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Bacterial Diarrhea

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E. Coli, Salmonella, Shigella, Campylobacter, Vibrio, Yersinia, Clostridium difficle ... Rare in Salmonella, Yersinia, ETEC, EAEC. Treatment of Diarrhea ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Bacterial Diarrhea


1
Bacterial Diarrhea
  • Chris E. Forsmark, M.D.
  • Division of Gastroenterology, Hepatology, and
    Nutrition

2
Infectious Diarrhea
  • 3-5 billion episodes yearly
  • Major cause of worldwide morbidity and mortality
  • 5 million deaths yearly, 80 lt 1 year of age
  • Major cause of work/school absenteeism
  • Major economic burden, especially in developing
    countries

3
Organisms
  • Bacteria
  • E. Coli, Salmonella, Shigella, Campylobacter,
    Vibrio, Yersinia, Clostridium difficle
  • Viruses
  • Norwalk agent, Rotavirus
  • Parasites
  • Giardia, Amoeba

4
How do these organisms cause diarrhea?
  • Pathophysiology
  • Osmotic
  • Secretory
  • Exudation
  • Abnormal motility

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Osmotic Diarrhea
Definition Increased amounts of poorly absorbed,
osmotically active solutes in gut lumen
  • Interferes with absorption of water
  • Solutes are ingested
  • Magnesium sulfate or citrate or magnesium
    containing antacids
  • Sorbitol
  • Malabsorption of food
  • Lactase deficiency
  • Celiac sprue
  • Variety of infectious organisms (particularly
    viruses)

7
Secretory Diarrhea
  • Excess secretion of electrolytes and water across
    mucosal surface
  • Usually coupled with inhibition of absorption
  • Clinical features
  • stools very watery
  • stool volume large
  • fasting does not stop diarrhea

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Secretory Diarrhea
  • Bacterial or viral enterotoxins
  • Cholera, enterotoxigenic E. coli, B. cereus, S.
    aureus, Rotavirus, Norwalk virus
  • Hormonal secretagogues
  • Certain laxatives (castor oil, senna)

10
Exudative Diarrhea
  • Intestinal or colonic mucosa inflamed and
    ulcerated
  • Leakage of fluid, blood, pus
  • Impairment of absorption
  • Increased secretion (prostaglandins)
  • The extent of bowel involved determines
  • Severity of diarrhea
  • Systemic signs and symptoms (abdominal pain,
    fever, etc)

11
Exudative Diarrhea
  • Infectious, invasive organisms
  • Shigella, Campylobacter, Yersinia, E.
    histolytica, EHEC, C diff
  • Idiopathic inflammatory bowel disease
  • Crohns disease
  • Ulcerative Colitis
  • Ischemia

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14
Abnormal Motility
  • Increased colonic motility
  • Irritable bowel syndrome
  • Increased small bowel motility
  • Hyperthyroidism, post-operative dumping
  • Decreased small bowel motility
  • Scleroderma, with bacterial overgrowth
  • Anal sphincter dysfunction
  • Incontinence

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16
Diarrhea
  • Non-inflammatory
  • Watery diarrhea, no blood or mucus or pus in
    stool, no fever or systemic signs
  • Secretory or osmotic mechanism
  • Dehydration may occur
  • Generally self-limited and more benign
  • Therapy generally supportive
  • Inflammatory
  • Frequent lower volume stool, mucoid, bloody, or
    purulent. Often with fever or systemic signs,
    tenesmus, urgency
  • Exudative mechanism
  • Dehydration rare
  • Less benign

17
Common syndromes of infectious diarrhea
  • Food poisoning
  • Acute watery diarrhea
  • Travelers diarrhea
  • Epidemics
  • Acute bloody diarrhea
  • Dysentery

18
Special circumstances
  • Outbreaks/food poisoning
  • Overseas travel
  • Immunocompromised host
  • Raw seafood ingestion
  • Antibiotic usage

19
Host defense factors
  • Gastric acidity
  • Intestinal motility
  • Intestinal microflora
  • Mucus
  • Systemic and local immune mechanisms
  • Others (e.g. breast feeding)

20
Bacterial virulence factors
  • Adherence
  • Enterotoxin production
  • Cytotoxin production
  • Mucosal invasion

21
Mechanisms of infection
  • Ingestion of preformed toxin (food poisoning)
  • Fecal-oral contamination
  • Food, flies, fingers, feces, and fomites
  • Contaminated food
  • Animal reservoir
  • Fecal-oral contamination of food
  • Infectious dose varies (100 to 109)

22
History
  • Onset and duration of diarrhea
  • Timing of exposure to potential pathogens
  • Travel, ingestion history, environment, recent
    medications, age
  • Character of stool
  • Volume, presence of blood, mucus, or pus
  • Associated symptoms and signs
  • Abdominal pain, fever, vomiting, dehydration

23
Physical examination
  • Vital signs Fever, tachycardia
  • Abdominal tenderness or pain
  • Signs of dehydration
  • Blood in stool

24
E. coli
25
Nontyphoidal Salmonella
  • Salmonella typhimurium and enteritidis
  • Clinical syndromes
  • Gastroenteritis and colitis
  • Bacteremia and endocarditis
  • Enteric fever (typhi and paratyphi)
  • Localized tissue infection
  • Carrier state (gt 1 year)
  • Food-borne illness (poultry, meat, eggs)

26
Shigella
  • dysenteriae, flexneri, boydii, sonnei
  • Watery or bloody diarrhea
  • May be complicated by reactive arthritis and
    rarely HUS
  • Very infectious ( 100 organisms cause disease)

27
Campylobacter
  • Mainly C. jejuni
  • Transmission from infected animals or food
    products, fresh or salt water
  • Watery diarrhea or dysentery
  • May be complicated by Guillain-Barré and IPSID

28
Vibrio
  • Cholera
  • Enterotoxin elaborated causes severe watery
    diarrhea
  • Complications common due to dehydration

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31
Classic Syndromes Acute food poisoning
  • Similar illness in 2 or more persons
  • Epidemiologic evidence of common food source
  • Onset of symptoms typically within 6 hours of
    ingestion
  • Nausea and vomiting prominent
  • Preformed toxin of S. aureus or B. cereus
  • Longer incubation periods for C. perfringens

32
Classic Syndromes Travelers Diarrhea
  • Attack rates of as high as 25
  • 90 brief and self-limited
  • Persistent diarrhea in 1-2
  • Depends on destination, eating habits, length of
    stay

33
Food-borne illness
34
Nosocomial diarrhea
  • Clostridium difficle
  • Increasing worldwide due to hypervirulent strain
    (North American Pulsefield type 1)
  • High fluoroquinolone resistance
  • Less responsive to usual therapy (metronidazole)
  • Higher complication rate

35
Evaluation of diarrhea
  • How long has the diarrhea been present?
  • Was it acquired in a particular environment?
  • Hospital
  • Recent antibiotic use
  • While traveling
  • Day care, cruise ship, picnic, etc
  • Exposure to sick persons
  • What are the characteristics of the diarrhea
  • Is there blood, mucus, or pus in the stool
  • Is it high volume or low volume
  • Is there associated tenesmus or urgency
  • What are the associated symptoms?
  • Fever, abdominal pain, vomiting, dehydration

36
Is evaluation required in every patient?
  • No
  • Evaluate those with high fever, systemic illness,
    tenesmus, blood/pus in stool, dehydration,
    immunocompromised
  • Remainder can often be managed without specific
    diagnosis with rehydration and antiperistaltic
    agents

37
Evaluation of Infectious Diarrhea
  • Stool studies
  • fecal leukocytes and RBC/blood
  • Bacterial culture
  • Include C. difficle toxin assay
  • May need to request EHEC screen
  • Endoscopic evaluation may be useful in some
  • especially for bloody diarrhea or chronic
    diarrhea

38
Fecal PMNs
  • Common in Shigella, Campylobacter, EHEC, EIEC, C.
    diff
  • Rare in Salmonella, Yersinia, ETEC, EAEC

39
Treatment of Diarrhea
  • Treatment of specific etiology
  • Non-specific treatment
  • hydration
  • Absorptions (Kaopectate)
  • Bismuth
  • Antiperistaltics/opiate derivatives
  • Fiber supplementation

40
Oral rehydration solutions
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43
Why not treat everyone with bacterial diarrhea?
  • Some have no effective specific treatment
  • Treatment may not change disease duration or
    severity
  • Treatment may predispose to carrier state
  • Treatment may produce complications (HUS,
    antibiotic resistance, C. difficle, toxic
    megacolon)

44
Who should be treated?
45
Antibiotic choice
  • E. coli
  • Quinolone
  • Shigella
  • Quinolone or TMP-SMX
  • Vibrio cholera
  • Tetracycline or quinolone
  • Salmonella
  • Quinolone or TMP-SMX
  • Campylobacter
  • Erythromycin or quinolone
  • Yersinia
  • tetracycline, TMP-SMX, or quinolone
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