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Red eye
CODES
ICD9
- 077.99 Unspecified diseases of conjunctiva due to viruses
- 372.03 Other mucopurulent conjunctivitis
- 372.30 Conjunctivitis, unspecified
ICD10
- B30.9 Viral conjunctivitis, unspecified
- H10.029 Other mucopurulent conjunctivitis, unspecified eye
- H10.9 Unspecified conjunctivitis
CONSTIPATION
Julia H. Sone
BASICS
DESCRIPTION
Rome Criteria
for the diagnosis of constipation requires 2 or more of the following for at least 3 mo:
- Straining >25% of the time
- Hard stools >25% of the time
- Incomplete evacuation >25% of the time
- 2 or fewer bowel movements per wk
Pediatric Considerations
- 3% of pediatric outpatient visits are because of defecation disorders.
- Children with cerebral palsy often develop functional constipation.
- Can be classified into subgroups:
- Constipation with anatomical origins (anal stenosis/strictures, ectopic anus, imperforate anus, sacrococcygeal teratomas)
- Colonic neuromuscular disease (Hirschsprung disease)
- Defecation disorders (functional constipation and nonretentive fecal soiling)
- Function fecal retention
- Most common cause of fecal retention and soiling in children is functional fecal retention:
- Caused by fears associated with defecation
- Associated with irritability, abdominal cramps, decreased appetite, early satiety
ETIOLOGY
- Metabolic and endocrine:
- Diabetes
- Uremia
- Porphyria
- Hypothyroidism
- Hypercalcemia
- Pheochromocytoma
- Panhypopituitarism
- Pregnancy
- Functional and idiopathic:
- Colonic irritable bowel syndrome
- Diverticular disease
- Colonic inertia
- Megacolon/megarectum
- Pelvic intussusception
- Nonrelaxing puborectalis
- Rectocele/sigmoidocele
- Posthysterectomy syndrome
- Descending perineum
- Pharmacologic:
- Analgesics
- Anesthetics
- Antacids
- Anticholinergics
- Anticonvulsants
- Antidepressants
- Antihypertensives
- Calcium channel blockers
- Diuretics
- Ferrous compounds
- Laxative abuse
- MAOIs
- Opiates
- Paralytic agents
- Parasympatholytics
- Phenothiazines
- Psychotropics
- Neurologic:
- Central Parkinson disease
- Multiple sclerosis
- Cerebrovascular accidents
- Spinal cord lesions/injury
- Peripheral Hirschsprung disease
- Chagas disease
- Neurofibromatosis
- Autonomic neuropathy
- Mechanical obstruction:
- Neoplasm
- Stricture
- Hernia
- Volvulus
DIAGNOSIS
SIGNS AND SYMPTOMS
- Constipation is a symptom, not a disease.
- Passage of hard stool
- Straining/difficulty passing stool
- Infrequent bowel movements
- Abdominal distention/bloating
- Firm/hard stool on digital rectal exam:
- May have empty rectal vault
- Diarrhea (liquid stool passes around firm feces)
History
- Age of onset of symptoms
- Diet and exercise regimen
- Stool size, caliber, consistency, frequency, ease of defecation
- Medical and surgical history:
- Medications that can slow colonic transit like β-blockers, high-dose calcium channel blockers, narcotics
- Use of enemas, laxatives, and digital manipulation to facilitate defecation
- Associated pelvic floor dysfunction:
- Urinary symptoms
- Rectocele
Physical-Exam
- Abdominal exam may reveal a mass due to stool
- Rectal exam to assess for outlet obstruction:
- Ability to squeeze and relax the sphincter
- Is there a rectocele or cystocele?
- Assess firmness of stool
ESSENTIAL WORKUP
Thorough history and physical exam:
- Medical, surgical, and psychiatric investigation and date of onset
- Note abdominal distention, hernias, tenderness, or masses
- Complete anorectal exam for anal stenosis, fissure, neoplasm, sphincter tone, perineal descent, tenderness, spasm
DIAGNOSIS TESTS & NTERPRETATION
Lab
- Only necessary when considering metabolic/endocrine disorders
- CBC if inflammatory or neoplastic origin
- Electrolytes and calcium indicated if at risk of:
- Thyroid function test if patient appears to be hypothyroid
Imaging
- Rarely indicated unless an underlying process suspected
- Abdominal radiograph:
- Large amount of feces in colon
- Dilated colon that needs decompression
- CT scan of abdomen/pelvis to r/o perforation in elderly, constipated patient with abdominal pain/fever
- Barium/Gastrografin enema study:
- Diverticulosis
- Megarectum
- Megacolon
- Hirschsprung disease
- Stricture from inflammation or tumor
DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS
- See “Etiology.”
- Bowel obstruction
TREATMENT
PRE HOSPITAL
Establish IV access for patients with significant abdominal pain.
INITIAL STABILIZATION/THERAPY
IV fluids for dehydrated/hypotensive patients
ED TREATMENT/PROCEDURES
- Clean out colon:
- Enemas, suppositories
- Manual disimpaction of hard stool
- Laxatives
- Maintain bowel regimen:
- Increase noncaffeinated fluids (8–10 cups per day).
- Increase dietary fiber intake (20 g/day).
- Stool softeners
- Exercise
- Change medications causing constipation.
MEDICATION
- Enemas:
- Fleet: 120 mL (peds: 60–120 mL) per rectum (PR)
- Mineral oil: 60–150 mL (peds: 5–11 yr old, 30–60 mL; older than 12 yr, 60–150 mL) PR daily
- Tap water: 100–500 mL PR
- Fiber supplements:
- Methylcellulose: 1 tbs in cup water PO daily to TID
- Psyllium: 1–2 tsp in cup of water/juice (peds: Younger than 6 yr, 1/4–1/2 tsp in 2 oz water or juice; 6–11 yr, 1/2–1 tsp in 4 oz water or juice; older than 12 yr, 1–2 tsp in cup water or juice) PO daily to TID
- Laxatives (osmotic):
- Lactulose: 15–30 mL (peds: 1 mL/kg) PO daily to BID
- Polyethylene glycol: 17 g (peds: 0.8 g/kg/d dissolved in 4–8 oz of liquid) PO daily dissolved in liquid
- Milk of magnesia: 2400--4800 mg Mg hydroxide po (peds 6 mo--1 yr: 40 mg/kg Mg hydroxide; 2--5 yr: 400--1200 mg Mg hydroxide; 6--11 yr: 1200--2400 mg Mghydroxide; over 12 yrs: 2400--4800 mg Mg hydroxide) QD or divided bid--qid prn
- Laxatives (stimulant):
- Bisacodyl: 10–15 mg PO daily (peds: Younger than 3 yr, 5 mg PR daily; 3–12 yr, 5–10 mg PO/PR daily; older than 12 yr, 5–15 mg PO daily or 10 mg PR daily)
- Senna: 2 tabs PO daily to BID (peds: 2–6 yr, 1/2–1 tab PO daily to BID; 6–12 yr, 1–2 tabs PO daily to BID; older than 12 yr, 2–4 tabs PO daily to BID)
- Stool softeners:
- Docusate sodium: 100 mg (peds: 3–5 mg/kg/d in div. doses) PO daily to BID
- Mineral oil: 15–45 mL (peds: 5–15 mL) PO daily
- Suppositories:
- Glycerin: 1 adult (peds: Infant, 1 infant suppository) PR PRN