Acute gastroenteritis: Difference between revisions
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| [[Salmonella]]||6-72 hours|| | | [[Salmonella]]||6-72 hours|| | ||
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*[[Abdominal pain]] | *[[Abdominal pain]] | ||
*Bloody diarrhea | |||
*[[Headache]] | *[[Headache]] | ||
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*[[Fever]] | *[[Fever]] | ||
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*1-5 years old | *1-5 years old | ||
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Revision as of 19:16, 25 May 2016
See Acute gastroenteritis (peds) for pediatric patients
Background
- Blood diarrhea suggests bacterial etiology
- Viral AGE usually lasts <7d
- Do not dx isolated vomiting as AGE
Causes
| Species | Onset | Symptoms | Transmisison | Preformed Toxin |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Viral (norovirus, adenovirus, rotavirus) | 11-72 hrs |
|
|
No |
| Staph | 1-6 hrs |
|
|
Yes |
| B. cereus | 1-6 hrs |
|
|
Yes |
| C. perfringens | 8-24 hrs |
|
|
Yes |
| V. cholerae | 11-72 hrs |
|
|
No |
| Giardia | 1-4 wks |
|
|
No |
| Species | Onset | Symptoms | Transmission |
|---|---|---|---|
| Salmonella | 6-72 hours |
|
|
| Shigella | 1-3 days |
|
|
| Yersinia | 1-5 days |
|
|
| Campylobacter | 1-7 days |
|
|
| C. Diff | 1-11 Weeks |
|
|
| Entamoeba | 1-11 weeks |
|
Clinical Features
- Vomiting/diarrhea
- Crampy/diffuse abdominal pain
Differential Diagnosis
Diffuse Abdominal pain
- Abdominal aortic aneurysm
- Acute gastroenteritis
- Aortoenteric fisulta
- Appendicitis (early)
- Bowel obstruction
- Bowel perforation
- Diabetic ketoacidosis
- Gastroparesis
- Hernia
- Hypercalcemia
- Inflammatory bowel disease
- Mesenteric ischemia
- Pancreatitis
- Peritonitis
- Sickle cell crisis
- Spontaneous bacterial peritonitis
- Volvulus
Diagnosis
- Assess hydration status
- Cap refill, skin turgor, resp rate
- Consider stool labs if:
- >10 stools in previous 24hr
- Travel to high-risk country
- Fever
- Bloody stool
- Persistent diarrhea
Management
- Rehydration (PO preferred)
- 30mL(1oz)/kg/hr
- Antiemetic
- Ondansetron 0.15mg/kg/dose IV/PO
- Antibiotics
- Only consider in pts w/ invasive infection
- Shigella, campylobacter, E. coli, yersinia, vibrio
- Bloody stool with mucus and fever
- NOT indicated for E. coli O157:H7
- NOT routinely indicated for salmonella
- Exceptions: SCD, IBD, <3mo
- Azithromycin (able to tolerate PO)
- OR ciprofloxacin
- OR TMP-SMX
- Ceftriaxone (parenteral)
- Only consider in pts w/ invasive infection
Disposition
- Most can be discharged
- Admit
- Unable to tolerate PO
- Hemodynamic instability
- Significant comorbidities
