Gastrointestinal infections

Management of H pylori , resistant H pylori and culture and sensitivity , giardiasis, amoebiasis, SIBO, acute gastroenteritis, Clostridium dificile treatment including fecal transplantation,

 

Gastrointestinal infections are viral, bacterial or parasitic infections that cause gastroenteritis, an inflammation of the gastrointestinal tract involving both the stomach and the small intestine. Symptoms include diarrhea, vomiting, and abdominal pain. Dehydration is the main danger of gastrointestinal infections, so rehydration is important, but most gastrointestinal infections are self-limited and resolve within a few days. However, in a healthcare setting and in specific populations (newborns/infants, immunocompromized patients or elderly populations), they are potentially serious. Rapid diagnosis, appropriate treatment and infection control measures are therefore particularly important in these contexts.

When symptoms point to a possible gastrointestinal infection,diagnosis can be confirmed through laboratory tests used for culture or antigen detection from stool specimens. In certain cases (e.g. for E. coli, Salmonella, C. difficile …), antibiotic susceptibility testing is used to determine microbial resistance to antibiotic therapy, if appropriate. Particularly in hospital settings, rapid diagnosis provides important information for implementing infection control measures.

To diagnose the cause of a diarrhea, it is helpful to consider where the context is a food-borne outbreak or “travelers’ diarrhea”.

Food-borne outbreaks:

  • Often local – a group of people eating together suffer the same illness.
  • A public health concern when widespread, affecting people in different places and over a longer period of time.
  • mportant to recognize and track epidemiologically, to prevent more people from being infected.
  • E. coli, Salmonella, Campylobacter and Staphylococcus are among the most common pathogens causing food-borne outbreaks.

Travelers’ diarrhea:

  • Most common travel-related illness.
  • Contracted by people travelling in places where there are different pathogens from what they are used to, especially in regions where food/water contamination is more prevalent.
  • Most commonly transmitted through ingestion of food or water contaminated with feces.
  • Most cases caused by bacteria including E. coli, Salmonella andShigella.
     

The best ways to prevent gastrointestinal infection include:

  • Proper hand-washing
  • Disinfecting of contaminated surfaces with bleach
  • Washing of soiled articles of clothing
  • Identifying infected patients as soon as possible to implement extended infection control
  • There are no vaccines for most gastrointestinal infections. Exceptions:
      Rotavirus
     Adenovirus (limited availability)
  • For C. difficile: avoid prescribing antibiotics unnecessarily

Treatment measures for gastrointestinal infection include:

  • Rehydration – oral and sometimes intravenous
  • For many cases of bacterial gastroenteritis, only symptomatic treatment (for fever, diarrhea…) is required.
  • Antibiotics are not usually recommended as they have no effect on viral infections, may cause side effects and overuse increases the risk of resistant bacteria developing.
  • Antibiotics may be recommended in particularly severe cases of gastroenteritis, or if a specific bacteria has been identified as the cause