GI Flashcards
Evaluating GI infections/food poisoning
- history and physical
- travel history
- recreational activities
- duration of symptoms
Duration of GI symptoms
- acute: < 14 days
- persistant: < 30 days
- chronic: > 30 days
GI anatomic considerations
- esophagus to stomach to small intestine to large intestine
- pH of stomach can withstand most bacteria
- peristalsis of small intestine inhibits adherence
- colon flora and IgA compete with pathogens
GI risk factors
- number of ingested organisms
- achlorhydia
- reduction in normal flora due to antibiotics
Traveler’s diarrhea
Enterotoxigenic E. coli
Parasitic infections
Giardia, Entamoeba
Antibiotic-associated diarrhea
C. difficile
Practical diagnosis
- History (food ingestion, travel, activities)
- Duration of illness
- Medications
- Underlying conditions
- Physical exam (state of hydration, exam of abdomen)
- Laboratory studies
- Fecal exam
Direct fecal smear
- Gram stain of smear
- WBC’s indicate invasion, not toxin
Enterotoxin-mediated diarrhea
- rapid onset indicates preformed toxin
- lack of fever
- absence of blood or pus
- large number of watery stools (> 20/day)
- Enterotoxigenic E. coli, cholera, S. aureus, C. perfringens, Bacillus cereus, viral or parasitic
Diarrhea mediated by invasion of bowel mucosal surface
- fecal leukocytes, RBC’s, fever
- Salmonella, Campy, Shigella, E. coli, Entamoeba
Diarrhea mediated by invasion of full thickness of bowel with lymphatic spread
- S. typhi, Y. enterocolitica
- presents with constipation
- fecal leukocytes and RBC’s
Common viral pathogens
Rodaviruses, Enteric adenoviruses, calciviruses, astroviruses
Common bacterial pathogens
Campy, Salmonella, Shigella, E. coli, Vibrio (parahaemolyticus, cholera, vulnificus), Y. enterocolitica, C. difficile, Listeria monocytogenes, Helicobacter, Aeromonas, Plesiomonas shigelloides, Edwardsiella, Neisseria gonorrhoeae, Chlyamydia, Treponema
Common parasitic pathogens
Giardia intestinalis, E. histolytica, Cryptosporidium, Cyclospora, Microsporidia
- most common cause of diarrheal illness worldwide
- microaerophilic, Campy BAP, 42C
- seagull wing appearance, darting motility
- oxidase +, catalase +
Campylobacter jejuni
- contaminated meat, eggs
- symptoms 6-8 hours after ingestion
- usually self-limiting
- indole -, K/A H2S +, oxidase -
- enteric fever
- high inoculum required
Salmonella typhi
- dysenteriae, flexneri, boydii, sonnei
- sonnei is most common in US
- non-motile, oxidase -
- causes dynsentery
- low inoculum required
Shigella
- infantile diarrhea
- adhesive, mucus in stool (no blood)
Enteropathogenic E. coli
- Traveler’s diarrhea
- due to poor sanitation
- requires large inoculum
- releases toxins
Enterotoxigenic E. coli
- dysentery with direction invasion/destruction of mucosa
- similar to Shigella, but higher inoculum
- watery diarrhea with blood, mucus and WBCs
Enteroinvasive E. coli
- rice-water stool
- large loss of electrolytes
- associated with epidemics
- catalase +, oxidase +
- toxin produced
- yellow on TCBS
Vibrio cholera
- Summer diarrhea in Japan, associated with seafood
- diarrhea and cramping
- green on TCBS
Vibrio parahaemolyticus
- “lactose positive” species
- raw or undercooked seafood, wounds
- green on TCBS
Vibrio vulnificus