Pharmacologic Profile
General Use
For the control and symptomatic relief of acute and chronic nonspecific diarrhea.
General Action and Information
Diphenoxylate/atropine, difenoxin/atropine, and loperamide slow intestinal motility and propulsion. Bismuth subsalicylate affects fluid content of the stool. Bismuth subsalicylate is also used as part of the management of peptic ulcer disease due to
. Polycarbophil acts as an antidiarrheal by taking on water within the bowel lumen to create a formed stool. Polycarbophil may also be used to treat constipation. Octreotide is used specifically for diarrhea associated with GI endocrine tumors.Contraindications
Previous hypersensitivity. Severe abdominal pain of unknown cause, especially when associated with fever.
Precautions
Use cautiously in patients with severe liver disease or inflammatory bowel disease. Safety in pregnancy and lactation not established (diphenoxylate/atropine and loperamide). Octreotide may aggravate gallbladder disease.
Interactions
Polycarbophil ↓ the absorption of tetracycline. Octreotide may alter the response to insulin or oral hypoglycemic agents.
Nursing Implications
Assessment
Potential Nursing Diagnoses
Implementation
Patient/Family Teaching
Evaluation/Desired Outcomes