Infectious diarrhoea Flashcards

1
Q

What is infectious diarrhoea?

A

Inflammation of mucous membranes of GI tract

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2
Q

Presentation of infectious diarrhoea

A

Diarrhoea
+/- abdo pain
Fever
Nausea and vomitting

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3
Q

How quick is onset of food poisonning with S.aureus toxin?

A

Within 12 hours - v fast

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4
Q

Bacterial infectious diarrhoea causes

A

E.coli
Cholera
Shigella
Salmonella
S.aureus
Campylobacter
Bacillus cerues

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5
Q

What bacteria that causes food poisonning is also ass with guillian barre syndrome?

A

Campylobacter

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6
Q

What causes parasitic infection adn onset?

A

Giardia
Amoebiasis

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7
Q

Non bloody causes of diarrhoea

A

E.coli
Giardiasis
Cholera
S.aureus
Bacilus

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8
Q

Bloody causes of diarrhoea

A

Shigella
Campylobacter
Amoebiasis
Shiga toxin producing e coli

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9
Q

Most common cause of travellers diarrhoer

A

E.coli followed by campylobacter

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10
Q

Symptoms of travellers diarrhoea

A

abdominal cramps, nausea, fever, headache and bloating.

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11
Q

Symptoms of C difficile

A

Watery diarrhoea
Cramping abdo pain
Nause
Fever
Severe dehydration
Blood/pus in stool
pseudomembranous colitis

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12
Q

What do you get iwth pseudomembranous colitis?

A
  • Colon inflammation
  • Diarrhoea
  • Abdo pain
  • Fever
  • Distended colon and abdomen
  • life threat
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13
Q

Risk factors for C difficile

A

PPI use
Over 65
Prev infection

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14
Q

What causes C.difficile infection

A

Antibiotics use disrupts gut micorbiota causing overgrowth of C difficile

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15
Q

Life threatening complications of c difficile

A

Hypotension
Ileus
Toxic megacolon

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16
Q

How long does viral diarrhoea last

A

2-3 days

17
Q

Bacterial diarrhoea duration

A

3-7 dyasif untreated

18
Q

Protozoal diarrhoea duration

A

Weeks to months without treatment

19
Q

Red flags with acute diarrhoea

A

Blood in the stool.
Recent hospital treatment or antibiotic treatment
Weight loss.
Evidence of dehydration.
Nocturnal symptoms — organic cause more likely.

20
Q

What are high risk groups for infectious diarrhoea?

A

Food handlers
Care home residents
Recent hospitilisaiton
Contacts with diarrhoea
Exposure to sources enteric infection eg meals out, petting zoo
Immunosupression

21
Q

Signs of dehydration

A

increased pulse rate, reduced skin turgor, dryness of mucous membranes, delayed capillary refill time, decreased urine output, hypotension

22
Q

Investigations bedside infectious diarrhoea

A

Abdo exam
PR exam
Stool sample - loose

23
Q

Dehydration symptoms

A
  • Moderate dehydration
    • Apathy/tiredness.
    • Dizziness.
    • Nausea/headache.
    • Muscle cramps.
    • Pinched face.
    • Dry tongue or sunken eyes.
    • Reduced skin elasticity.
    • Postural hypotension.
    • Tachycardia.
    • Oliguria
      Confusion -> coma
      Bp <90
      Hypovolaemic shock
24
Q

How to do a stool sample if the person has travelled abroad, its prolonged or recurrent?

A

Suspicious for parasites - request ova, cysts and parasites tests seperately a minimum of two days apart

25
Q

What to include on request form of stool sample for infectious diarrhoea?

A

Clinical features (for example fever; bloody stool; severe abdominal pain).
History of immunosuppression.
Food intake (for example shellfish).
Recent foreign travel (specify countries).
Recent antibiotic therapy, proton pump inhibitor therapy, or hospitalization (suggestive of Clostridium difficile infection).
Exposure to untreated water (suggestive of infection with protozoa).
Contact with other affected people, or an outbreak

26
Q

When to admit patient with acute diarrhoea?

A

Vomitting and unable to retain oral fluids or signs of severe dehydration and shock
Influenced by:
Over 60
Home circumstances and support level
Fever
Bloody diarrhoea
Comorbidities eg immunosupression, IBD, DM, rheumatoid, renal impaired, SLE
Drugs - PPIs, steroids, immunosupressants ACEis, diuretics

27
Q

Management of mild gastroenteritis

A

Advise on monitoring fluid intake and prevent/treat dehydration
Encourage regular fluid intake
Oral rehydration slat sl=olution as supplemental or with clinical features of dehydration
Give frequently in small doses after every loose motion
Drug treatment not routinely recommended
Advise should not attend work or other insitiutional/social settings for at least 48 hours after last episode
New features - safety net
Prevent transmission with hand washing with soap, cleaning surfaces that are often touched and washing soiled clothing and linen seperately to rest

28
Q

When should OTC antidiarrhoeal drugs not be used?

A

Blood mucous or pus in stools
High fever
shigellosis confimred, probable or suspected, E coli stool culture and sensitivity

29
Q

Treatment for gastroenteritis caused by giardiasis

A

Tinidazole 2g single dose

30
Q

Contraindications for clarithromycin

A

severe hepatic impairment if renal impairment is also present.
Pregnant women, especially in the first trimester
Breastfeeding women

31
Q

How to prescribe clarithromycin in people with renal impairment

A

use half normal dose if the estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) is less than 30 mL per minute per 1.73 m2; maximum duration 14 days.