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Chapter 5 Diarrhoea Case I

Chapter 5 Diarrhoea Case I. Case study: Sarah. Sarah, a 9 months old girl was brought to the hospital with diarrhoea for 5 days. She was restless and irritable. What are the stages in the management of Sarah?. Stages in the management of a sick child (Ref. Chart 1, p. xxii).

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Chapter 5 Diarrhoea Case I

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  1. Chapter 5DiarrhoeaCase I

  2. Case study: Sarah Sarah, a 9 months old girl was brought to the hospital with diarrhoea for 5 days. She was restless and irritable.

  3. What are the stages in the management of Sarah?

  4. Stages in the management of a sick child(Ref. Chart 1, p. xxii) • Triage • Emergency treatment • History and examination • Laboratory investigations, if required • Main diagnosis and other diagnoses • Treatment • Supportive care • Monitoring • Discharge planning • Follow-up

  5. At Triage – how to quickly assess for emergency signs Take a brief history of the presenting problem Take temperature and weigh the child • Listen for stridor or obstructed breathing • Look for cyanosis and for signs of respiratory distress (chest indrawing, tracheal tug), check SpO2 • Feel the skin temperature of the hands and feet, feel the peripheral pulses for volume, check capillary refill time • Assess for lethargy and level of interaction.

  6. Have you noticed any emergency or priority signs? Temperature: 36.50C, weight 6.5kg, RR 40/min, pulse: 130/min, capillary refill time: 2 seconds, sunken eyes, normal skin turgor

  7. Triage Emergency signs (Ref. p. 2, 6) • Obstructed breathing • Severe respiratory distress • Central cyanosis • Signs of shock • Coma • Convulsions • Severe dehydration Priority signs (Ref. p. 6) • Tiny baby • Temperature • Trauma • Pallor • Poisoning • Pain (severe) • Respiratory distress • Restless, irritable, lethargic • Referral • Malnutrition • Oedema of both feet • Burns

  8. Triage Emergency signs (Ref. p. 2, 6) • Obstructed breathing • Severe respiratory distress • Central cyanosis • Signs of shock • Coma • Convulsions • Severe dehydration Priority signs (Ref. p. 6) • Tiny baby • Temperature • Trauma • Pallor • Poisoning • Pain (severe) • Respiratory distress • Restless, irritable, lethargic • Referral • Malnutrition • Oedema of both feet • Burns

  9. History Sarah was well until 5 days ago, then she started having loose watery stools 6-10 times per day. • Vomited the last 2 days, 2 times each day • There was no blood or pus in the stool. • Past medical history: previously well, no significant past history • Immunization: up to date according to vaccine schedule, measles vaccine due at 9 months • Social history: lives with her mother and sister, 4 years old • Medications: none

  10. Examination Sarah was crying continuously, she only stopped briefly when her mother put her to her breast. When she was offered ORS she drank eagerly. Vital signs: temperature: 36.5 °C, RR: 40/min, pulse: 130/min Weight: 6.5 kg Eyes: sunken Skin: normal skin turgor (skin pinch goes back immediately) Chest: air entry was good bilaterally and there were no added sounds Cardiovascular: both heart sounds were audible and there was no murmur Abdomen: soft and doughy, bowel sounds active and there was no organomegaly Neurology: restless and irritable; no neck stiffness

  11. Differential diagnoses List possible causes of the illness, in order they are likely, use clinical features to say which are most and least likely(Ref. p. 127)

  12. Differential diagnoses What clinical features make these diagnoses most or less likely? • Acute watery diarrhoea • Cholera • Dysentery • Persistent diarrhoea • Diarrhoea with severe malnutrition • Diarrhoea associated with recent antibiotic use • Intussusception

  13. Classification of the severity of dehydration in children with diarrhoea (Ref. Table 12, p. 128)

  14. Are any investigations needed to make a diagnosis ?

  15. How would you treat Sarah?

  16. Treatment Plan B (Ref. Chart 14, p. 135) In the first 4 hours give 75 ml per kg of ORS as shown in table below Show the mother how to give the child ORS solution, a teaspoonful every 1-2 minutes if the child is under 2 years; frequent sips from a cup for an older child

  17. Supportive Care • Check to see if there are problems (Ref. p. 132-136 ) • Advise mother to continue to breastfeed whenever Sarah wants to feed • Infection control: hand washing

  18. Monitoring and discharge planning • After 4 hours: reassess • Check the signs of dehydration • Check that the child has drank the ORS • Check that she has not vomited • Select the appropriate plan to continue • Show Sarah’s mother how to prepare ORS at home • Give her enough ORS packets to complete rehydration, and zinc for 7 days • Explain: how to give ORS safely at home, continue feeding, and when to return

  19. Summary • Sarah had acute watery diarrhoea and some dehydration • She was rehydrated with ORS and continued breast feeding • She was discharged on the same day after taking ORS for 4 hours (75ml/kg), without vomiting • At discharge she was alert, and able to drink and eat. • Her mother was given advice on how to give extra fluid, to continue feeding and to return to be checked the following day.

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