P1: RLJ/OZN P2: KUF
0521779407-D-01 CUNY1086/Karliner 0 521 77940 7 June 13, 2007 7:41
484 Diarrhea
Osmotic Diarrhea
■Disaccharidase deficiency, small intestinal mucosal disease, laxa-
tive abuse, medication/ETOH induced, malabsorption syndromes,
lymphatic obstruction, intestinal resection, bacterial overgrowth
Secretory Diarrhea
■Celiac sprue, enterotoxins, endocrine tumors, medication, neo-
plasms, colitis, fatty acid/bile acid malabsorption, hyperthyroidism,
collagen vascular disease
Diarrhea Due to Dysmotility
■IBS, diabetic diarrhea, blind loop syndrome, malignant carcinoid,
post vagotomy, cholecystectomy, gastrectomy, ileocecal valve
■resection
management
What to Do First
■Assess acuteness, severity of diarrhea, complications and candidacy
for therapy
■Determine organic vs functional disorder
General Measures
■Correction of electrolyte disorders and anemia
■Rehydration
■Avoidance of offending agent if possible
■Nutritional support
specific therapy
■Antibiotics for infectious etiologies: (see section on infectious diar-
rhea) especially in immunosuppressed patients or those with valvu-
lar heart disease, orthopedic prosthesis, or malignancies
■Antimotility agents if not detrimental (see below)
■Octreotide for endocrine tumors
■Cholestyramine for bile acid diarrhea
■Anti-inflammatory agents for IBD/microscopic colitis: glucocorti-
coids, 5ASA compounds, azathioprine, 6MPClonidine for diabetic
diarrhea
■Enzyme replacement therapy for disaccharidase deficiency and pan-
creatic insufficiency
Side Effects & Contraindications
■Antibiotics: may cause prolongation of microorganism excretion
time, allergic reactions, worsening diarrhea
➣Contraindication: history of allergy to medication