Check for Cryptosporidium in Immunosuppressed Patients with Chronic, Severe, or Refractory Diarrhea
Ala’ S. Haddadin MD
Diarrhea, the principal manifestation of intestinal infection among the critically ill, affects approximately one-third of all patients (reported incidence of 2% to 63%) admitted to the intensive care unit (ICU). Although many definitions exist in the literature, diarrhea is best defined as bowel movements that, because of increased frequency, abnormal consistency (the normal water content of stool is 60% to 85% of total weight), or increased volume (stool volume output <250 mL or 250 g/day), are deleterious to the well-being of the patient. Potentially deleterious consequences in these patients include perianal and sacral skin ulcers with secondary superinfections and decreased absorption of enterally administered medications. For the critically ill patient, the dehydration that accompanies severe diarrhea strains a circulatory system already limited by impaired cardiac function and septic hemodynamics, which might ultimately culminate in multisystem organ failure. Diarrhea can also precipitate metabolic derangements including electrolyte imbalances and anion gap acidosis with all their debilitating consequences.
Three main types of diarrhea include secretory, osmotic, and inflammatory diarrhea.
Secretory Diarrhea
In this disorder, there is both active intestinal secretion of fluids (commonly described as “watery” diarrhea) and electrolytes as well as decreased absorption. Common causes of secretory diarrhea include enterotoxins (e.g., cholera, rotavirus, Escherichia coli); hormones (e.g., vasoactive intestinal peptide in the Verner-Morrison syndrome); bile salts (in the colon) following ileal resection; fatty acids (in the colon) following ileal resection; and laxatives (e.g., a docusate sodium). Secretory diarrhea occurs even when the patient is fasting because the secretory process is independent of enteral intake or the absorptive process.
Osmotic Diarrhea
This type of diarrhea results from consuming nonabsorbable solutes by mouth, nasogastric tube, or nasoenteral tube. This type of diarrhea resolves once the osmotic load is eliminated (i.e., on the outset of fasting). Some medications causing this type of diarrhea include sorbitol; a solution of polyethylene glycol and electrolytes (GoLYTELY); and magnesium-containing medications. It can also be secondary to malabsorption and incomplete digestion of protein (azotorrhea), fats (steatorrhea), or carbohydrates.