al reported a prevalence of chronic
    diarrhoea of between 7 and 14 in an elderly
    population
  • estimates of the prevalence of chronic diarrhoea
    in a Western population are of the order of 45

4
Algorithm for investigation of chronic diarrhoea
5
Causes of chronic diarrhoea
  • Other small bowel enteropathies (for example,
    Whipples disease,
  • tropical sprue, amyloid, intestinal
    lymphangiectasia)
  • Bile acid malabsorption
  • Disaccharidase deficiency
  • Small bowel bacterial overgrowth
  • Mesenteric ischaemia
  • Radiation enteritis
  • Lymphoma
  • Giardiasis (and other chronic infection)
  • Colonic
  • Colonic neoplasia
  • Ulcerative and Crohns colitis
  • Microscopic colitis
  • Small bowel
  • Coeliac disease
  • Crohns disease

6
Causes of Chronic Diarhoea
  • Other
  • Factitious diarrhoea
  • Surgical causes (e.g. small bowel resections,
    internal fistulae)
  • Drugs
  • Alcohol
  • Autonomic neuropathy
  • Pancreatic
  • Chronic pancreatitis
  • Pancreatic carcinoma
  • Cystic fibrosis
  • Endocrine
  • Hyperthyroidism
  • Diabetes
  • Hypoparathyroidism
  • Addisons disease
  • Hormone secreting tumours (VIPoma, gastrinoma,
    carcinoid)

7
Initial investigations
  • History and Examination
  • Aim to establish
  • (a) organic vs functional,
  • (b) malabsorptive vs colonic/inflammatory forms
    of diarrhoea
  • (c) to assess for specific causes of diarrhoea.

8
Symptoms of Organic Disease
  • less than three months duration,
  • Predominantly nocturnal or continuous (as opposed
    to intermittent) diarrhoea,
  • significant weight loss.

9
Functional Disease
  • The absence of symptoms of organic disease, in
    conjunction with positive symptoms such as those
    defined in the Manning or Rome criteria and a
    normal physical examination, are suggestive of a
    functional bowel disturbance, but only with a
    specificity of approximately 5274.
  • Unfortunately, these criteria do not reliably
    exclude inflammatory bowel disease.

10
Malabsorption Colonic/Inflammtory
steatorrhoea liquid loose stools with blood
bulky malodorous pale stools mucous discharge
Inspection of the stool may be helpful
in distinguishing these two
11
Risk Factors for Organic Disease
  • Family history. Particularly of neoplastic,
    inflammatory bowel, or coeliac disease.
  • Previous surgery.
  • Previous Pancreatic disease
  • Systemic disease i.e. Thyrotoxicosis/parathyroid
    disease
  • Alcohol
  • Drugs
  • Recent overseas travel or other potential sources
    of infectious gastrointestinal pathogens
  • Recent antibiotic therapy and Clostridium
    difficile infection
  • Lactase deficiency

12
Basic Investigations
  • FBC
  • U and Es
  • liver function tests, including albumin
  • vitamin B12 and folate,
  • calcium, ferritin,
  • ESR and CRP
  • TFTs
  • Coeliac screen- EMA (anti endomysial antibodies),
  • Anti TTG (anti tissue tranglutaminase)

13
Stool Tests
  • Inspection of stool
  • Stool collection - 24-48hrs
  • If less than 200g/day, no further investigations
    may be warranted
  • Stool cultures
  • Protozoan, giardasis and amoebiasis
  • ELISA for giardiasis
  • Stool osmolality limited use may help in
    differentiating secretory and osmotic diarrhoea

14
Functional Disease
  • Symptoms suggestive of Functional disease
  • lt 45 years
  • Normal basic investigations
  • Diagnosis Irritable bowel syndrome

15
Factitious Diarrhoea
  • a common cause of reported chronic diarrhoeal
    symptoms in Western populations.
  • Due to
  • laxative abuse
  • adding of water or urine to stool specimens
  • Up to 20 of patients that are seen in tertiary
    centres.
  • Often underlying psychiatric hx such as eating
    disorders
  • High index of suspicion

16
Colonic/Terminal Ileal Disease
  • Flexible Sigmoidoscopy
  • Recommended in patients under 45 because covers
    most pathology in this age group
  • Allows assessment and sampling of sigmoid and
    descending colon
  • In a study (n809) of non HIV Non bloody chronic
    diarrhoea it was demonstrated that 15 of
    patients had colonic pathology
  • 99.7 of these diagnoses could have been made
    from biopsies of the distal colon using a
    flexible sigmoidoscope,
  • primary diagnoses being microscopic colitis,
    Crohns disease, melanosis coli, and ulcerative
    colitis.

17
Colonic/Terminal Ileal Disease
  • Colonoscopy
  • Recommended in patients over 45 years old
  • Diarrhoea may be caused by colorectal neoplasia
  • One study showed prevalence of colonic neoplasms
    of 27 in those patients undergoing colonoscopy
    for a change in bowel habit
  • 50 of neoplasms are proximal to splenic flexture
  • Higher diagnostic yield with ileoscopy
    particularly in IBD
  • preferred modality to exclude or confirm
    microscopic colitis
  • Barium Enemas useful in complementing colonoscopy
    but has lower sensitivity in detecting neoplasms

18
Colonic/Terminal Ileal Disease
  • If colonoscopy and barium enema negative
  • Barium follow through further imaging of
    terminal ileum and proximal colon in patients
    with negative findings on colonoscopy and biopsy
  • Enteroclysis/Technetium scan
  • ?Superseded by CT with contrast and video
    endoscopy

19
Malabsorption- Small Bowel
  • Upper GI endoscopy with duodenal biopsies even in
    absence of EMA/TTG antibodies
  • Small bowel imaging (barium follow through or
    enteroclysis) should be reserved for cases where
    small bowel malabsorption is suspected and distal
    duodenal histology is normal (C).

20
Malabsorption- Small Bowel
  • If enteropathy (e.g. Whipples , tropical sprue
    amyloid)-
  • Fat malabsorption
  • faecal elastase and EMA is superior to 3 day
    stool samples for fat measurement.
  • Breath tests 14C-triolein absorption to measure
    fat absorption in high faecal fat content

21
Malabsorption- Pancreatic
  • Severe pancreatic insufficiency with
    malabsorption is normally associated with
    pancreatic duct abnormalities. ERCP offers the
    greatest sensitivity for the diagnosis of ductal
    changes- (however since the publication of this
    guideline in 2003 practice has changed as
    mentioned below MRCP has replaced ERCP as
    diagnostic option)
  • MRCP has the potential to replace ERCP as the
    imaging modality of choice and has the advantage
    of avoiding the risks associated with ERCP

22
Malabsorption- Pancreatic
  • Urine tests such as the Pancreolauryl test and
    stool tests such as faecal elastase or
    chymotrypsin poor sensitivity in mild/moderate
    pancreatic dysfunction
  • Serum levels of pancreatic dysfunction are only
    affected in severe pancreatic dysfunction

23
Small bowel bacterial overgrowth
  • Culture of small bowel aspirates is the most
    sensitive test for SBBO but methods are poorly
    standardised and positive results may not reflect
    clinically significant SBBO (B).
  • Hydrogen breath tests have poor sensitivity but
    acceptable specificity, and are of value when a
    positive result is obtained.
  • The glucose hydrogen breath test is recommended

24
Bile Acid Malabsorption
  • Bile acid malabsorption (BAM) may occur when
    there isterminal ileal disease or resection.
    Measurement of serum 7a hydroxy-4-cholesten-3-one
    is an effective test for this but is seldom
    performed.
  • 75Se homotaurocholate (75Se-HCAT) testing is more
    widely available and is a sensitive measure
  • In the absence of these tests a therapeutic trial
    of cholestyramine is sometimes employed as a test
    for the presence of BAM, but the validity of this
    approach has not been subject to study

25
Hormone Secreting Tumours
  • Diarrhoea due to hormone secreting tumours is
    extremely rare and
  • testing for the presence of excess vasoactive
    intestinal peptide, gastrin, or glucagon in
    plasma is recommended only in the presence of
    high volume watery diarrhoea when other causes of
    diarrhoea have been excluded

26
Summary
  • History and examination extremely important
  • Important to exclude functional diarrhoea with
    basic investigations and thorough history
  • Coeliac serology tests should be done early in
    investigation
  • In patients under the age of 45, flexible
    sigmoidoscopy is recommended
  • In patients with one first degree relative with
    bowel neoplasm and above age of 45 warrant a
    colonoscopy

27
Summary
  • Obvious deficiencies in the investigation of
    SBBO, pancreatic insufficiency, BAM
  • Empirical therapy is often employed

28
  • Gut. 2003 July 52(Suppl 5) v1v15.Guidelines
    for the investigation of chronic diarrhoea, 2nd
    edition P Thomas, A Forbes, J Green, P Howdle, R
    Long, R Playford, M Sheridan, R Stevens, R
    Valori, J Walters, G Addison, P Hill, and G
    Brydon
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