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Acute Diarrhoea Management and Antidiarrhoeal Agents

Post your experience

Acute gastroenteritis is usually a mild, self-limiting illness in the UK. If prolonged and untreated there may be sequelae from dehydration and electrolyte disturbances. In Western Europe dehydration may necessitate hospital admission, but death is uncommon in the previously well.

Deaths from intestinal infectious diseases, England & Wales 2005
Age Group Number of deaths
0-4 8
5-64 73
65+ 2125

There is a statutory obligation to notify by telephone or fax initially, the local Consultant for Communicable Disease Control (or Public Health consultant) if you suspect dysentery or food poisoning. This should be followed by written notification, on the standard certificate. There should be no delay for laboratory results.1

General management and advice

Most cases are short-lived and do not require investigation.

General principles

  • Assess dehydration and whether patient is systemically unwell
  • Encourage fluids and rehydration
  • Provide symptomatic relief with antimotility drugs
  • Obtain stool sample if persists or food poisoning suspected
  • Consider antibiotics if ill or frail
  • Consider referring if very ill, diabetic on insulin or metformin
  • People should be advised how to reduce spread by hand washing.2 Disinfecting contaminated surfaces, prompt washing of soiled items and avoiding contaminated food or water are also recommended.
  • Affected people should remain away from work or school until symptom free. Food-handlers and staff in health care services should be symptom free for 48 hours before return.3
  • If diarrhoea is due to Hepatitis A then employees must remain off work for 7 days after the start of symptoms.
  • Specialist advice should be sought for all cases of typhoid fever and haemorrhagic E. coli.
  • Negative stool cultures are NOT prerequisite for return to work.
  • Particular care should be taken when dealing with the following patients:
Dehydration

General principles

Most people can be safely advised to increase their daily fluid intake during the episode of diarrhoea.

  • Patients should be encouraged to drink glucose containing liquids and soups. Carbohydrates e.g. pasta and bread, assist the co-transport of glucose and sodium, so the amount of diarrhoea lost will be less than if water is used alone.
  • Children and the elderly are prone to dehydration; the use of Oral Rehydration Therapy (ORT) is advisable.4
  • A child should be encouraged by their preferred diet.

Management

  • Dehydration of less than 5% (mild) can be treated in primary care.
    • The amount of weight loss as a percentage of normal body weight provides the best estimate of degree of dehydration.
    • Clinical signs are not present until the child has lost at least 4% of their body weight. The best signs for identifying dehydration include decreased peripheral perfusion, abnormal skin turgor, and an abnormal respiratory pattern.5
  • ORT should be used in all cases where dehydration is seen.
    • Blood glucose monitoring should be more regular in diabetics on ORT.
    • Soft or fizzy drinks may cause osmotic diarrhoea as they are hypertonic.
    • 30-50 ml of ORT should be given to children over 3-4 hours.
    • If breast feeding is continuing, alternate feeds with ORT.
    • Adults should receive 2 litres of ORT in the first 24 hours. This is followed by unrestricted normal fluids with 200 ml of ORT for every loose stool or vomit.
  • Moderate (5-10%) or severe (greater than 10%)dehydration is an indication for admission.
Body weight Child fluid requirement per day
First 10kg 100ml/kg
Second 10 kg 50 ml/kg
Each subsequent kg 25 ml/kg
Feeding

There is no evidence that fasting has any benefit to recovery. Normal feeding should be resumed as soon as possible.6 Most children with watery diarrhoea regain their appetite after dehydration is corrected, whereas those with bloody diarrhoea often eat poorly until the illness resolves.7

  • Meta-analyses have found limited evidence that lactose-free feeds reduced the duration of diarrhoea in children with mild to severe dehydration compared with feeds containing lactose.8 A further Cochrane review is expected soon.
  • Continuing to feed is particularly important during breast feeding.
  • If the child is also vomiting, very small frequent feeds of normal diet or ORT every 10-60 minutes may be tolerated better.9
Anti-emetics
  • In general there is a lack of evidence to support their use in primary care. There may be significant adverse effects in children.
  • Adults may be helped, if vomiting is a severe problem, by metoclopramide 10 mg intramuscularly.
Anti-bacterials

HPA and local microbiology departments prefer the avoidance of treatment in infective diarrhoea, unless absolutely necessary. Preferably the patient's own immune system should be allowed to cope, to avoid antibiotic resistance.

  • Antibiotic therapy is usually only indicated for patients with positive stool cultures, who are systemically unwell and whose condition fails to improve within a few days.
  • Empirical treatment may be justified in high risk groups or those with clinical picture of dysentery.
    • Ciprofloxacin 500 mg bd is appropriate.
    • A significant reduction in the duration of diarrhoea and other symptoms has been observed after treatment, regardless of whether a pathogen is detected.10
  • It is also appropriate where symptoms cause serious disruption e.g urgent/ non postponable event.
  • It is also appropriate in diabetic patients.
  • Community acquired diarrhoea e.g. salmonella, responds well to ciprofloxacin, in cases where antibiotics are considered necessary. It reduces the duration of symptoms by 1-2 days.1
  • Trimethoprim is first line in children, adolescents, pregnant and breast feeding mothers.
  • Prophylactic antibiotic prescriptions are NOT available on the NHS for foreign travel. It may be appropriate for patients travelling to remote areas to obtain a private prescription. A single 500 mg dose of ciprofloxacin is an effective empirical treatment for reducing the duration and severity of diarrhoea in travellers.11
Anti-motility drugs
  • These are occasionally useful for symptom control in mild to moderate diarrhoea in adults.
  • They should be avoided if the diarrhoea is bloody as there is a risk of causing severe colitis and toxic dilation of the colon.1,6
  • Loperamide is first line treatment as it has fewer central nervous system adverse effects
  • Anti-motility drugs are not to be used in young children. They do not prevent dehydration.
  • Loperamide may be used in children aged over 4 years. Some evidence shows it significantly improved recovery time. It may cause constipation.8
When to investigate
  • If symptoms have not settled within 48 hours, stool cultures for parasites, cysts and ova should be sent. Ideally 3 samples from differing days.
  • History of recent foreign travel.
  • Clinically indicated by severity of systemic upset, bloody diarrhoea, persisting for more than 5 days, suspected food poisoning or suspected traveller's diarrhoea.
  • Check stool for Clostridium difficile if recently hospitalised or received broad-spectrum antibiotic therapy in previous 6 weeks.
When to refer
  • Patients who are more than 5% dehydrated. The amount of weight loss as a percentage of normal body weight provides the best estimate of degree of dehydration. Clinical signs are not present until the child has lost at least 4% of their body weight. The best signs for identifying dehydration include decreased peripheral perfusion, abnormal skin turgor, and an abnormal respiratory pattern.
  • Severe systemic upset and unable to tolerate ORT
  • The elderly
  • Immunocompromised or taking systemic corticosteroids
  • Typhoid syndrome
  • Inflammatory bowel disease
  • Pancreatitis, carditis or renal failure
  • Specialist opinion should be sought if homosexual young men, or patients who are HIV positive develop acute, severe or persistent diarrhoea
  • Chronic diarrhoea is defined as loose stools, with or without increased frequency for more than 4 weeks. Specialist opinion should be sought.


Document references
  1. Farthing M, Feldman R, Finch R, et al; The management of infective gastroenteritis in adults. A consensus statement by an expert panel convened by the British Society for the Study of Infection. J Infect. 1996 Nov;33(3):143-52.
  2. Curtis V, Cairncross S; Effect of washing hands with soap on diarrhoea risk in the community: a systematic review. Lancet Infect Dis. 2003 May;3(5):275-81. [abstract]
  3. DH(1995)Food Handlers fitness to work: guidance for food businesses, enforcement officers and health professionals. London: Department of Health.
  4. Murphy MS; Guidelines for managing acute gastroenteritis based on a systematic review of published research. Arch Dis Child. 1998 Sep;79(3):279-84.
  5. Webb A, Starr M; Acute gastroenteritis in children. Aust Fam Physician. 2005 Apr;34(4):227-31. [abstract]
  6. Farthing M; Treatment and prevention of diarrhoea. Practitioner. 1998 May;242(1586):388-90, 392, 394.
  7. Gastroenteritis, Clinical Knowledge Summaries (January 2007)
  8. Dalby-Payne J, Elliott E. Gastroenteritis in Children. BMJ. Clinical Evidence (subscription required). 2004.
  9. Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center; Evidence based clinical practice guideline for children with acute gastroenteritis(AGE). Guideline 5 (2002).
  10. Dryden MS, Gabb RJ, Wright SK; Empirical treatment of severe acute community-acquired gastroenteritis with ciprofloxacin. Clin Infect Dis. 1996 Jun;22(6):1019-25. [abstract]
  11. Salam I, Katelaris P, Leigh-Smith S, et al; Randomised trial of single-dose ciprofloxacin for travellers' diarrhoea. Lancet. 1994 Dec 3;344(8936):1537-9. [abstract]

Internet and further reading Acknowledgements EMIS is grateful to Dr Hayley Willacy for writing this article. The final copy has passed scrutiny by the independent Mentor GP reviewing team. ©EMIS 2008.
DocID: 484
Document Version: 3
DocRef: bgp25020
Last Updated: 20 Feb 2008
Review Date: 19 Feb 2010

The authors and editors of this article are employed to create accurate and up to date content reflecting reliable research evidence, guidance and best clinical practice. They are free from any commercial conflicts of interest. Find out more about updating.

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