Diarrhoea illness Flashcards

1
Q

what is gastro-enteritis?

A

3 or more loose stools per day with accompanying features such as:

  • fever
  • abdo pain
  • bloody stool
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2
Q

what is dysentry?

A

large bowel inflammation with bloody stools

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3
Q

what can cause gastroenteritis?

A

contamination of foodstuffs aka. food poisoning
poor storage of foodstuffs
travel related infection
person to person spread

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4
Q

what is the most common cause of gastroenteritis?

A

viruses

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5
Q

what’s the most common bacterial pathogen responsible for gastroenteritis?

A

campylobacter

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6
Q

what are the 4 defences against enteric infections?

A

hygiene
stomach acid
normal gut flora
immunity

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7
Q

how does cholera cause diarrhoea?

A

increases cAMP levels and Cl secretion

increases secretion of Cl along with Na and K which causes osmotic effect = massive loss of water from the gut

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8
Q

how would you initially assess a patient with diarrhoea?

A

symptom duration: <2 weeks is unlikely
risk of food poisoning (diet, travel)
assess hydration (pulse, skin turgor, postural BP)
features of inflammation: SIRS (fever, raised WCC etc)

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9
Q

what investigations would you carry out if someone presented with diarrhoea?

A
stool bacterial culture 
(molecular or Ag testing)
blood culture
renal function
blood count
abdominal X-ray/ CT if distended/tender abdominal
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10
Q

what are the differential diagnoses of gastroenteritis?

A

IBD
spurious diarrhoea secondary to constipation
carcinoma

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11
Q

what is the difference in the onset of campylobacter vs salmonella?

A

campylobacter has 7 day incubation period whereas salmonella is < 48 hours after exposure

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12
Q

what are the 2 most common species of campylobacter that cause gastroenteritis?

A

C. jejuni

C. coli

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13
Q

what is the difference in the stool tests with campylobacter vs salmonella?

A

campylobacter will be negative after 6 weeks

salmonella may still show positive up to 20 weeks

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14
Q

what are the 2 most common salmonella infections?

A

salmonella enteritis

salmonella typhimurium

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15
Q

how is E.coli contracted?

A

contaminated meat or from person to person spread

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16
Q

what toxin does E.coli O157 produce?

A

shinga toxin

17
Q

what is haemolytic uraemia syndrome and what causes it?

A

caused by E.coli O157

renal failure, haemolytic anaemia and thrombocytopenia (low platelets)

18
Q

what is the treatment for HUS?

A

supportive

don’t give antibiotics as this makes the haemolytic worse

19
Q

how is E.coli distinguished from other strains of E.coli?

A

it is non-sorbitol fermenting

20
Q

what are causes of food poisoning outbreaks?

A

staph aureus
bacillus cereus
clostridium perfringes

21
Q

when would you give antibiotics for gastroenteritis?

A

immunocompromised
severe sepsis or invasive infection
chronic illness i.e. malignancy

22
Q

if a patient presents with diarrhoea and had been on co-amoxiclav 2 weeks ago, what is the most likely cause of the diarrhoea?

A

clostridium difficile

23
Q

what is the treatment for c.diff?

A

vancomycin

metronidazole

24
Q

what is the treatment for giardia lamblia?

A

metronidazole

25
Q

what amoeba causes invasive extra intestinal symptoms?

A

entamoeba histolytica

26
Q

what is the treatment for intestinal disease causes by entamoeba histolytica?

A

metronidazole + luminal agent to clear colonisation

27
Q

what is the difference between rotavirus and norovirus?

A

rotavirus found in children under 5 in the winter usually

norovirus is the ‘winter vomiting disease’ found in adults usually in hospitals, schools etc

28
Q

how is norovirus diagnosed?

A

PCR

29
Q

what is an example of an inflammatory and non-inflammatory diarrhoea illness?

A
non-inflammatory = cholera
inflammatory = shigella dysentery
30
Q

what are the 3 most common parasites that cause diarrhoea illness?

A

giardia lambia / duodenalis
cryptosporidium parvum
entamoeba histolytica

31
Q

what investigation should be carried out for diagnosis of a parasitic infection causing diarrhoea?

A

stool microscopy

32
Q

what investigations should be carried out to exclude c.difficile as the cause of diarrhoea?

A

toxin testing

33
Q

what investigation should be carried out for diagnosis of a viral infection causing diarrhoea?

A

viral PCR/ antigen testing

34
Q

what diarrhoea illness is toxic megacolon a complication of?

A

clostridium difficile

35
Q

what is responsible for the cause of entamoeba histolytic?

A

foreign travel and poor hygiene

36
Q

what is responsible for the cause of guardia lambia?

A

contaminated water supply