Chapter 33 Intestines
Diarrhoea
Fluid and electrolyte treatment
Oral rehydration salts (ORSs)
The World Health Organization/UNICEF-recommended formulation is:
This provides sodium 90 mmol/L, potassium 20 mmol/L, chloride 80 mmol/L, citrate 10 mmol/L, glucose 111 mmol/L (total osmolarity 311 mmol/L). Several other formulations exist, some with less sodium (see national formularies).
Antidiarrhoeal drugs
Drugs that directly increase the viscosity of gut contents
Kaolin and chalk are adsorbent powders. Their therapeutic efficacy is marginal as is shown by the fact that they are often combined with an opioid; they should not be used routinely. Bulk forming agents such as ispaghula, methylcellulose and sterculia1 (see above) are useful for diarrhoea in diverticular disease, and for reducing the fluidity of faeces in patients with ileostomy and colostomy.
Secretory diarrhoea due to vasoactive peptides
Octreotide, a synthetic somatostatin analogue (see p. 549), inhibits the release of peptides that mediate certain alimentary secretions, and may be used to relieve diarrhoea due to neuroendocrine tumours such as carcinoids and VIPomas (tumours that produce VIP).
Bile acid malabsorption (BAM)
If no treatable underlying cause of BAM is identified then a bile acid absorption resin such as colesevelam, colestipol or colestyramine may be given. These are awkward drugs to take, due to taste, consistency and to the fact that they bind numerous other drugs. They must therefore be given at least 1 hour before or several hours after the administration of other drugs. Bile acid sequestrants are also used as lipid-lowering drugs (see Ch. 26).
Constipation
Constipation means different things to different people, and is difficult to define formally. Generally it refers to infrequent, hard to pass bowel motions. Rome III criteria2define constipation as 2 + of the following over 12 weeks: < 3 stools per week, straining > 1/4 of the time, passage of hard stools, incomplete evacuation, sensation of anorectal blockage.