Associate Editor(s)-in-Chief: Mydah Sajid, MD[1]
Dysentery in adults resident survival guide
Overview
Causes
Life-threatening Causes
Life-threatening causes include conditions that may result in death or permanent disability within 24 hours if left untreated.
- Does not include any known cause
Common Causes
Evaluation
References
| | | Characterize the symptoms:
- Duration of diarrhea
- Frequency and consistency of stools
- Presence of mucus and blood in the stools
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| | | To evaluate cause ask the following questions:
- Food history
- Occupational exposure (e.g. daycare center, poultry farm)
- Exposure to animals (pets, poultry, zoo, turtles)
- Recent travel to endemic areas
- Medication history (use of proton pump inhibitors increase susceptibility to infection with Shigella)
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| | | Does the patient have any of the following clinical signs or history?
- Old age (more than 70 years)
- Presence of co-morbidities (advance cardiac disease, severe immunocompromised state)
- Fever (>101.3 degrees Fahrenheit)
- Presence of severe symptoms
- Need for hospitalization
- Signs of dehydration (dry mucous membranes, sunken eyes, decreased skin turgor, orthostatic hypotension, oliguria, dark-colored urine, and drowsiness)
abdominal tenderness on palpation, rebound tenderness, abdominal distention, and abdominal rigidity. | | | |
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Yes | | | | No |
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Perform the following stool tests:
- Bacterial culture for Salmonella, Shigella, and Campylobacter.
- Test for Shigella toxin and E. coli O157: H7
- Test for fecal leukocytes and lactoferrin.
| | | | Does the patient have any of the following:
Clinical signs suggestive of inflammatory bowel disease
Symptoms present for more than a week despite conservative management
The patient is a health care worker or food handler (which can be a potential health hazard) |