The etiological profile of chronic organic non-bloody diarrhea in India: Emergence of inflammatory bowel disease as a dominant cause.

Prachi Daga, Amarender Singh Puri, Lipika Lipi, Sumit Bhatia, Randhir Sud
Author Information
  1. Prachi Daga: Department of Gastroenterology, Hind Institute of Medical Sciences, Ataria, Lucknow, India.
  2. Amarender Singh Puri: Institute of Digestive and Hepatobiliary Sciences, Medanta Hospital, Gurugram, Haryana, India. amarender.puri@gmail.com. ORCID
  3. Lipika Lipi: Department of Laboratory Medicine and Biochemistry, Medanta, Gurugram, India.
  4. Sumit Bhatia: Department of Gastroenterology, Paras Hospital, Gurgaon, 122 002, India.
  5. Randhir Sud: Institute of Digestive and Hepatobiliary Sciences, Medanta Hospital, Gurugram, Haryana, India.

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Chronic non-bloody diarrhea may be attributed either to functional or organic diseases. The latter category may present with malabsorption syndrome if there is extensive involvement of the small bowel, whereas diseases of the large bowel may only present with diarrhea sans malabsorption. Indian data has predominantly focussed on the etiological spectrum of malabsorption syndrome in adults. The primary aim of the current study was to evaluate etiological spectrum of chronic organic non-bloody diarrhea in India.
METHODS: This prospective observational study was done at a tertiary care hospital in North India. patients ≥ 18 years presenting with chronic non-bloody diarrhea of > 4 weeks duration were enrolled in the study after exclusion of patients with IBS and anal incontinence.
RESULTS: During the study period of 12 months, 100 patients with chronic organic non-bloody diarrhea were evaluated. A definite etiological diagnosis was made in 97 patients (97%). The mean age of the patients was 48 ± 16.7 years (58% males). The median duration of diarrhea was 5.5 months (interquartile range [IQR] 3.5, 11). Inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) accounted for 45% of the cases making it the predominant cause for organic diarrhea. GI infections and adult-onset celiac disease accounted for 18% and 9% of the cases, respectively. Pancreatic disease, benign or neoplastic, accounted for 6% of the total cases. Notably, gastrointestinal (GI) malignancies manifesting as chronic non-bloody diarrhea were diagnosed in 5% of the patients.
CONCLUSION: Our data suggests a paradigm shift in the etiological spectrum of chronic organic non-bloody diarrhea in India with the emergence of IBD as the predominant cause displacing GI infections.

Keywords

References

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Word Cloud

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