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Diarrhoea in children
1. DR. VIRENDRA KUMAR GUPTA
ASSISTANT PROFESSOR
Department Of Pediatric Gastroentero-hepatology & Liver
Transplantation
NIMS MEDICAL COLLEGE & HOSPITAL ,
JAIPUR
APPROACH TO
DIARRHEA
4. DIARRHOEA
Diarrhoea defined as excessive loss of fluid and electrolyte in
stool.
For infants stool output >10 ml/kg/24 hr and >200g/24hr for
older children.
When there is an ↑ in frequency, volume or liquidity ( Recent
change in consistency) of the bowel movement relative to the
usual habit of each individual
Nelson Textbook of Pediatrics, 20th ed
5. DEFINITIONS
• Acute diarrhea
Duration <2 wks, usually of infectious origin
• Prolonged diarrhea
Diarrhea of duration 7-14 days of presumed infectious etiology. It
may be an indicator for children with a high risk of progression to
Persistent diarrhea
• Chronic diarrhea
Diarrhea of more than 2 weeks duration.
• Dysentry
Bloody diarrhea, visible blood and mucus present.
Nelson Textbook of Pediatrics, 20th ed
6. Persistent diarrhea
Persistent diarrhea (PD) is an episode of diarrhea of presumed
infectious etiology, which starts acutely but lasts for more than 14
days, and excludes chronic or recurrent diarrheal disorders such as
tropical sprue, gluten sensitive enteropathy or other hereditary
disorders [WHO] (INDIAN PEDIATRICS, JAN 2011)
passage of >=3 watery stools per day for >2 weeks in a child who
either fails to gain weight or loses weight.(ESPGHAN)
7. WHAT IS NOT A DIARRHOEA?
1.Frequent formed stools
2.Pasty stools in breastfed child
3.Stools during or after feeding
4.PSEUDODIARRHOEA:Small volume of stool frequently
(IBS)
15. DIAGNOSIS
ATLEAST 3 STOOLS PER 24H
ASSESSING DEHYDRATION
-H/O NORMAL FLUID INTAKE AND OUT PUT
- PHYSICAL EXAMINATION
- PERCENTAGE OF BODY WT LOSS
20. Treat Diarrhea at Home.
4 Rules of Home Treatment:
GIVE EXTRA FLUID
CONTINUE FEEDING
WHEN TO RETURN [ADVICE TO
MOTHER]
GIVE ORAL ZINC FOR 14 DAYS
PLAN – A
21. TELL THE MOTHER:
Breastfeed frequently and for longer at each feed
If exclusively breastfeed give ORS for replacement of stool
losses
If not exclusively breastfed, give one or more of the
following:
ORS, food-based fluid (such as soup, rice water,
coconut water and yogurt drinks), or clean water.
TEACH THE MOTHER HOW TO MIX AND GIVE
O.R.S
AMOUNT OF FLUID TO GIVE IN ADDITION TO THE
USUAL FLUID INTAKE:
Up to 2 years: 50 to 100 ml after each loose stool.
2 years or more: 100 to 200 ml after each loose stool.
Give extra fluid
22. Continue usual feeding, which the child was
taking before becoming sick 3-4 times
(6 times)
Up to 6 months of age:
Exclusive Breast feeding
6 months to 12 months of age:
add Complementary Feeding
12 months and above:
Family Food
Continue feeding
23. Advise mother to return immediately if
the child has any of these signs:
Not able to drink or breastfeed or drinks poorly
Becomes sicker
Develops a fever
Blood in stool
[IF IT WAS NOT THERE EARLIER]
When to Return
[Advice to mother]
24. Plan-B is carried out at ORT Corner in
OPD/clinic/ PHC
Treat ‘some’ dehydration with ORS (50-
100 ml/kg
Give 75 ml/kg of ORS in first 4 hours
If the child wants more, give more
After 4 hours:
PLAN – B
25. PLAN -C
Signs of sever dehydration
Child not improving after 4 hours
Refer to higher center –give ORS on way /keep
warm /BF
When child comes back follow up as other children
26. Start I. V. Fluid immediately
Give 100 ml/kg of Ringer’s Lactate
Age First give
30ml/kg
in
Then give
70 ml/kg
in
Under 12
months
1 hour 5 hours
12 months and
older
½ hour 2½ hour
PLAN – C
27. Use intravenous or intraosseus route
Ringers Lactate with 5% dextrose or ½ normal saline with 5% dextrose at
15 ml/kg/hour for the first hour
* do not use 5% dextrose alone
Fluid therapy in severe
dehydration
Continue monitoring every 5-10 min.
Assess after 1 hour
If no improvement or worsening If improvement(pulse slows/faster
capillary refill /increase in blood
pressure)
Consider septic shock Consider severe dehydration with shock
Repeat Ringers Lactate 15 ml/kg over 1 h
Switch to ORS 5-10ml/kg/hr orally or by
nasogastric tube for up to 10 hrs
29. Safe & effective
Can alone successfully rehydrate 95-97% patients
with diarrhea,
Reduces hospital case fatality rates by 40 - 50%
Cost saving
Reduces hospital admission rates by 50% and
cost of treatment by 90%
BUT
30. > 50% Goa, Himachal, Meghalaya, Tripura,
Manipur
> 40% West Bengal, J&K, Mizo,
Chhattisgarh
> 20% Bihar, Orissa, Uttaranchal,
Punjab, Gujarat, MP, Southern States
< 20% Rajasthan, UP, Assam,
Jharkhand, Nagaland
Recent NFHS 3 data
ORS use rates are dismally low in some
regions
31. STANDARD ORS SOLUTION LOW
OSMOLARITY ORS
(MEQ OR MMOL/L)
GLUCOSE 111 75
SODIUM 90 75
CHLORIDE 80 65
POTASSIUM 20 20
CITRATE 10 10
OSMOLARITY 311 245
Composition of standard and low
osmolarity ORS solutions
32. LAB.EVALUATION AND IMAGING
STOOL CULTURE- salmonella
shigella
yersinia
campylobacter
pathogenic E.coli-serotyping
RAPID STOOL TEST: for inflammatory markers
Hematological tests: white blood cell band count >100/mm3.
C-reactive protein cut point of >12 milligrams/dl
Biochemical tests: BUN
Ser.bicarbonate <17 mEq/L
GRBS
USG
33.
34. TREATMENT
ANTIEMETIC-Ondansetron 0.5mg/kg/dose
NO ANTIMOTILITY MEDICATION :
Diarrhea may function as an evolved expulsion
defense mechanism
Can cause HUS in EHEC infection.
ADSORBANTS AND ANTISECRETORY AGENTS:
Bismuth – inc.salicylate levels
PROBIOTICS - Lactobacillus GG and
Saccharomyces boulardii
ANTIBIOTICS FOR A/C GE
41. HISTORY TAKING
What is the complaint
Onset – sudden? Gradual?
Duration
Stool- frequency, consistency, volume, presence of blood or mucus, pain
Relation to particular food stuff
Fever
Abdominal pain – peri-umblical? Left lower quadrant?
Features of any systemic diseases
History of weight loss
Any known systemic disease
Food taken & History of gastroenteritis in others sharing same food
history of food allergy/ abdominal surgery
42. HISTORY
Confirm this is diarrhea (compare with usual habit of child )
Onset acute or insidious – infectious, acute secretory diarrhea
Age of onset
Neonatal – lactose intolerance, congenital diarrhea
- Cow milk protein intolerance
Early childhood- Celiac disease
late childhood - IBD, IBS
Duration of symptom
Does the child have weight loss or failure to gain weight- malabsorption,
pancreatic enzyme insufficiency
43. Nature of diarrhea
Urine like stool- Congenital chloride diarrhea
- Microvillus inclusion disease
Explosive watery diarrhea - Carbohydrate malabsorption
Loose bulky stool - Celiac disease
Pasty and yellowish offensive – Exocrine pancreatic insufficiency
Fatty, floating stools- Malabsorption syndromes
Blood, pus, mucous- chronic inflammatory diarrhea
Relation with diet/ dietary history
Carbonated drink and fruit juice – Chronic non specific diarrhea
Sucrose diet – sucrose intolerance
Wheat diet – Celiac disease
Fatty diet – Pancreatic insufficiency
Milk – Lactose intolerance, Cow milk protein intolerance
HISTORY
44. HISTORY
Abdominal pain – IBD, IBS
Patient undergo abdominal surgery – Short gut or bacterial over growth
syndrome
Fever, red eye, oral ulcer – IBD
Arthritis – IBD, Whipple disease
Drug history – Laxative (Factitious diarrhea)
Recurrent respiratory and skin infection - immunodeficiency, Cystic fibrosis
Family history of food allergy, asthma or allergic rhinitis.
Family history of celiac disease, crohn’s disease, cystic fibrosis
Prolonged use of antibiotic, pseudomembranous colitis
45. PHYSICAL EXAMINATION
Level of hydration
Look for tongue
Sunken eyes
Skin turger
Temperature, Blood pressure, Pulse rate, rr
Pallor
features of malnourishment -Anthropometry ,Loss of subcutaneous fat,
Muscle wasting, Loose skin appearance
Abdominal tenderness
Features of liver / pancreatic disease
Other features of relevant systemic diseases
46. Abdominal distension – Gas - due to bacteria
– Ascites – protein loss
Oedema – Protein lossing enteropathy
Clubbing – Coeliac diseae, cystic fibrosis
Perianal excoriation – carbohydrate malabsorption
Perianal and circumoral rash – acrodermatitis enteropathica
Hepatosplenomegaly with lymphadenopathy – HIV
Oral thrush – Immunodeficiency
Features of associated vitamin deficiencies
Glossitis, Cheilosis, Stomatitis, Vit B deficiency
Peripheral neuropathy - Vit B12and Thiamine deficiency
Ricketic change, osteomalacia, easy fracture – vit. D and Ca deficiency
Koilonychia – Iron deficiency
49. Stool examination-
Take liquid contents
Stored in refrigerator
Blood or mucus colonic inflammation
Microscopic examination- >20 wbc/hpf
Fecal calprotectin concentration-100ug/gm stool
PH <5 .5 & presence of reducing substance – carbohydrate malabsorption
Stool electrolytes and osmolality - Secretory diarrhea
Microscopy for ova and parasite- in endemic areas
Acid fast staining
Cryptosporidium/cyclospora
Stool culture- dysentry, fecal leucocytes +, HUS, immunocompromised
children.
50. FAT MALABSORPTION TESTS
1. STOOL FOR FAT GLOBULES
Qualitative test
Rapid and inexpensive
SudanIII stain- DRUMMEY’S method
Orange fat globule - seen in microscope
<100 globule with diameter <4-8 u / HPF – moderate steatorrhoea
>100 globule with diameter <6-75 u / HPF – severe steatorrhoea
2. 72 hours fat extraction test (quantitative)
“Gold standard”
however cant differentiate between pancreatic and intestinal causes
Before the test, the patient is put on a high fat diet, consuming between 50-150 g/day of fat
for three days. Stool fat is estimated by VAN DE KAMER METHOD.
Steatorrhoea if >15% fat output (<6 mo of age) >7%(>6 mo of age)
Limited use in clinical practice due to issues with
collection/processing
51. 3. Classical steatocrit
Semi-quantitative screening test
Steatocrit >2.1% indicates steatorrhoea of >10gm/d
4. Fat soluble vitamin – Vit. D – ↓ Ca, ↓ Po4,
↑ Alk PO4,
– Vit K – PT INR
S. carotene- Dietary carotene is the only source and serum level
depends on normal fat absorption.
normal- 100IU/dl
52. CARBOHYDRATE MALABSORPTION TEST
1. D-XYLOSE ABRORPTION TEST
Indicates malabsorption secondary to mucosal dysfunction (proximal small
intestinal- jejunum)
After overnight fasting-Oral load with 25 g D-xylose (adult dose) 5gm(children)
5 hr urine collection done ( atleast 25% excretion <4g/ <15%- abnormal)
1 hr and 2 hr serum samples (normal > 20 mg/dl at 1 hr, > 25 mg/dl at 2 hr)
Normal- in pancreatic insufficiency
Abnormal- CD, Tropical sprue, Chron’s disease, pellagra, advanced AIDS
Falsely low- vomiting, gastric stasis, ascites, edema, bacterial overgrowth, impaired
renal functions
Drugs that decrease urinary excretion of D xylose- aspirin, indomethacin,digitalis,
neomicin, opiates.
Almost obsolete test.
53. 2. Breath Hydrogen test
For specific carbohydrate malabsorption and bacterial overgrowth
Overnight fast
Suspected sugar 1-2 gm/kg max. 50 gm given
Not digest or absorb in small intestine
In colon by fermentation hydrogen and carbon dioxide is formed, absorbed
into blood and excreted in breath.
<20 ppm is normal. 20-80 ppm indeterminate. >80ppm- malabsorption.
Unreliable results- smokers, pulmonary disease, hyperventilation.
False negatives- Hydrogen non excretors, antibiotics 2 weeks prior.
54. PROTEIN MALABSORPTION TESTS
Indirect methods
Fecal α-1 antitrypsin concentration
normal- 0.8 mg/gm stool.
Protein losing enteropathy- >2.6mg/gm stool
cant be done in < 1 week of age
Hypoalbuminemia
Serum proteins with short half lives can be used as nutritional markers.
Prealbumin(transthyretin)
Somatomedin C
Retinal binding protein
Transferrin
55. TESTS FOR PANCREATIC INSUFFICIENCY
Serum trypsinogen
Fecal chymotrypsin <150 mg/kg in older children
Fecal elastase-1
Gold standard- Direct estimation of bicarbonate (secretin) or
amylase/lipase/trypsin (CCK) after stimulation using either secretin or CCK
or test (Lundh) meal
Limited by availability, invasiveness, expense
Cystic fibrosis is most common cause of exocrine pancreatic insufficiency in
children so a sweat chloride test must be performed.
56. IMAGING STUDIES & ENDOSCOPY
Plain X- ray abdomen
Air fluid levels- ileus, obstruction
Calcification- Chr. Pancreatitis
USG- e/o cholestasis, cirrhosis, thickening of small
bowel – crohn’s disease
Barium contrast small bowel series
Anatomical lesions, transit time
stenosis, decreased folds, segmentation, dilation
CT/MR abdomen
Detect bowel and pancreatic lesions
Small bowel endoscopy with jejunal aspirate and culture,
Colonoscopy
ERCP / MRCP- Detect ductal abnormalities
57. ENDOSCOPY AND SMALL BOWEL BIOPSY
-when SI mucosal disease is suspected
-when d-xylose test is abnormal
Visual assessment
Decreased folds, scalloping, mosaic
pattern, inflammatory changes
59. • Definite treatment- celiac disease, acrodermatitis
enteropathica
• Spontaneous improvement with nutritional rehabilitation
seen in- Secondary lactose intolerance, short bowel
syndrome
• Nutritional support is an essential component of long term
management of other disorders with chronic diarrhea and
malabsorption- Pancreatic insufficiency,
abetalipoproteinemia, intestinal lymphangiectasia
• In moderate to severe malnutrition, caloric intake is
progressively increased to >=50% above recommended
dietary allowances.
NUTRITIONAL MANAGEMNT
60. o Elemental diets- overcome food intolerance and facilitate
nutrient absorption
o In case the child cant be fed by oral route, enteral nutrition
may be delivered by nasogastric or gastrostomy tube.
o Continuous enteral nutrition is effective in children with
reduced absorptive function, such as short bowel
syndrome, because it extends the time of nutrient
absorption through the still functional surface area.
o In extreme wasting- parenteral nutrition may be required.
• Supplement with minerals, vitamins esp Zn- promotes ion
absorption, restores epithelial proliferation, stimulates
immune response
63. ANTIBIOTICS
Antimicrobial therapy is required for
• Clostridium difficile enterocolitis
•Giardia- Metronidazole, nitrazoxanide
•Cryptosporidium- Nitrazoxanide
•If bacterial agent is detected- specific antibiotic treatment
Small intestinal bacterial overgrowth- metronidazole with ampicillin or
trimethoprim- sulfamethoxazole.
Emperically given antibiotics in the treatment of associated systemic
infections that are seen in almost 30% to 40% of such children
Oral- Cefixime
Ciprofloxacin
Azithromycin
IV- Cefotaxim
Ceftriaxone
64. PROBIOTICS
• DEFINITION- Live micro-organisms that, when administered in
adequate amounts, confer a health benefit on the host
MECHANISM OF ACTION
65. INDICATIONS:
•Persistent diarrhea: The use of probiotics appear to hold promise as
adjunctive therapy but there is insufficient evidence to recommend their
use. (Cochrane reviews. 2010)
•Chronic diarrhea:
• Cl. Difficile associated diarrhea prevention: level B evidence
• IBS: level B evidence
• IBD: role in UC, no role in CD
66. ANTIMOTILITY DRUGS & ANTISECRETORY DRUGS
Antimotility drug- LOPERAMIDE.
4mg f/b 2 mg (adult dose)
MOA- reduces gastric motility.
not recommended in under 4 yr age
Indications:
• Chronic diarrhoea in HIV/AIDS- can still be used, with greater emphasis
placed on adjunct therapies [Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews
2008]
• Treatment of diarrhea- predominant IBS [Digestion 2006]
• S/E: Abdominal cramps, rashes, paralytic ileus, toxic megacolon
• Antimotility drug- CODEINE
Opium alkaloid
MOA- acts on u receptors and decreases stool frequency by peripheral action
on small intestine and colon.
S/e- nausea, vomiting, dizziness, dependance producing liability is low but
present
67. Enkephalinase inhibitors- RACECADOTRIL
enkephalinase
Enkephalins inactive
delta receptors
Decrease c-AMP
Decreases electrolyte
and water secretion
• Decreases intestinal secretion . No
effect on motility
•The advantage over standard opiates
is no rebound constipation or
prolonged intestinal transit time. [GUT
2002]
•INDICATION
Short term treatment of secretory
diarrheas
S/E- nausea, flatulance, drowsiness
Dose- 1.5 mg/kg TDS
68. Somatostatin analogue- OCTREOTIDE
MOA- reduce intestinal secretion by decreasing gut hormones e.g. VIP and
direct effect, either on the ENS or on the enterocyte itself. [GUT 2002]
Antimotility action
Indications:
•HIV enteropathy
•IBS
•Hormone secreting tumors- VIPoma, carcinoid tumours, and gastrinoma
[Aliment Pharmacol Ther. 2001]
Adrenergic agonist- CLONIDINE
MOA- antisecretory and antimotility effects
Indications:
• Moderate and severe diarrhea-predominant IBS. [Clin Gastroenterol
Hepatol. 2003]
• Short bowel syndrome and high-output proximal jejunostomy that
require chronic parenteral fluid infusion. [J Parenter Enteral Nutr. 2006]
69. ABSORBANTS
Ispaghula / Psyllium
•They contain a natural colloidal mucilage and form a
gelatinous mass by absorbing water.
•They modify the consistency and frequency of stools and
give an impression of improvement without actually
decreasing water or electrolyte loss.
•No good evidence to support the use of bulking agents
(eg, psyllium) or adsorbents (eg, charcoal, kaolin plus
pectin) in chronic diarrhea- . [Aliment Pharmacol Ther. 2001]
•Irritable bowel syndrome – useful in both constipation and
diarrhea phases of IBS and also decrease abdominal pain
Notes de l'éditeur
The fluid chart was discussed in the last IAP National task force meeting, a consensus was reached and it had been approved. But just to recapitulate. Basically we need to emphasize that ringer lactate with 5% dextrose should be the first choice but if not possible to give that half normal saline with 5% dextrose should be given as the second choice.
This needs to be given at slower infusion rates over 1 hour with continuous monitoring.
If at the end of 1st hour there is rapid improvement consider severe dehydration and repeat the rehydrating solution slowly over another hour and so on till child clinically better and able to accept orally.
At end of 1st hour if no improvement septic shock must be considered and treated as in the standard manner.
There must be very frequent monitoring to see responses and to look for features of overhydration and cardiac decompensation.
Slide indicates the effectiveness, safety, and cost-benefit ratio of WHO-ORS.
Bihar, UP and Rajasthan have dismal ORS use rates.
The composition of ORS with different osmolarity that have been evaluated