Limited time75% off all plans
Get the app

Gastrointestinal Infections

Gastrointestinal Infections

Gastrointestinal Infections

On this page

Gastrointestinal Infections - Bug Parade & Gut Attack

Microscopic view of various gastrointestinal parasites

Transmission: Primarily fecal-oral.

Viral Agents:

  • Rotavirus: Villous destruction (malabsorptive diarrhea).

    ⭐ Rotavirus is the leading cause of severe dehydrating diarrhea in infants and young children globally.

  • Norovirus: Villi blunting (vomiting prominent, outbreaks).

Bacterial Agents: (📌 "Eat Some Campy Vibrio Shigella" - for E.coli, Salmonella, Campylobacter, Vibrio, Shigella)

  • E. coli:
    • ETEC: Toxins (Traveler's diarrhea - watery).
    • EPEC: Adherence, effacement (Pediatric diarrhea - watery).
    • EIEC: Invasive (Inflammatory diarrhea - dysentery).
    • EHEC (O157:H7): Shiga-like toxin (Hemorrhagic colitis, HUS).
  • Salmonella (non-typhoidal): Invasion, inflammation (poultry, eggs).
  • Shigella: Invasion, Shiga toxin (dysentery, low inoculum).
  • Campylobacter jejuni: Invasion, cytotoxin (poultry, Guillain-Barré link).
  • Vibrio cholerae: Cholera toxin (profuse "rice-water" stools).

Parasitic Agents:

  • Giardia lamblia: Villous atrophy, malabsorption (foul fatty stools, contaminated water).
  • Entamoeba histolytica: Invasion, flask-shaped ulcers (dysentery, liver abscess).

Gastrointestinal Infections - Symptom Spotlight & Fluid Rescue

  • Diarrhea Types:

    • Secretory: Watery, large volume (Cholera, ETEC). Persists with fasting.
    • Osmotic: Stops with fasting, ↑ osmotic gap (Lactose intolerance).
    • Inflammatory: Blood/mucus, fever, pain (Shigella, Salmonella, EHEC).
  • Key Symptoms & Red Flags:

    • Symptoms: Diarrhea, vomiting, fever, abdominal pain.
    • Red Flags: Severe dehydration signs, persistent vomiting, bloody/mucoid stools, high fever (>39°C), altered sensorium, abdominal distension, failure of ORT.
  • 📌 Mnemonic (Dehydration Assessment): 'ABCD' (Appearance, Breathing, Circulation, Dehydration status/Skin turgor).

  • Oral Rehydration Therapy (ORT):

    • Low-osmolarity WHO ORS: Osmolarity 245 mOsm/L.
    • Composition (mmol/L): $Na^+$ 75, $K^+$ 20, $Cl^-$ 65, Glucose 75 (anhydrous, 13.5g/L), Citrate 10.

    ⭐ Low osmolarity ORS reduces stool volume by ~25% and vomiting by ~30% compared to standard ORS.

  • IV Fluid Therapy:

    • Indications: Severe dehydration, shock, persistent vomiting despite ORT, inability to take ORT, high stool output (>10 ml/kg/hr).
    • Fluids: Ringer's Lactate (RL) or Normal Saline (NS 0.9%).
    • Bolus: 10-20 ml/kg rapidly; repeat if needed. Severe Malnutrition: 10-15 ml/kg slowly, with caution.

Gastrointestinal Infections - Pathogen Profiles & Bug Busters

  • Rotavirus: #1 severe dehydrating diarrhea (infants). Dx: Stool Ag. Rx: ORS. Vaccine.

  • Cholera: "Rice-water" stool, severe dehydration. Dx: Culture. Rx: Rehydrate; Doxy (300mg SD) / Azithro (1g SD).

  • Shigella: Dysentery, fever. Dx: Culture. Rx: Cipro/Azithro. No anti-motility.

  • Salmonella (NT): Watery/bloody diarrhea. Dx: Culture. Rx: Supportive; Cipro if severe/high-risk (<3mo).

  • ETEC: Traveler's diarrhea (watery). Dx: Clin/PCR. Rx: Supportive; Rifaximin/Cipro if severe.

  • Giardia: Steatorrhea, foul, chronic. Dx: Stool micro/Ag. Rx: Metronidazole (5mg/kg/dose TID).

  • E. histolytica: Amebic dysentery, liver abscess. Dx: Stool micro/Ag. Rx: Metronidazole (35-50mg/kg/day) + luminal.

  • Stool Tests: Dysentery, severe/persistent (>7d), immunocompromised, outbreak. (Micro, culture, Ag).

  • Antimicrobials: Pathogen/severity guided. Empiric if severe. Avoid overuse (↑resistance).

  • Adjuncts: Zinc (10mg <6mo/20mg >6mo, 10-14d); Probiotics (LGG, S.boulardii) may ↓ duration.

⭐ Zinc supplementation reduces duration and severity of diarrhea.

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Rotavirus: Most common cause of severe dehydrating diarrhea in young children; vaccine-preventable.
  • Cholera: Profuse "rice-water" stools; Oral Rehydration Therapy (ORT) is life-saving.
  • Shigellosis: Bloody dysentery, high fever; risk of febrile seizures.
  • Typhoid fever: Step-ladder fever, rose spots, relative bradycardia; Salmonella Typhi.
  • Amoebiasis: Flask-shaped ulcers, potential for liver abscess; E. histolytica.
  • Giardiasis: Foul, fatty stools (steatorrhea), malabsorption.
  • EHEC (O157:H7): Causes hemorrhagic colitis and Hemolytic Uremic Syndrome (HUS).

Continue reading on Oncourse

Sign up for free to access the full lesson, plus unlimited questions, flashcards, AI-powered notes, and more.

CONTINUE READING — FREE

or get the app

Rezzy — Oncourse's AI Study Mate

Have doubts about this lesson?

Ask Rezzy, your AI Study Mate, to explain anything you didn't understand

Enjoying this lesson?

Get full access to all lessons, practice questions, and more.

START FOR FREE