Most common complications of diarrhoea
- Dehydration — must rehydrate (replace fluids)
- Wrong balance of body chemistry (eg metabolic acidosis, low bicarbonate, low potassium)
- Lactose intolerance (gut not able to digest ‘milk-sugar’)
Ask
- Diarrhoea — when did it start, how often, is it watery, is there blood or mucus
- Vomiting — when did it start, how often, green (bile), spurting across room (projectile)
- Drinking and eating
- What is child eating, drinking
- How much is child breastfeeding, drinking, eating
- Urine — how much urine, how many wet nappies
- Other sickness also present, contact with other sick people
Check
- Calculate age-appropriate REWS
- Adult — AVPU, RR, O2 sats, pulse, BP, Temp
- Child (less than 13 years) — AVPU, respiratory distress, RR, O2 sats, pulse, central capillary refill time, Temp
- Weight, BGL
Assessing dehydration
- Best way to measure dehydration in children is to work out percentage of weight loss — weigh babies without clothes, small children should be weighed with minimal clothes
- Use a recent weight from child’s file notes to work out if they have lost weight — percentage of weight loss is about equal to the percentage of dehydration
Table 3.22 Dehydration by percentage weight loss
- Working out percentage (%) weight loss
- % weight loss = % dehydration
- [Recent well weight – today's weight] ÷ [recent well weight] x 100
- Example: Weight last week was 13.5kg and weight now is 12.6kg
- (13.5 ‑ 12.6) ÷ 13.5 = 0.067, then x 100 (to make %) = 6.7%
- Child has moderate dehydration
- If recent weight not known do clinical assessment of dehydration — Table 3.23
Table 3.23 Clinical assessment of dehydration
Do — if severe dehydration
Medical emergency —Urgent medical consult
- Put in IV cannula
- If can’t get IV cannula in — put in intraosseous needle
- POC Test for electrolytes, if able
- Start IV OR Intraosseous fluids — Hartmann’s solution or normal saline
- If in shock — give 20mL/kg as a bolus
- If not in shock — give 20mL/kg/hour over 2–4 hours, depending on progress and medical advice
- Aim to correct dehydration over 4 hours
- OR Give nasogastric ORS 20mL/kg/hour over 2–4 hours depending on progress and medical advice, if can’t put in IV and child not in shock
- While waiting to send to hospital
- Check pulse, RR, capillary refill every 15 minutes
- Check BGL — if hypoglycaemia (low) may need to use rehydration solution containing glucose for maintenance
- Record amount of diarrhoea and vomiting
- Collect faeces and urine samples for pathology tests if possible
Additional reasons for medical consult
- Any of the following may mean there is another illness
- Fever, shortness of breath, fast breathing or deep breathing
- Altered conscious state, convulsions, drowsy or unusually irritable, floppy
- Neck stiffness, bulging fontanelle
- Non-blanching rash (doesn't disappear when you press on it)
- Blood or mucus in faeces
- Bile (green) vomit
- No urine passed all day
- Severe or localised abdominal pain, swollen abdomen
- Baby with projectile vomiting (vomit spurting across room)
- It is late and you are not sure about managing child overnight
Do — if moderate dehydration
- Medical consult
- Give ORS using cup, spoon, syringe, bottle — Table 3.24
- Doses Table 3.25
- If 6 months or over and vomiting a lot — Medical consult to consider giving ondansetron wafer — doses — may help prevent need for IV rehydration
- Check progress every half hour. If not drinking ORS — use nasogastric tube
- Check at 4 hours
- How much ORS taken
- How much diarrhoea and vomiting has there been
- Weight, pulse, dehydration
- If better — weight gain, drinking well
- Send home with ORS to continue at home — 10mL/kg after every diarrhoea action. Check again in 12 hours
- If still dehydrated
- Medical consult
- Continue ORS or use IV rehydration, as for severe dehydration
Do — if mild dehydration
- Give extra fluids — Table 3.24
- Give ORS using a cup, spoon, syringe, bottle
- If child won’t drink ORS — give usual fluids, but not high in sugar
- Check within 12 hours OR within 6 hours if under 6 months old
- How much ORS have they taken
- How much diarrhoea and vomiting has there been
- Weight, pulse, dehydration
- If better — not dehydrated, weight gain, drinking well
- Send home with ORS to continue at home — 10mL/kg after every watery diarrhoea
- Review daily until diarrhoea stops
- If more dehydrated
- Treat as moderate dehydration
- Medical consult
Do — if no dehydration
- Offer extra fluids
- Continue breastfeeds (more than usual) or formula (every 3 hours)
- Continue feeding with good foods
- Give ORS 10mL/kg after every watery diarrhoea
- If child won’t drink ORS — give usual fluids, but not high in sugar
- If diarrhoea or vomiting continues — review next day
Good foods
- Rice, bread, cereals, potato, banana, yoghurt, fruit, vegetables
Do not give
- Sports drinks — may increase fluid loss
- Diet soft drinks
- Food or drinks high in fat or sugar (eg chocolate, lollies, coke, other soft drinks, undiluted fruit juice, tea, other very sweet drinks)
- Antidiarrhoeal (antimotility) medicines (eg loperamide)
- Antiemetics (anti-nausea medicine) — except ondansetron
Fluids for treating dehydration
Table 3.24 Dehydration level and fluid rates
Table 3.25 Approximate ORS over 1 hour to replace fluid loss for child with moderate dehydration
Tips for giving ORS
- ORS prevents and treats dehydration — it doesn’t stop diarrhoea
- If child vomiting a lot — start with 5mL every 1–2 minutes
- Increase amount as child tolerates it
- If over 6 months — Medical consult to consider giving ondansetron wafer — doses. May help prevent need for IV rehydration
- Consider using nasogastric tube
- Medical consult if vomiting not improving
- Use clock or timer so parent/carer can give ORS every 5 minutes
- Record how much ORS taken
- Give with spoon, cup, syringe, bottle (avoid bottle if breastfed)
- Mix ORS sachets with chilled water (makes it taste better)
- Try ORS ice blocks — but make sure same volume given
Special situations
- If child unwell with signs of sepsis — urgent medical consult, send to hospital
- Consider systemic Shigella or Salmonella infection, especially infants less than 12 months
- Give ceftriaxone IV/IM — child 50mg/kg/dose up to 2g — doses
- If blood and mucus in diarrhoea — may be caused by Shigella
- Send faeces for MC&S and OCP
- If fever, malnourished, unwell — medical consult
- If evidence of strongyloides infection — see Worms
- If several linked cases of diarrhoea (eg children in daily close contact with each other, from same school class)
- Collect faeces samples for MC&S
- Notify PHU
Persistent diarrhoea
If diarrhoea for more than 7 days — treat as persistent diarrhoea. More common in malnourished children. May be caused by
Long-lasting or recurrent acute infections
- Parasitic infections like Giardia or Cryptosporidium
- Gut being unable to digest some parts of milk (lactose intolerance)
Ask
- How long diarrhoea has lasted
Check
- Weight (naked)
- Signs of dehydration
- Child’s growth on growth chart — is child growing well
Do
- If dehydrated
- Give ORS
- Medical consult — send to hospital
- If growth faltering — medical consult, may need to send to hospital
- Collect faeces for MC&S and OCP on 2 occasions
- Encourage good food
- If 6 months or over — elemental zinc oral — 20mg, once a day for 14 days
- This is 1.8mL if using 50mg/mL zinc sulfate (50mg/mL zinc sulfate = 11.3mg/mL elemental zinc)
- Treat for Giardia
- Give metronidazole oral — child 30mg/kg/dose up to 2g — doses — once a day for 3 days
- If allergy — medical consult
Follow-up
Check on child every 2–3 days
- Examine and weigh child
- Ask about diarrhoea
- If diarrhoea continues but child well — medical consult
- If diarrhoea continues and child unwell — medical consult about sending to hospital
- Check faeces results for worms — treat if present
Prevention
Tell parents and carers how to help prevent spread of infection causing diarrhoea
- Hand washing is most important. Use soap (liquid if available) and wash hands
- After using toilet or changing nappy
- Before getting meals ready or eating
- Do not share towels or clothing
- Children should not go to school or day-care while they have diarrhoea/vomiting and should wait 24 hours after last episode to return
- Children shouldn't use swimming pools until all symptoms have gone OR for 2 weeks if they have Cryptosporidium infection