RECOGNITION AND ASSESSMENT
Symptoms and signs
- Severe diarrhoea, tenesmus
- Abdominal pain
- Anorexia, weight loss
- Malaise
- Variable amount of blood in stool
- Dehydration
- Tachycardia
- Fever
- Anaemia
Life-threatening features
- Severe sepsis/septic shock
- Toxic dilatation of colon
- Perforation of colon
- Profound electrolyte disturbance
- Massive haemorrhage
- Obvious weight loss
- Secondary multi-organ failure
Investigations
- FBC
- U&E
- LFT
- CRP
- Blood glucose
- Abdominal X-ray
- Erect chest X-ray – look for gas under diaphragm
- Stool culture (Salmonella, Shigella, Campylobacter), Clostridium difficile toxin
- Crossmatch: group and save
- Arterial blood gases
Differential diagnosis
- Bacterial and amoebic colitis (history of travel)
- Pseudomembranous colitis (history of antimicrobial use)
- Diverticular disease
- Ischaemic colitis
- Bowel cancer
- Abdominal lymphoma
- Radiation colitis
- Ileocaecal TB
IMMEDIATE TREATMENT
Logistics
- If needed, contact on-call consultant gastroenterologist
- In patients with life-threatening features inform duty surgical team
- Barrier nurse
- inflammatory bowel disease can at first be indistinguishable from infective diarrhoea
- Admit to GI ward
Drugs and fluid
- Establish IV access and correct dehydration/electrolyte disturbance
- If Hb <80 g/L, give blood transfusion
- 4 units plus an extra unit for each g/L below 80
- Hydrocortisone 200 mg 8-hrly by slow IV injection over 1 min
- Ensure all patients receive prophylactic dalteparin 5000 units once daily
- If not improving either clinically or biochemically after 48 hr, consider escalation therapy with:
- either ciclosporin IV (unlicensed and rarely used) or infliximab IV only after discussion with consultant gastroenterologist or via a consensus opinion in IBD MDT (contact IBD Nurses for further information)
- If still no improvement by day 5, consider surgical opinion
DO NOT GIVE anti-diarrhoeal drugs in acute phase - they increase the risk of toxic dilatation
DO NOT PERFORM barium enema or colonoscopy in acute phase - there is a high risk of perforation of the colon
SUBSEQUENT MANAGEMENT
- Once infective element has been excluded, relax barrier nursing restrictions
- Ensure patient discussed with consultant gastroenterologist
If improving
- Substitute prednisolone (not enteric coated) 40 mg oral daily in place of hydrocortisone
- taper dose by 5mg every week
- co-prescribe calcium and vitamin D (e.g. Adcal D3® 2 tablets daily) whilst on prednisolone
- Start restricted oral feeding. Seek dietetic opinion
- Give mesalazine (Octasa® MR) 800 mg oral 8-hrly
- For distal disease, consider hydrocortisone foam enema 10% 12–24 hrly for 2–3 weeks
- If extent and severity of inflammation not apparent from supine plain abdominal X-ray
- consult with consultant gastroenterologist to plan colonoscopy in convalescent phase
If not improving
- If no improvement after 48 hr, consider escalation therapy with:
- either IV ciclosporin (unlicensed) or infliximab
- only after discussion with a consultant gastroenterologist
- If still no improvement by day 5, consider surgery
MONITORING TREATMENT
2-hrly
- Temperature
- Pulse
- BP
- Respiration
Twice daily
- Abdominal examination
- look for local peritonism and check bowel sounds
- Measure abdominal girth
Daily
- FBC, U&E, stool culture
- Abdominal X-ray
- look for free abdominal gas or colonic dilatation >6 cm
- Count stools and inspect for blood
Alternate days
- Erect chest X-ray: look for gas under diaphragm
DISCHARGE AND FOLLOW-UP
Plan home treatment regimen
- Prednisolone (not enteric coated)
- taper daily dosage by 5 mg each week to zero or previous maintenance dosage
- co-prescribe calcium and vitamin D (e.g. Adcal D3® 2 tablets daily) whilst on prednisolone
- If distal disease, hydrocortisone foam enema 10% 12–24 hrly
- Mesalazine (Octasa® MR), usually 800 mg 8-hrly but higher doses (up to 4.8 g/day) can be used if needed
- Nutritional support, as advised by dietitian
Follow-up
- If outpatient colonoscopy not already performed, arrange in consultation with consultant gastroenterologist
- Arrange follow-up in gastrointestinal outpatient clinic after 4 weeks
- Give patient information literature and encourage membership of Crohn's and Colitis UK
- Inform IBD Nurses of admission, especially if new diagnosis
Date updated: 2023-10-23