- Shigella dysentery - in cases presenting as bloody diarrhoea, these should be treated with an antimicrobial effective for Shigella
- When cholera is suspected
- When diarrhoea is associated with another acute infection such as pneumonia and urinary tract infection
- May be indicated for Salmonella gastroenteritis in very young babies (< 3 months), immune-compromised, immunosuppressed, systemically ill, achlorhydia
Causative Agent by Age
Differentiating Viral and Bacterial infection
- Generally, in patients with high fever (>39°C), overt faecal blood, abdominal pain, central nervous system involvement such as irritability, apathy, seizures or coma suggest bacterial aetiology.
- Patients presenting with more significant vomiting and respiratory symptoms suggest viral aetiology
- Rotavirus causes more severe vomiting and dehydration.
- However, it should be emphasised that the clinical features of both viral and bacterial aetiology overlap considerably.
Adjunctive Antibiotic Therapy
- Guideline on the Management of Acute Diarrhoea in Children, 2011. ACAD Med
- Antibiotics for the Empirical Treatment of Acute Infectious Diarrhea in Children. http://www.scielo.br/pdf/bjid/v10n3/a11v10n3
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