Chronic Constipation: Simple or Complicated?

Blog BPF 82.24

The diagnosis of chronic constipation may seem like a simple concept; however, bowel patients can be a challenging group within our pelvic health population. The interesting part about treating these patients is that constipation can result in a variety of complaints. Diaz et al confirmed this in their 2023 research. Their article shared that “Constipation encompasses several subtypes, each with its unique characteristics and underlying factors.”(1) Common complaints can include frequency, size, length, and consistency which can become overwhelming for the practitioner to decide which clinical complaints seem the most important to focus on.

Knowing how to effectively treat these patients and ask the right questions is valuable in the scheme of pelvic floor rehab, secondary to overlapping symptoms and etiology of chronic constipation. Consideration needs to be taken into account for any outside factors that can also contribute to patient complaints. For example, taking different prescription medications, supplements, and eating different foods can all influence the patient's stool frequency and formation (2). Realizing where this issue stems from is the deep-dive question to get a handle on their complaints.

Bowel frequency can be one of the biggest clinical challenges for clinicians to educate patients to master – consistency is key! Understanding what their normal frequency should be, or what it should be now, is part of the clinical judgment skill when setting goals. If your patient is only getting a natural bowel movement urge every 10 days, their goal of daily BMs, at first, should be emotionally readjusted so that they don’t feel like they have failed their rehabilitation goals.

Learning colon physiology helps to understand normal vs abnormal motility and can be helpful in treating your patient’s constipation. In my course, Bowel Pathology and Physiology we discuss the physiological reflex that controls the lower motility of the GI tract following a meal (3). When patients present with chronic constipation, they may be experiencing a profound loss of the gastrocolic reflex. The course is filled with clinical pearls and research tidbits that help to improve or slow down colonic motility. Join me in the next course offering on September 14-15, 2024 to learn more.

 

Resources:

  1. Diaz S, Bittar K, Hashmi MF, et al. [Updated 2023 Nov 12]. In: StatPearls [Internet]. Treasure Island (FL): StatPearls Publishing; 2024 Jan. Available from: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK513291/
  2. Araújo MM, Botelho PB. Probiotics, prebiotics, and synbiotics in chronic constipation: Outstanding aspects to be considered for the current evidence. Front Nutr. 2022 Dec 8;9:935830. doi: 10.3389/fnut.2022.935830. PMID: 36570175; PMCID: PMC9773270.
  3. Mawer S, Alhawaj AF. Physiology, Defecation. 2023 Nov 13. In: StatPearls [Internet]. Treasure Island (FL): StatPearls Publishing; 2024 Jan–. PMID: 30969554.

 

 

AUTHOR BIO

Lila Abbate, PT, DPT, MS, OCS, WCS, PRPC

Lila Abbate, PT, DPT, MS, OCS, PRPC Lila Abbate is the Director/Owner of New Dimensions Physical Therapy. She graduated from Touro College in Dix Hills, NY with a Bachelor of Science (BS) in Health Sciences and a Master of Arts (MA) in Physical Therapy in 1997. She completed her Advanced Masters in Manual Orthopedic Physical Therapy (MS) at Touro College, Bayshore, NY in 2003 and continued to pursue her Doctor of Physical Therapy (DPT) at Touro in 2005. Dr. Abbate is a Board-Certified Specialist by the American Physical Therapy Association in Orthopedics (OCS) 2004 and Women’s Health (WCS) 2011. She obtained the Certified Pelvic Rehabilitation Practitioner (PRPC) from the Herman & Wallace Institute in 2014. She is a Diane Lee/LJ Lee, Integrated Systems Model (ISM) graduate and completed the New York series in 2012.

Dr. Abbate has been an educator for most of her physical therapy career. She has experience as a full-time faculty at Touro College, Manhattan Campus from 2002 to 2006 teaching the biomechanical approach to orthopedic dysfunction and therapeutic exercise as well as massage/soft tissue work that highlighted trigger point work, scar management, and myofascial release. She is currently on faculty as a Lecturer at Columbia University teaching the private practice section Business & Management course (since 2016) along with the Pelvic Health elective (since 2012). She teaches nationally and internationally with the Herman & Wallace Pelvic Rehabilitation Institute teaching advanced courses of her own intellectual property: Orthopedic Assessment for the Pelvic Health Therapist, Bowel Pathology Function, Dysfunction and the Pelvic Floor, Coccydynia & Painful Sitting: Orthopedic Implications. She was a co-writer for the Pudendal Neuralgia course and teaches the Pelvic Function Series, and Pregnancy/Postpartum Series. She has written two book chapters in 2016: Pelvic Pain Management by Valvoska and Healing in Urology: Clinical Guidebook to Herbal and Alternative Therapies by Chughtai.

Lila is a member of the American Physical Therapy Association, the National Vulvodynia Association, the American Urogynecology Association, the International Pelvic Pain Society, and is also a Senior Physical Therapy consultant for SI Bone, a sacroiliac joint instrumentation company.

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