Diarrhea, Acute and Chronic


Risk

  • Incidence in USA: 200–300 million new cases/y of acute, with >900,000 hospital admissions

  • Chronic: 1–5% of population; increasing with age; female at greater risk than male

  • Acute: Male and female equivalent

Perioperative Risks

  • Hypovolemia with hemodynamic instability

  • Electrolyte abnormalities, especially hypokalemia

  • Acid-base abnormalities: May be non–anion gap acidosis or alkalosis, depending on underlying cause

Worry About

  • Chronic

    • Underlying disease, especially iatrogenic (e.g., infection with antibiotic-induced diarrhea, end-stage liver disease with lactulose-induced diarrhea, or disaccharide [usually lactose] intolerance)

    • Hormone-producing tumors (e.g., carcinoid, VIPomas, gastrinomas)

    • Vitamin K malabsorption with coagulopathy

    • Extraintestinal manifestations of IBD (e.g., deforming arthritis, cholangitis)

    • Stress-steroid therapy in IBD

    • Psychologic symptoms in up to 50% of pts with IBS; often alternates with constipation

    • Postsurgical losses that may drain via ileostomy or fistula or may be due to inadequate bowel absorption secondary to resection (short bowel syndrome)

  • Acute

  • Viral, bacterial, or protozoan disease

Overview

  • Acute: Abrupt onset of loose stools in healthy individual: Viral—Self-limited, 1–3 d, causing changes in small intestinal cells with a shortened transit time; bacterial—Tends to occur in groups of individuals (if within 12 h of a meal, usually due to preformed toxin); protozoan—Prolonged watery diarrhea from contaminated water supply in endemic area.

  • Chronic: Too-frequent passage of stools that are too loose for too long; >200 g/day of stool for >4 wk.

  • Multifactorial medical problem that requires supportive therapy and attention to the underlying etiology.

  • Only one in a spectrum of medical problems associated with an underlying disease or with treatment of disease. Supportive therapy includes fluid and lyte repletion and attention to acid-base balance.

  • Toxic megacolon: Extreme manifestation of inflammatory or infectious bowel disease is a surgical emergency. Pts often septic.

Etiology

  • Chronic:

    • Osmotic: Laxatives, indigestible carbohydrates

    • Secretory: Hormone-producing tumors

    • Exudative: IBD, pseudomembranous colitis

    • Decreased mucosal contact/mixing: Short bowel syndrome, IBS, hypermotility secondary to vagotomy, diabetic neuropathy

    • Malabsorption: Pancreatic exocrine insufficiency, celiac disease, Whipple disease, small-bowel bacterial overgrowth

  • Acute

    • Viral or bacterial (with or without toxin) or protozoan (see Overview )

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