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Constipation

How common is it?

Constipation affects about 15% of Americans. Most cases are simple, safe, and treatable, but sometimes it can signal a more serious problem.

What is Constipation?

Constipation can mean:

  • Infrequent stools (less than 3/week)
  • Hard stools
  • Straining
  • Incomplete emptying

What’s “normal” varies — some people go daily, others every 2–3 days.

How Normal Bowel Function Works

After food moves through the small intestine, the colon:

  • Absorbs water
  • Forms stool
  • Passes it to the rectum for storage until a bowel movement occurs
Good bowel function depends on:
  • Stool consistency
  • Ease of passing
  • Feeling completely empty
Fiber helps by making stools bulkier and easier to move.

Common Causes

Constipation is often due to:

  • Low fiber intake
  • Poor hydration
  • Lack of physical activity

Other causes include:

  • Medical conditions (diabetes, hypothyroidism)
  • Medications (pain meds, antidepressants, BP meds)
  • Pelvic floor dysfunction
  • Structural blockage
  • Cancer (rare but important to rule out)

When to Seek Medical Attention

See a healthcare provider if constipation:

  • Is persistent or worsening
  • Comes with nausea, vomiting, severe pain
  • Causes blood in stool
  • Involves pencil-thin stools
  • Does not improve after lifestyle changes

Treatment Basics

Start with lifestyle changes, which help most people:

  1. Fiber: 25–35g/day from fruits, vegetables, whole grains
  2. Fluids: 6–8 glasses of water daily
  3. Exercise: Regular activity stimulates the bowel

Laxatives

Available types include:

  • Stimulant (senna, bisacodyl) — occasional use only
  • Osmotic (MiraLAX®, lactulose, magnesium) — draws water in
  • Stool softeners (Colace®)
  • Enemas/suppositories — avoid routine use

Always talk to a provider before long-term laxative use.

Prescription Medications

Used when conservative measures fail. Examples:

  • Lubiprostone (Amitiza®)
  • Linaclotide (Linzess®)
  • Medications for opioid-induced constipation

Cost and insurance coverage may vary.

Evaluation Tools (If Symptoms Persist)

Tests may include:

  • Colonoscopy
  • Transit study (Sitzmarks®)
  • Anorectal manometry
  • Defecography

Used to check for blockage, slow motility, or pelvic floor dysfunction.

Specific Disorders & Advanced Care

  • Pelvic floor dyssynergia can be treated with biofeedback physical therapy
  • Slow-transit constipation is rare and requires specialized evaluation
  • Surgery is rare and only used for select cases

    Bottom Line: Most constipation improves with fiber, fluids, and exercise, but persistent symptoms — especially with bleeding, pain, or weight loss — deserve medical evaluation.