According to the World Health Organization (WHO), diseases that cause diarrhea are responsible for killing around 760,000 children every year, making them the second leading cause of death in children under 5 years old. In addition, diarrhea is responsible for more than 80% of child deaths in Africa and South Asia.
The leading cause of acute diarrhea is rotavirus according to WHO, and rotavirus is responsible for about 40% of all hospital admissions due to diarrhea among children under five worldwide.
Diarrhea can be defined as loose, watery stools, or bowel movements, for three or more times in a single day.
Diarrhea can be categorized into three types: Acute diarrhea that lasts for two weeks or less, persistent diarrhea that lasts for longer than two weeks and less than four weeks, and chronic diarrhea that persists from more than two weeks or is intermittent over months or years.
There are many causes that can lead to diarrhea, most important of which is contamination, poor hygiene and other factors that may lead to infection.
A large number of studies have identified possible risk factors for diarrhea that include early weaning, lack of piped water supply, poor water-storage practices, and unsatisfactory garbage disposal.
The pathogenesis of diarrhea manifests by one or more of five mechanisms. These mechanisms are osmotic, which results from malabsorption; secretory, when water secretion exceeds absorption; inflammatory and infectious, resulting from a virus or bacteria; diarrhea associated with deranged motility, which affects absorption; and diarrhea resulting from mucus, blood, or protein entering the bowel.
The signs and symptoms associated with diarrhea may include loose, watery stools, and an urgent need to have a bowel movement, in addition to abdominal cramps.
Health care providers may follow one or more diagnostic measure to find the cause of the illness; these may include testing stool or blood to search for bacteria, parasites, or other signs of a disease or infection involved. The doctor may recommend stopping eating certain foods to observe the progress of diarrhea, or may perform a colonoscopy to ascertain the cause of persistent diarrhea.
Most cases of diarrhea improve without special treatment within a couple of days, but in case the condition does not show any improvement, the healthcare provider may recommend other treatments depending on the cause, such antibiotics if diarrhea is the result of a bacterial infection.
Diarrhea can lead to a number of complications, such as dehydration, irritable bowel syndrome, and lactose intolerance.
Diarrhea can persist for several days, and can lead to a deficiency in water and salts essential for human survival; this may become life-threatening. From an epidemiological perspective, diarrhea-causing diseases are responsible for the death of around 760,000 children every year and are considered the second leading cause of death in children under 5 years old, according to the World Health Organization.
There is controversy regarding a unified definition for diarrhea, but mainly diarrhea can be defined as a loose, watery bowel movements that occur three or more times in one day. Frequent bowel movements of formed stools are not considered diarrhea. In addition, in case of breastfed babies, the passing of loose stools is not considered diarrhea.
Diarrhea can be categorized into three types:
Acute diarrhea: Acute diarrhea lasts for less than 2 weeks, and is self-limited, requiring no particular diagnostic procedures because its symptoms can be cured only by increasing fluid intake. Further investigation is only required when finding evidence of tissue invasions, such as blood or pus in the stool, leukocytosis, fever, and severity that generates considerable fluid and electrolyte loss. Acute diarrhea is usually the result of a bacterial, viral or parasitic infection.
Chronic diarrhea: Chronic diarrhea demands proper diagnostic procedures because it can last longer than 2 weeks, or can be intermittent over months or years. This type is usually the result of an underlying condition, mainly inflammatory bowel diseases, such as ulcerative colitis.
Persistent diarrhea: This form of diarrhea lasts between two and four weeks.
There are many causes that can lead to diarrhea. The following are the most common:
The following are risk factors that increase the possibility of getting diarrhea:
Diarrhea can happen due to one of five basic mechanisms. It is common for more than one of these mechanisms to be involved in the pathogenesis of a single case:
Signs and symptoms associated with diarrhea may include:
Diarrhea caused by some infections may trigger one or more of the following symptoms:
The healthcare provider may conduct one or more of the following in order to find the cause of diarrhea:
Most cases of diarrhea improve without special treatment within a couple of days. If the patient does not recover, the healthcare provider might recommend:
Diarrhea can lead to a number of complications, such as:
Some of the key measures to prevent diarrhea include:
Diarrhea can persist for several days, and it can cause a deficiency in water and salts that are essential for human survival. Dehydration and fluid loss are potentially fatal in patients diagnosed with severe diarrhea.
An improvement within 2-4 days could be noticed in many people with symptoms of acute diarrhea. Infections with Campylobacter spp. and Salmonella spp. usually last for 2-7 days. Rotavirus diarrhea usually lasts 3-8 days, and norovirus around 2 days.
According to the World Health Organization (WHO), diseases that cause diarrhea are responsible for killing around 760,000 children every year, making them the second leading cause of death in children under 5 years old. In addition, diarrhea is responsible for more than 80% of child deaths in Africa and South Asia.
The leading cause of acute diarrhea is rotavirus according to WHO, and rotavirus is responsible for about 40% of all hospital admissions due to diarrhea among children under five worldwide.