Gastroenteritis Flashcards

1
Q

Diarrhea v Dysentery

A
  • Diarrhea - most common consequence of gastroenteritis; usually caused by enterotoxins and small intestine damage; frequent, watery d/c
  • Dysentery - frequent low volume stools w/ blood and pus; usually caused by inflammation and colon damage
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2
Q

Tx of Infectious Diarrhea

A
  • REHYDRATE (restore water and electrolytes)
    • Mild - pedialyte or water w/ saltine crackers
    • Moderate - oral rehydration (with Na and glucose to drag water into cells)
    • Severe - IV fluids
  • If non-inflammatory then can give anti-motility (loperamide or diphenoxalate - atropine)
  • If inflammatory (blood, pus, leuks in feces) then no anti-motility (prolongs contact) but give abx (unless EHEC)
    • Quinolones

**traveler should pack a thermometer, loperamide (anti-motility) and broad-spectrum abx; so if sick they can take temp (if no fever just use loperamide; if fever use abx)

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3
Q

Viral Gastroenteritis + Example

A
  • In General: brief incubation, vomiting anf diarrhea, esp in infants and young kids
  • Ex) Rotavirus
    • ds RNA reovirus
    • More common in winter and in young kids/elderly
    • Kills intestinal cells –> malabsorption
    • No vaccine
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4
Q

Vibrio Cholera

A
  • Gram neg rod; oxidase-pos
  • Usually spreads in fecally-contaminated water
  • Cholera enterotoxin –> inc cAMP –> Cl- secretion –> water diarrhea and severe dehydration
  • Tx - fluids and abx
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5
Q

Norovirus

A
  • ss RNA (calcivirus)
  • Easily spread fecal-orally
  • Sudden onset b/c .5-2 day incubation and only lasts 1-2 days
  • Damage to intestinal mucosa –> malabsorption
  • Tx - fluids and electrolytes (+ prevention via handwashing and disinfecting w/ bleach)
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6
Q

Food Poisoning Categorization

A
  • Intoxications (just need to ingest toxin- FAST ONSET)
  • Infections (must ingest actual viable pathogen)

1- In Vivo Toxin Production (C. perfringens, B. cereus, EHEC) - MODERATE ONSET; only symptomatic tx

2- Invasion (Salmonella, Shigella, Campylobacter) - SLOW ONSET; see fecal leuks and fevers; treat w/ abx

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7
Q

2 Examples of Intoxications

A
  • Ex) Clostridium botulinum
    - Produces neurotoxin –> flaccid paralysis
  • Ex) Staph or Bacillus cereus
    - Both produce heat-stable enterotoxins –> vomiting and diarrhea w/in 6 hrs
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8
Q

EHEC

A
  • Gram neg rod
  • Includes O157:H7 strain (can cause HUS)
  • Usually from contaminated foods (or petting zoo)
  • Produces Shiga toxin –> kills cells by inhibiting protein synthesis
  • Hemorrhagic colitis - bloody diarrhea 4 days after exposure that lasts about 1 wk
  • HUS - Shiga toxin absorbed –> circulation –> kidney –> acute renal fail
  • Use dialysis or fluids but not abx
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9
Q

Salmonella

A
  • Gram neg rod
  • 2 types - non-typhoid (#1 US food poisoning) and S. typhi (causes typhoid fever in developing countries)
  • Invade thru M cells of Peyers patches
  • Non-typhoid stays in intestine and causes nausea, vomiting, cramps, diiarrhea
  • S typhi can survive in macrophages then spread via reticuloendothelial tissue (esp to liver) –> multi-organ disease and fever
  • Traveler’s vaccine for S. typhi
  • Tx - may use abx for non-typhoid and definitely use abx for S. typhi; restore fluids and electrolytes
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10
Q

C Diff

A
  • Gram pos, anaerobic, spore-forming rod
  • Range from mild abx-associated diarrhea to pseudomembranous colitis (systemic, fever, severe dehydration)
  • 1-3% develop megacolon
  • Toxins A and B - inflammation and damage colon mucosa
  • Dx - toxins A and B in stool
  • Tx - fluids, metro/oral vancomycin, fecal transplant (more effective than abx)
  • Gloves, handwashing (NOT ALCOHOL), 10% bleach wipes
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11
Q

ETEC

A

Enterotoxigenic E Coli (most common traveler’s diarrhea)

  • Gram neg rod
  • Fecal-oral transmission
  • Causes watery diarrhea w/o fever
  • Enterotoxins
    - Heat-labile –> inc cAMP
    - Heat-stable –> inc cGMP
  • Treat w/ fluids and electrolytes; can treat symptoms w/ loperamide
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12
Q

Gastroenteritis in Immune-Comp

A
  • In General: can be infected w/ normal GI pathogens at lower doses (Shigella, Salmonella)
  • OR opportunistic infections
    • In Transplant Pt … CMV, Epstein Barr
    • In HIV/AIDS Pt … entamoeba histolytica, crypto, Giardia, Isospora (parasite), mycobacterium avium intracellulare, CMV, HSV
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13
Q

Cryptosporidium Parvum

A
  • Parasite that forms resistant cysts
  • Contaminated drinking water
  • Dx - modified acid fast stain of stool for cysts
  • No effective abx
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