0521779407-10 CUNY1086/Karliner 0 521 77940 7 June 7, 2007 18:40
826 Infectious Diarrheas
detect opportunistic infections such as CMV in immunocompro-
mised pts, and rarely to diagnose C. difficile with pseudomembranes
while toxin assays are pending)
differential diagnosis
■nausea, vomiting, watery diarrhea: viral gastroenteritis (e.g., noro-
viruses in families and outbreaks; rotaviruses in young children) or
preformed toxin (e.g.,S. aureus, B. cereus)
■dehydration: cholera, ETEC (in very young & very old), EPEC
(infants), rotavirus, rarely Salmonella
■large volume diarrhea, upper abdominal pain/cramps: small intesti-
nal pathogen±colonic involvement
■many small frequent stools, urgency, tenesmus, dysentery:
➣colitis – Campylobacter most common; IBD
➣proctitis – N. gonorrhoeae
■persistent diarrhea (≥14 days): parasites (e.g.,Giardia, Cryptosporid-
ium, Cyclospora, Microsporidium, Isospora), bacterial infection or
overgrowth, malabsorption
■recent travel to: developing countries (bacteria); mountainous
areas/recreational waters with wildlife (Giardia); Russia (Cryp-
tosporidium, Giardia)
■recent antibiotic treatment (≤2 mo) or recent hospitalization: C. dif-
ficile
■day care center contact: any agent spread by fecal-oral route
■food- or water-borne outbreak: Norwalk virus,S. aureus, B. cereus,
V. parahaemolyticus, V. cholerae, Aeromonas, Plesiomonas, L. mono-
cytogenes, Cyclospora, Giardia
management
What To Do First
■assess hydration
■prompt fluid and electrolyte therapy
General Measures
■nondehydrated, otherwise healthy: sport drinks, diluted fruit juices,
soft drinks and saltine crackers/broths/soups, avoidance of milk
products, use of “BRAT” diet (bananas, rice, applesauce, and toast)
■elderly and/or immunosuppressed: Pedialyte or Rehydrolyte solu-
tions (containing 45–75 mEq Na per liter)
■dehydrating, cholera-like: WHO oral rehydration solution or home-
made recipe (1/2 tsp table salt, 1/2 tsp baking soda, 4 tbsp sugar,
1 liter clean water)
■severe dehydration, hypovolemic shock: IV hydration