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This episode's going to get real. So... be prepared for that
Let's start here: Nobody likes to be constipated.
Sometimes — because of things like diet or stress —- you don't poop for a little while.
It happens to me whenever Igo on vacation and I'm like
"Why?! I'm supposed to be having a good time! This is not fun!"
Thankfully, it's usually fixable with coffee or and a bunch of fiber... have a couple bran muffins!
But if that little while turns into a long time, and you just stop pooping entirely...
things can get pretty ugly.
Poop is your body's way of getting rid of undigested or undigestible food and other wastes that your body produces.
After the stuff travels through your small and large intestine, it ends up at the rectum,
which stretches and sends a signal to your brain, "it's time to go!"
Sometimes, though, things can stop chugging along as nature intended.
That's where constipation comes in, and it can be caused by anything from holding it in too long to a lack of exercise.
Some diseases can also make your intestines struggle to propel along poop.
Parkinson's or inflammatory bowel diseases, for example, can prevent the muscles and nerves
in the colon from working properly, so it can't pass along feces or gas.
In severe cases, that can cause a megacolon, and that's the actual name for this thing.
It's an abnormally large or swollen colon — which can create a fecal backup.
Regardless of what causes it, though, nothing good happens when your poop gets stuck in your body.
When it hangs out in the colon, more and more water is sucked out of it.
That makes it harder — which, in turn, makes it more difficult for your body to push out.
And when you do try, you have to push harder.
That strain can cause hemorrhoids, which are inflamed veins in your rectum, or anal fissures, which are small tears in the lining of the anus.
All this sounds so fun!
If you don't go for a long, long, long time, your poop gets too hard and dry, it can also cause something called a fecal impaction:
a hardened mass of stool that can't move at all.
Those masses can cause nausea and ulcers, and press on the bladder, causing urinary incontinence.
They can even cause the colon to perforate or rupture which is life-threateningly dangerous and requirings surgery.
And in really, really, really rare cases, things can get... oh goodness.
A severe fecal impaction can actually make intestines contract in reverse.
In an effort to get things moving, they'll contract and relax — which, unfortunately,
can send their contents in the wrong direction.
They're just tying to save your life!
Liquid from the small intestine backs up into the stomach, and causes the unfortunately named condition: fecal vomiting.
It's not quite as nasty as it sounds — like, it's not fully formed stools or anything — but also definitely not pleasant!
Thankfully, fecal impactions can be broken up with laxatives, or can be broken up manually by a doctor.
If someone is chronically constipated, or develop fecal impactions, their intestinal
muscles might also weaken over time, making it more difficult to regulate the pooping process on their own.
So make sure to eat plenty of fiber, don't hold it for too long, and if you're not
pooping regularly, go talk to a doctor, because the alternatives.... NO!
Thanks for asking, and thanks to our patrons on Patreon who keep answers like this coming!
Cause look... sponsors aren't going to sponsor content like this!
If you want to join us for a monthly Google Hangout, or just support the show, you can go to patreon.com/scishow.
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