Skip to main content

I have a J pouch and I am constipated. It started last week. Last Wednesday I had horrific rectal bleeding. The GI put me on Flagyl and that is when I became constipated. I am so backed up that I have put on 10 pounds in a week's time. I am severely bloated/distended and when I eat, the bloating/distension is worse. I went to the ER on Tuesday and there are no blockages. It appears the constipation is down in the low. The GI Doctor instructed me to take Miralax over the next few days and if that didn't work call back. I did the miralax mixture on Saturday and Sunday and it didn't work. I am trying it again today but is there anything else that will do the trick. I am just plain miserable and uncomfortable. This is the first experience I have had with constipation since my total colectomy in Dec. 2011.

Any help or advice would be greatly appreciated.

Replies sorted oldest to newest

Reduce your solid foods to nil and increase fluids a LOT, especially fruit juices, which naturally stimulate the gut. Warm, broth is good too. It is safe to keep taking the Miralax.

It is not uncommon for antibiotics to thicken the stool a lot, since bacteria can add a lot of the volume. If you were taking any Imodium, stop taking it until this resolves and/or you are off Flagyl.

Have you had a rectal exam? It is possible you have an anal stricture too, that was not evident until your stool thickened. If you cannot get a finger in, then you have a stricture.

Good luck!

Jan Smiler
Jan Dollar
Thanks Jan!

I took myself off Flagyl on Friday as I figured it was the cause of the constipation. I did not get a rectal exam. I will go on liquids for awhile. Should the miralax be done more than once in a day as the transit time is faster than normal people. The miralax produced a very small movement about two hours after taking it and that has been it.
H
Saturday and Sunday I did two scoops of miralax with 12 oz of Gatorade 2. The past few days I have done one scoop(capful) a day with colase. I am on all liquid and had a small movement with undigested food. In June I was iron deficient anemic and I had blood work done and my hemoglobin is a 10 and my iron serum is a 197, my iron sat 62 (both high) and low uibc. I am Wondering if this is contributing to my constipation issues.
H
Have folks found it to be true that more Miralax is needed to keep things moving through the pouch with its speedy transit time? Anyway, just wondering as I have started to take Miralax for constipation caused by other meds and I feel uncertain about the amount of dose that works best and the time of day to take it. So far I have been taking one dose in 12 oz of vitamin water in the morning and .5 dose in tea with lunch. Then I feel like I'm afloat with water much of the day as I am drinking so much. I go to the bathroom comfortably without great urgency but I do feel somewhat bloated and uncomfortable before heading off to the toilet. The bloated discomfort can last quite awhile. I would like a regimen that is a bit more comfortable. Has anyone found a good system? I would love to hear how you have experimented with Miralax and/or other products to treat the more unusual issue of constipation with the pouch.

Savannah
2005 Dx UC
2009 Colon rupture/colectomy/end ileostomy
2010 My husband died of AML Leukemia
2010 2 stage reversal/j pouch
2011 Partial Spinal Cord Injury w/nerve damage
Savannah
Savannah,

It took me almost a week to get "unconstipated". This is the first time I had this situation since my surgery in 2011. I ended up doing 2 capfuls of Miralax in 12 oz of gatorade with 6 colase (stool softeners-without stimulant) once in the morning and once at night for three nights. I was really distended and bloated but after the second day a lot of gas was released and the bloat disappeared. I did the third day as insurance, then made sure I was back to normal by eating something I knew would go straight through and identifiable (blueberries). Sorry for being graphic Smiler

If you have any questions, let me know.

Good Luck!
H
Thanks Heather. I am finding my way with constipation and your experience with dosing was helpful. I have been fairly comfortable with 1 dose of Miralax in the morning and at night plus the addition of more fiber in my diet. It is a bit lonely on this site with constipation as the usual symptom is diarrhea. Be well and let me know if I can ever be of help to you.
Savannah
Savannah

Hi!

I was dealing with a severe cause of pouchitis and my doctor had to put me on steroids (after trying Cypro and Flagil, it just kept coming back), so I started with 40 mg and I'm on 25 mg now, hoping to keep it decreasing 5mg every 3 days.  My problem is, I'm facing horrible constipation and I'm terrified.  Does anybody there dealing with a similar problem caused by Prednisone.  At this point I heard things on my belly moving and I'm able to pass gas and some stool, but I'm not eliminating enough and I feel bloated and sore on my pouch.  I feel urges but seats on the toilet for long periods of time but not much going out.  What can I do? Any suggestions, ideas would be highly appreciated.  I'm so scared!

Thank you in advance! 

Laurita 

LauraLee

Laurita, the most important thing is drinking enough fluid. I can't tell if you're doing that. If fluid alone doesn't work there are additional things to try, but none of them will work without fluid.

Did Cipro and Flagyl work while you were taking them? If they did, you may have pouchitis that just requires antibiotic treatment all of the time. Prednisone doesn't seem to fix it for most of us.

Scott F

Thank you so much for responding Scott.  I'm trying to keep drinking my fluids.  Water make me nauseous but I'm forcing myself to drink.  This morning I was too uncomfortable, so I took Miralax dissolved in apple juice (I saw Jan's previous post and she said Miralax is safe for Jpouchers).   Later,  I was able to eliminate some stool.  I'm having a lot of noises and gurgling and even passed gas (big relief) but not feeling empty yet.  One of my many concerns is what to put on my stomach now besides fluids to keep things flowing.  It terrifies me to eat anything solid and go back on the same vicious circle because I can't stop Prednisone inmediately.

I been dealing with Pouchitis on and off, and Cypro worked for a while, then not anymore.  Flagyl burned my stomach awfully, that's why my doctor put me on steroids as a last source, but I know as long as I'm taking Prednisone, I'll be constipated, so I feel trapped , please help! 

 

As a reference about me, I had UC for 22 years, after two years long flare up and trying all possible meds (including Remicade and Humira) my colon was removed (3 stages) and got the reversal in Feb/2014.  My first 6 months with the pouch were great, but 2015 and so far 2016 I'm having too many Pouchitis issues.   I just refusing myself to give up on my JPouch, but I wonder if too many Pouchitis incidents will eventually deteriorate or weak my pouch.  I'm so depressed about this whole situation.

LauraLee

Thank you Scott, you're being so helpful, and you're absolutely right! Steroids was the last on my list specially because they caused me severe bone damage on my hips (I have hip replacements in both sides), so I know I'm walking on very thin ice.   I think I put too much pressure on my doctor when he decided to put me on steroids because I need so desperately to feel better.  I will like to discuss that list of antibiotics with him.

Right now I'm dealing with this Prednisone-constipation, but so far I'm being able to eliminate with the Miralax help and that is giving me a little peace of mind. 

LauraLee

This thread is 12 months old, but fruit veg and fibre are fine for jpouch if you can tolerate them.  Your new insides need time and practice with veg and fibre, I think most people try it once it twice then give up, but normally I have a vegetable smoothie and wholemeal or multigrain sandwiches for lunch.

 

Today I had spinach, celery, broccoli, kale and sweet potatoes (with skin) basically cooked down and blended into a soup.  This made about a litre,I had half today and will have half tomorrow.  I've also just had an apple and a banana, and earlier had some left over quorn chilli (vegetarian) with a 5 bean salad mixed into it (peppers and all sorts).  And ím not a vegetarian.  

 

I definitely have more bathroom visits on fibre and veg, but then so do people with colons.  I go cos I need to go (is the pouch is full), because veg and fibre is very high residue, more bathroom visits are required.  Taking psyllium husk just before the soup shows things down and actually seems to do wonders for hydration too

 

Tonight I'm making a pizza with chicken instead of bread for the base (is a slimming world recipe as the missus is downsizing lol).  This will have garlic, tomatoes pepper pineapple and salami on.  I honestly reckon eating veg regularly has helped me make such a good recovery, or maybe I am just lucky.  Either way, make hay while the sun shines . Don't avoid a good just cos others say they had an issue with it, you should probably make up your own mind

Bobish

Last time I had blueberries I got water runs out of control.  Doctors will tell you no fiber.  I'm amazed you can get away with it.  I'm very constipated right now and don't know what to do.  I'm taking anti biotics for pouchitis which we really don't know I have.  That causes constipation.  I haven't gone for 3 or more days.  I just don't know what to do.  Took Miralax last night and this morning.  I'm afraid to eat anything.  Do you eat pancakes?  Thanks for sharing.

Balletbarre

Well you have a lot more experience than me, I'm 8 months out.  Docs say a lot of things, not all of it is right. Docs advice is usually based on statistics rather than conclusion drawing from a specific patient.  That has been my experience anyway.  To start my body fought fibre and veg, now it doesn't seem to mind, in fact I'm sure the veg is basically healing sludge that reduces inflammation!  I held remission of UC for 15 odd years with no meds with juicing.  My JPouch was deemed necessary because I was 40 and had long term UC and a lump they thought was dysplasia (it wasn't)..

Without wanting to be flippant, if blue berries effect you so bad, couldn't you just eat a few to sort your constipation problem?  As I'm sure your aware most people with JPouch are frequent visitors to the bathroom.

 

You could perhaps try some magnesium based laxative. It's gentle and she for long term use.  Taking 8 would have a 'blueberry' effect but taking 2 would probably give a much more civilised response.   I'm thinking colosan or oxypowder.  If you want to keep it old school Epsom salts would probably do the trick too!, Same stuff in a slightly more horrible tasting form lol.

 

And yes I know I'm lucky for a poucher, I had an ace surgeon and good after care but I like to think I have at least contributed to that luck myself, restricting sugar and yeasts and eating healthy nutritious foods. I also take probiotics.   Maybe it's all quack, but I can only share my experience and hope that it doesn't bite my on the bum at a later date.  Also I didn't have severe complications others did, for example no radiation treatment, undoubtedly that helps.

 

I can rest pancakes no problems, but I wouldn't really as there is no nutrition in it, just sugar and white flour.  My doc never said no fibre.. he said "try stuff and see how you get on, fibre may be a problem".. indeed it was too start, seems to be better now, as long as I remember 1 loperomide twice a day and fibre before my soup/smoothie...

 

Bobish

Yeah I eat meat, my staple is turkey or chicken,  but beef prawns and fish too.  I don't avoid lamb, just didn't crop up much, in fact lately I've been reading more ostrich or kangaroo as the local butcher is diversifying lol   I eat mushrooms, corn on the cob, popcorn much as I like (and I'm a lousy chewer).  My one restriction is spicy food, but that's only cos of the butt burn.  I can have 1 chilli in a stir fry or a mild to medium curry but no more!

 

I wouldn't quit the antibiotics just yet if your supposed to be taking them.  You could reduce the amount of loperomide, drinking more water (don't worry too much about sipping it, but obviously try not to swallow too much air with it).  Drinking water more quickly means the gut doesn't have time to absorb it all during transit, so it's looser.  If you drink water too fast you may swallow air though which would lead to gas pain.

 

Maybe the doc have you specific advice of foods to avoid for a reason?  If so you should probably adhere to that, if not then why not try something new?  You want a change.

 

Assume you are on flagyl for bacteria issues in the gut.  Quick disclaimer, I'm not saying this is medical fact, A lot of people will say this is quackery but im down with it.  This is basically the 'Candida overgrowth' advice.  Bad bacteria grows in a carbon dioxide environment, it ferments into poisonous by products.  A oxygen rich environment reduce the growth bad bacteria and fermentation.  So foods high in sugar and yeasts etc should be eaten sparsely.  Fibre helps scrub the walls of your bowel keeping then nice and clean, water flushes it through etc. The magnesium products I suggested also help 'oxygenate' the bowel (at least that is their claim)

 

The concern is whether you eating more fruit would contribute to the bad bacteria issue.

 

Blueberries are very acidic and sweet (even for a fruit) and have a tough skin, so potentially not the best starting point.  I would say that was an advanced fruit.  If you haven't had any for years you will probably react by getting gas, because you won't have much of the bacteria in your gut to help digest this food. With practice that should get better

I rely more on veg.  I hated the savoury nature of veg and craved the sweetness of fruit, that was basically habit and withdrawal symptoms lol.  Cook yourself some veg, then blend it up into a soup.  Go easy on the greens to start as they do cause gas, especially if not fresh.  Perhaps start with something like carrot, sweet potatoes and spinach and see how you get on.  

 

you want to be gentle with yourself, but consider if any pain is just a bit of cramping from unfamiliar food or gas from a food that your body isn't used to working with. I don't want to say be persistent, but don't give up at the first sign of difficulty either, after all you want change, so you need to do something different and there will be an adaptation period.  

 

It's only food (and healthy food at that) so you shouldn't be able to do yourself any harm with it, unless you know you have an allergy or doc has specifically told you to avoid a food.  The biggest problem is a blockage, but if you blend that won't be an issue.

 

Sorry for going on, as you can see I find the topic interesting.  Go easy and let us know how you get on. ��

 

Bobish

Add Reply

Copyright © 2019 The J-Pouch Group. All rights reserved.
×
×
×
×
Link copied to your clipboard.
×