Internal Medicine

(Wang) #1

0521779407-10 CUNY1086/Karliner 0 521 77940 7 June 7, 2007 18:40


Infectious Diarrheas 827

specific therapy
■empiric antimicrobial therapy without additional evaluation:
➣moderate-to-severe travelers’ diarrhea
➣8 stools/d, with blood or pus, fever
➣if bacterial diarrhea suspected by clinical features and/or pos-
itive fecal occult blood or fecal leukocytes; not for Shiga toxin-
producing E. coli or C. difficile
➣if Giardia suspected and≥2 wk duration (metronidazole)
■nonspecific (not for patients with febrile dysentery or Shiga toxin-
producing E. coli):
➣opiates and derivatives (decrease intestinal motility)
loperamide (Imodium) – reduces number of stools
diphenoxylate-atropine (Lomotil) – less expensive, but has
central opiate and adverse cholinergic effects
➣bismuth subsalicylate for vomiting and mild to moderate acute
diarrhea
➣specific antimicrobial therapy (treatment of choice listed):
Campylobacter jejuni(most common pathogen in immuno-
competent patients with bacterial diarrhea)
fluoroquinolones
Campylobacter fetus(immunocompromised patients)
ampicillin+gentamicin IV
Shigella(treat all moderate and severe dysentery)
fluoroquinolones
Salmonellagastroenteritis, uncomplicated
no antibiotics
Salmonellagastroenteritis, severe, or in immunocompro-
mised or elderly
trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole (if susceptible) or cipro-
floxacin
enteric (typhoid) fever
fluoroquinolones
if shock or deteriorating mental status – dexamethasone
(before antibiotic)
Shiga toxin-producing E. coli (including O157:H7)
antimotility agents and antibiotics should be avoided
enterotoxigenicE. coli(traveler’s diarrhea)
consider empiric therapy with fluoroquinolones, or rifax-
imin
enteropathogenic E. coli
fluoroquinolones
Clostridium difficile
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