Practice Guidelines for the Management of Infectious Diarrhea

Richard L. Guerrant(University of Virginia), Thomas Van Gilder, Ted S. Steiner(University of British Columbia), Nathan M. Thielman(Duke University), Laurence Slutsker, Robert V. Tauxe, Thomas Hennessy, Patricia M. Griffin, Herbert L. DuPont(St. Luke's Episcopal Hospital), R. Bradley Sack(Johns Hopkins University), Phillip I. Tarr(Seattle Children's Hospital), Marguerite A. Neill(Memorial Hospital of Rhode Island), Irving Nachamkin(University of Pennsylvania), L. Barth Reller(Duke University), Michael T. Osterholm, Michael L. Bennish(Tufts Medical Center), Larry K. Pickering
Clinical Infectious Diseases
February 1, 2001
Cited by 1,073Open Access
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Abstract

The widening array of recognized enteric pathogens and the increasing demand for cost-containment sharpen the need for careful clinical and public health guidelines based on the best evidence currently available. Adequate fluid and electrolyte replacement and maintenance are key to managing diarrheal illnesses. Thorough clinical and epidemiological evaluation must define the severity and type of illness (e.g., febrile, hemorrhagic, nosocomial, persistent, or inflammatory), exposures (e.g., travel, ingestion of raw or undercooked meat, seafood, or milk products, contacts who are ill, day care or institutional exposure, recent antibiotic use), and whether the patient is immunocompromised, in order to direct the performance of selective diagnostic cultures, toxin testing, parasite studies, and the administration of antimicrobial therapy (the latter as for traveler's diarrhea, shigellosis, and possibly Campylobacter jejuni enteritis). Increasing numbers of isolates resistant to antimicrobial agents and the risk of worsened illness (such as hemolytic uremic syndrome with Shiga toxin-producing Escherichia coli O157:H7) further complicate antimicrobial and antimotility drug


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