Группа авторов

Clinical Reasoning in Veterinary Practice


Скачать книгу

the presence of secondary systemic effects

       Small bowel or large bowel origin, or mixed

       Due to primary or secondary gastrointestinal (GI) disease.

      Failure to elicit sufficient information from the client about the characteristics of the diarrhoea, so as to allow appropriate classification as small bowel, large bowel or mixed, may result in inappropriate diagnostic procedures or therapeutic trials with increased expense to the client and frustration of the veterinarian and client.

      C04i001 Define the problem

      Diarrhoea is defined as an alteration in the normal pattern of defaecation, resulting in the passage of soft, unformed stools with increased faecal water content and/or increased frequency of defecation. It is important to consider the animal’s previous pattern of defecation, as the frequency of defaecation and the nature of faeces vary between individuals.

      There are a few uncommon situations where it may not be obvious to the owner that his/her animal has diarrhoea. Occasionally, the owner may mistake anal or vaginal discharges for diarrhoea, or see vomitus on the floor and think it is diarrhoea. The patient with constipation may pass small amounts of liquid faeces, which the owner thinks is diarrhoea. Conversely, the patient who is straining to defaecate and attempting to defaecate frequently because of large bowel disease may be interpreted by the owner as being constipated. Therefore, it is important that the clinician is cognisant of these issues and aims to define the problem as a first priority in the consultation.

      C04i003 Define the location

      Because large bowel diarrhoea has fewer and more specific characteristics than small bowel diarrhoea, it is often easiest to note if there is any fresh blood, mucus and small amounts of faeces passed frequently. If the diarrhoea has none of these characteristics, then the patient has small bowel diarrhoea. Note also that diarrhoea may have features of both small and large bowel, which indicates either primary small bowel with secondary effects on the lower bowel or diffuse disease involving both the small and large intestine.

Small bowel diarrhoea Large bowel diarrhoea
Consistency, volume and pattern Faecal volume and/or water content is increased. Diarrhoea may be projectile and does not usually involve significant tenesmus or urgency. Small amounts of faecal material are passed frequently. Tenesmus and urgency are often present, particularly if the lower colon or the rectum is involved.
Blood If blood is present, it is usually digested (melaena) or, in acute diarrhoea, reddish‐brown. If blood is present, it will be undigested (haematochezia).
Appearance Colour may be grey if large amounts of undigested fat are present. A yellow‐green coloration is common and due to malabsorbed bile salts. Mucus is often present either on the surface (indicating the lesion is in the lower colon or rectum) or throughout the faeces (indicating a lesion in the higher colon).
Weight loss Chronic small bowel diarrhoea is often (but not always) associated with weight loss. Usually there is no weight loss caused by large bowel diarrhoea per se but there may be as a result of the pathology such as severe inflammation or neoplasia.
Vomiting Vomiting may also be present (but need not be). Relationship to eating can be variable depending on the location of the lesion. Vomiting can occur occasionally but is infrequent and is unrelated to eating.
Borborygmus and flatulence Gas commonly occurs with small bowel diarrhoea, as malabsorbed carbohydrates are fermented by colonic bacteria producing CO2 and H2S. Uncommon.
Appetite Appetite may be variable depending on the underlying aetiology. Usually, the appetite is unaffected.
Water balance If the diarrhoea is severe, the animal may be dehydrated. If the diarrhoea is very watery, the patient may have an increased water intake. Large bowel diarrhoea per se does not usually adversely affect water balance.
Physical examination Physical examination may reveal increased gas or thickened loops of bowel but is often unrewarding. Always do a rectal examination to check for melaena or large bowel signs such as mucus and fresh blood about which the owner may not be aware. Physical examination is often unremarkable, but it is imperative to do a rectal examination if possible to check for strictures, masses or thickened mucosa.

      C04i002 Define and refine the system

      Diarrhoea can be due to primary disorders of the small bowel and/or large bowel or due to other systemic, secondary GI disorders such as hepatic disease, exocrine pancreatic insufficiency, pancreatitis, hyperthyroidism or hypoadrenocorticism. As discussed earlier, large bowel diarrhoea is almost always due to primary GI disease, whereas small bowel diarrhoea may occur with either primary or secondary GI disease.

      Diarrhoea due to primary GI disease is more common than diarrhoea due to secondary GI disease. In animals with secondary GI disease, with the exception of exocrine pancreatic insufficiency and some dogs with hypoadrenocorticism, diarrhoea is not usually the primary presenting complaint.

      C04i004 Define the lesion