my stool is soft and I go once or twice a month. I’m tired of this. It gets stuck in the sigmoid colon. I have tried every laxative and nothing works. I’ve done testings everything is normal. I’m tired of living like this. I’m in pain in my butt everyday because of it. When I go , I feel relieved and that pain is gone. The pain is due to the stool sitting there and it hurts so bad. Any advice or suggestions ?
ibs c: my stool is soft and I go once or twice a... - IBS Network
ibs c
Hey, unfortunately I can only offer an opinion- and that being that you transition is obviously lacking for whatever reason.
If it were me:
1)Diet = am i giving my body what it needs ie; more fibre, less fibre, am I eating enough in the first place?!? (Only you know the answers to this!)
I find small amounts of caffeine works wonders for my toilet needs.
Lastly, water = do you drink enough?!
2) Exercises = i often walk after meals which helps my transition as I am ‘IBS-C’ mainly, but I am also very active.
3) Meds = suppository’s might help? - I take ‘Laxido’ 3 days out of 7 which aids my transition.
Probiotics? - they have changed things for me quite significantly, and I find my overall toilet habits have improved after around 3weeks of taking them.
More questions than answers I’m afraid, but try not to be disheartened and give all things a try………best of luck
You should go more than once or teice a month? Don't you mean "week"??... I go every day, usually 6am then go back to bed for an hour. Many years agi I had hard stools, but mixing up my diet and keeping away from battered stuff has improved how I go. I keep away from meals like spaghetti bolognasie or creamy sauce type meals. Wishing you well, try using more greens, I just keep to root vegetables, swede and carrot mix I use with a pie and mash meal or Sunday roast
What is your fibre intake like? To improve constipation in the short term you can try ground flaxseed on your breakfast, starting at 1 teaspoon and increasing at 1 teaspoon every 2-3 days - you'll need to consume extra water with it.
These foods are also high fibre:
8-9 Prunes
2 tablespoon chia seeds (soaked for 10-15 mins in milk or non dairy milk with cereal or water)
Shredded wheat (or if GF: Nutribrex)
60g Quinoa
Wholewheat bread
75g Whole grain pastas (if GF: Buckwheat)
2 Hard pears
5 Dried apricots
90g Raspberries
1 orange (contain a natural laxative)
2 kiwi.
I find that I need to have 1 orange or 2 kiwi a day and then another high fibre fruit later in the day to help with BMs. Introduce new foods and any fibre increases slowly, starting with one new thing at a time, waiting for 2-3 days for a response and keep a food diary. You may not need to consume as much fibre as I do.
For breakfast I make a porridge of 4 tablespoon of oat bran and 4 tablespoon all bran (wheat bran), 2.5 small cups of water and microwave for 10 mins. I then mix in 2 tablespoon of chia seeds and 1 tablespoon ground flaxseed and leave to stand for 15-20 mins since the chia seeds need to form a gel. On top of that I place 8 prunes and eat. The best thing to do is to start with normal oats in similar quantities and, if needed, replace one of the tablespoons of oats with oat bran for a couple of days, carrying on doing this every couple of days until you get to 4 tablespoon of oat bran and 4 tablespoon of oats. Then start replacing with wheat bran in the same manner. You can then add the other ingredients one at a time. You might find you do not need the complete 'recipe' to have a BM. All these individual components are down to tolerance e.g. you may not tolerate wheat (see later about Alflorex), so it is best to keep a food diary (I do this on a spreadsheet) recording symptoms for up to 2-3 days after each change.
I also take 30 drops of ginger extract before bedtime to aid motility. You may need to work up the dose to say 7 drop increments each night.
Exercise can help with BMs. The government recommends 150 mins of moderate exercise (e.g. walking as if you are late for an appointment) or 75 of intense exercise (e.g. jogging) per week. I also have a bit of a walk around straight after breakfast to get things moving.
You need to ensure that you are drinking enough fluids (2 litres of fluid per day).
There is some good advice about constipation here:
theibsnetwork.org/constipat...
theibsnetwork.org/constipat...
There are also medications that help IBS-C (constipation dominant IBS). I suffer from IBS-C and have been prescribed Linaclotide for it. I also take Alflorex probiotic which has made me more tolerant to taking in the extra fibre I need for a BM.
Failing dietary measures, you can try Optifibre, which needs to be worked up to a dose according to instructions. You may not need the full dose - watch out for gas and increment to a level that is acceptable for you.
Some people are more prone to constipation due to their intestinal anatomy. Through colonoscopies I have been told that I have a long loopy (redundant) colon. This means that food takes longer to pass through and in the mean time the intestines have more time to suck out water from the stool, drying them out and causing constipation. I have found that I need to consume much more fibre than other people to have regular BMs.
I have also found useful having most of my food at meal times, leaving 4-5 hours of not eating between meals, eating my fruit snack before a meal. This means that your digestive system has time to process each meal. It also allows something called the MMC (migrating motor complex) to run which sweeps food waste from your small intestine into your large intestine. This only happens when you have an empty stomach. When people snack regularly, it prevents the MMC from working properly. I also find the larger meals help to push things along better than drip feeding through snacking.
Look at stomach massage on youtube. You can do before you get out of bed in the morning. Some yoga postures also help.