Diarrhea in the ICU

Definition (ICU-relevant)

Diarrhea is the passage of ≥3 loose or watery stools/day or stool volume >200–250 mL/day.
In ICU practice, even new-onset watery stool ≥2 times/day is clinically significant due to risks of electrolyte imbalance, AKI, skin breakdown, malnutrition, infection control issues, and prolonged ICU stay.

 

Epidemiology & Importance in ICU

  • Occurs in 15–40% of critically ill patients.
  • Often multifactorial (feeds + drugs + infection).
  • Associated with mortality, LOS, and ventilator days.
  • Frequently under-investigated and misattributed to “tube feeds”.


Pathophysiology (ICU-specific mechanisms)

1. Secretory Diarrhea (most common in ICU)

  • Active secretion or absorption of electrolytes water follows.
  • Persists during fasting.
  • Causes:
    • Antibiotics (alter microbiota)
    • Clostridioides difficile
    • Bile acid malabsorption
    • Enteral feed osmolar load
    • Sepsis-related gut inflammation

2. Osmotic Diarrhea

  • Presence of non-absorbable solutes in lumen.
  • Improves with fasting.
  • Causes:
    • High-osmolar enteral feeds
    • Sorbitol-containing medications (elixirs, syrups)
    • Lactose intolerance (post-gut injury)

3. Inflammatory / Exudative

  • Mucosal injury protein, blood, pus loss.
  • Causes:
    • C. difficile colitis
    • Ischemic colitis
    • IBD flare
    • CMV colitis (immunosuppressed)

4. Motility-related

  • Transit time.
  • Causes:
    • Prokinetics (metoclopramide, erythromycin)
    • Autonomic dysfunction
    • Post-vagotomy, post-abdominal surgery


Etiology: ICU-Focused Differential Diagnosis

A. Non-infectious (≈70–80%)

  1. Enteral nutrition–associated
    • Rapid rate, hyperosmolar feeds
    • Lack of fiber
    • Cold feeds
  1. Medications
    • Antibiotics (β-lactams, clindamycin, fluoroquinolones)
    • PPIs, H2 blockers
    • Laxatives, stool softeners
    • Magnesium, phosphate
    • Sorbitol-based syrups
  1. Critical illness–related
    • Splanchnic hypoperfusion
    • Stress-induced mucosal injury
    • Hypoalbuminemia gut edema
  1. Post-surgical
    • Short bowel
    • Pancreatic insufficiency
  1. Endocrine
    • Thyrotoxicosis
    • Adrenal crisis (rare but exam-relevant)


B. Infectious Causes (always rule out)

  1. Clostridioides difficile
    • Most important ICU pathogen
    • Risk: antibiotics, PPI, prolonged ICU stay
  1. Bacterial
    • Salmonella, Shigella, Campylobacter (less common ICU-acquired)
  1. Viral
    • Norovirus (outbreaks)
  1. Parasitic
    • Rare in ICU unless immunosuppressed


Evaluation of Diarrhea in ICU 

Step 1: Clinical Assessment

  • Onset (early vs late ICU stay)
  • Stool characteristics (watery, bloody, oily)
  • Drug history (last 7–14 days)
  • Feeding details (rate, type, osmolarity)

Step 2: Basic Investigations

  • Serum electrolytes (Na, K, Mg, Phosphate)
  • Renal function
  • ABG (metabolic acidosis common)
  • Stool charting (volume & frequency)

Step 3: Microbiological Testing

  • C. difficile toxin/NAAT (mandatory in ICU diarrhea)
  • Stool culture (selective)
  • Ova/parasite only if risk factors

Step 4: Imaging (if red flags)

  • CT abdomen for:
    • Ileus
    • Ischemia
    • Toxic megacolon


Management 

General Measures (First Principles)

  1. Hemodynamic stabilization
  2. Fluid & electrolyte correction
    • Hypokalemia, hypomagnesemia common
  1. Strict stool output monitoring
  2. Skin care & pressure injury prevention


Nutrition Management

  • Do NOT stop enteral feeds routinely
  • Modify instead:
    • Reduce rate
    • Switch to isotonic or peptide-based feeds
    • Add soluble fiber
    • Avoid bolus feeds
  • Consider post-pyloric feeding


Drug Optimization

  • Stop non-essential:
    • Laxatives
    • Prokinetics
    • Sorbitol-containing syrups
  • Review antibiotics (de-escalate)


Antidiarrheal Therapy (Use with Caution)

  • Loperamide
    • Only after excluding infection
  • Cholestyramine
    • Bile acid diarrhea
  • Octreotide
    • Refractory secretory diarrhea
  • Probiotics
    • Not routinely recommended in ICU
    • Avoid in immunocompromised (fungemia risk)


Complications of ICU Diarrhea

  • Hypovolemia AKI
  • Electrolyte derangements
  • Metabolic acidosis
  • Malnutrition
  • Skin breakdown, infection
  • Increased ICU LOS and mortality