As a pediatric urologist, I treat children of all ages with a variety of toileting difficulties, including bedwetting, daytime wetting, encopresis (poop accidents), chronic urinary tract infections, urinary urgency, and urinary frequency.

These kids have two things in common: Number one, the root cause of their symptoms is chronic constipation, aka a clogged rectum; and number two, their constipation went overlooked or under-treated for years.

Childhood constipation, the top cause of stomachaches, is so common that it’s become normalized and is treated as a harmless, temporary condition. In fact, constipation is often chronic and can cause distressing symptoms, such as bedwetting, that can linger into adulthood.

Why Is Constipation in Kids Downplayed?

There are two reasons why many don’t take childhood constipation seriously: the conventional definition of constipation is inadequate, and common diagnostic methods are unreliable.

Many folks define constipation as “infrequent pooping.” In reality, many severely constipated children poop daily, even twice a day. They just don’t fully evacuate — and that’s what matters. This causes fresh poop to ooze around the hard stool mass, so the child appears “regular.” Meanwhile, stool is accumulating in the rectum.

In some children, the bulging rectum aggravates the nearby bladder nerves, triggering random, forceful bladder contractions. That’s enuresis — daytime or nighttime wetting.

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