When I poop, I’ll take my hand and make a “knife hand” and massage the area above my hip and grab the side of my stomach while bending over to help the poop get out instead of straining. It’s this weird?

  • southsamurai@sh.itjust.works
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    10 months ago

    Well, it’s very rare I need to, what with having IBS-d. But, yah, that’s a long standing thing.

    Back when I was still able to work, my main job was as a nurse’s assistant, I even did it for other people. When folks can’t really walk, the normal extra help you get from using the muscles of your abdomen can’t assist the bowel. So they’d be more likely to get backed up than usual. And, a lot of medications can change bowel motility too, including opiates. Since opiates are fairly common for bed-bound patients, and not rare with non-ambulatory but not bed-bound, I’d say close to 9 out of 10 of my patients would get constipated semi-regularly.

    Giving that little massage over the descending colon helps a lot, and if you give one over the transverse during a bath, it can prevent things from getting as hard and dry. Not much point of working the ascending colon, since there’s pretty much never enough water removed in that section to get backed up there.

    But, for paralyzed patients, you do sometimes do a full abdominal massage to help work things along. Not all of them need it, but it usually does help anyone with paralysis to work their bowel program anyway. Prevents accidents throughout the day usually, because by the time you’ve gotten done with the massage, done all the movement required to get set up for the necessary activity with the bowel, you’ve moved things along so that you can empty the last bits of the colon fully.

    Which is long winded and tangential, but I figure it might be of interest to someone scrolling through that has sone kind of difficulty with their bowels