Approach to Chronic Enteropathy Practice Test

Session length

1 / 20

How can you differentiate small intestinal from large intestinal disease on clinical signs?

SI disease often causes weight loss and vomiting.

The key idea is the pattern of clinical signs that point to where the GI tract is affected. Small intestinal disease tends to cause weight loss and vomiting because the small intestine is where most nutrient absorption occurs; when its function is impaired, nutrients aren’t absorbed well and calories are lost, and irritation or obstruction can trigger vomiting. Large intestinal disease, on the other hand, usually shows changes in stooling pattern—more frequent stools that are often small in volume, with mucus or blood and tenesmus (straining). Vomiting is not a typical feature of large intestinal disease.

So, identifying weight loss together with vomiting suggests small intestinal involvement, whereas frequent, mucus- or blood-streaked stools with tenesmus point toward large intestinal disease. There can be overlap, but this pattern helps differentiate them based on the most characteristic signs.

LI disease causes increased stool frequency with mucus or blood and tenesmus.

SI disease presents primarily as diarrhea without vomiting or weight loss.

LI disease causes vomiting.

Next Question
Subscribe

Get the latest from Passetra

You can unsubscribe at any time. Read our privacy policy