fecal impaction การใช้
- Individuals who have had one fecal impaction are at high risk of future impactions.
- :: I don't see anything on PubMed about allergy causing fecal impaction.
- Liquid stool may leak around a fecal impaction, possibly causing degrees of liquid fecal incontinence.
- The treatment of fecal impaction requires both the remedy of the impaction and treatment to prevent future recurrences.
- Often underlying medical conditions cause fecal impactions; these conditions should be treated to reduce the risk of future impactions.
- Complications include breakage of the encirclement material, fecal impaction, sepsis, and erosion into the skin or anal canal.
- Manual removal of a fecal impaction is often required with obese patients in traction, after a barium enema, and in poorly hydrated older adults.
- This may occur when there is a large mass of feces in the rectum ( fecal loading ), which may become hardened ( fecal impaction ).
- Many types of medications ( most notably opioid pain medications, such as codeine ) reduce motility of the colon, increasing the likelihood of fecal impactions.
- Decreased motility of the stools that in the case of fecal impaction become compacted into a large, hard mass of stool that cannot be expelled from the rectum.
- A "'fecal impaction "'is a solid, immobile bulk of human feces that can develop in the rectum as a result of chronic constipation.
- Retention of stool may result in fecal loading ( retention of a mass of stool of any consistency ) or fecal impaction ( retention of a mass of hard stool ).
- Severe constipation includes "'obstipation "'( failure to pass stools or gas ) and fecal impaction, which can progress to bowel obstruction and become life-threatening.
- Patients with rectal obstruction ( e . g ., from fecal impaction, obstruction due to a vaginal pessary ) may also present with pseudodiarrhea, since only liquid stool can make it through.
- Persistent failure to fully evacuate stool may lead to retention of a mass of stool in the rectum ( fecal loading ), which can become hardened, forming a fecal impaction or even fecoliths.
- Complications, including infection, urinary retention, bleeding, anastomotic dehiscence ( opening of the stitched edges inside ), stricture ( narrowing of the gut lumen ), diarrhea, and fecal impaction occur in 6-32 % of cases.
- But looking over the web it seems like fruit juice is commonly " recommended " to people with fecal impaction ( which sounds like a more serious version of this ), and it seems like advertisements for stool softeners have grown very common in the U . S . in recent years . ( the effect of home budget cutbacks . . . ? ) So in the interest of all the kids who haven't learned by trial and error yet I'm curious-can someone think of evidence that might link this problem to some ingredient in fake fruit juice?