Why Am I Constipated? Lifestyle Changes for Chronic Constipation

Are you still constipated after weeks of increasing fibre, drinking more water, and exercising regularly? When lifestyle changes fail, the cause likely goes beyond diet and activity alone; chronic constipation can stem from nerve signalling disruptions, muscle coordination problems, or structural changes in the colon and rectum.

Treatment depends on the underlying mechanism. Functional constipation responds to behavioural changes, but slow-transit constipation, pelvic floor dysfunction, or obstructive causes require targeted medical intervention. Your doctor will determine which type you have and recommend treatment tailored to your specific situation.

How Normal Bowel Function Works

Normal defecation (the process of passing stool) involves coordinated action between the colon, rectum, pelvic floor muscles, and nervous system. Disruption at any point in this sequence produces different types of constipation.

  • Colonic Transit: The colon absorbs water from digestive contents whilst propelling material towards the rectum through peristalsis (wave-like muscle contractions). These contractions intensify after meals via the gastrocolic reflex, creating the urge to defecate.
  • Rectal Signalling: When stool reaches the rectum, stretch receptors (sensors in the rectal wall) signal the brain, triggering awareness of rectal fullness and the need to pass stool.
  • Muscle Coordination: Successful defecation requires the puborectalis muscle to relax, straightening the anorectal angle, whilst the external anal sphincter opens voluntarily, and abdominal pressure from the diaphragm propels stool outward.

Types of Chronic Constipation

Normal-Transit Constipation

Stool moves through the colon at standard rates, but patients perceive difficulty with defecation. This form often responds to fibre supplementation and adequate hydration. Hard stools, straining, and incomplete evacuation characterise normal-transit constipation despite regular bowel movement frequency.

Slow-Transit Constipation

The colon’s propulsive contractions occur less frequently or with reduced strength. Stool remains in the colon longer than normal, allowing excessive water absorption and producing hard, dry faeces. Patients typically report infrequent bowel movements, sometimes only once weekly, with minimal urge to defecate. Dietary modifications provide limited benefit because the underlying problem involves colonic motility (the movement of the colon muscles) rather than stool consistency.

Defecatory Disorders

Also called outlet obstruction or pelvic floor dyssynergia (uncoordinated muscle movements during defecation), these conditions involve difficulty expelling stool from the rectum despite adequate colonic function. The pelvic floor muscles contract rather than relax during attempted defecation, or the rectum develops structural changes like rectocele (a bulge or pouch in the rectal wall that can trap stool) or intussusception (when part of the rectum folds inward on itself).

Patients experience prolonged straining, incomplete evacuation, and sometimes need to apply manual pressure to the vagina or perineum to pass stool. These symptoms may indicate evaluation beyond standard constipation treatment.

Medical Conditions That Cause Constipation

Several systemic conditions produce constipation as a secondary effect. Identifying these underlying causes changes management entirely.

Metabolic and Endocrine Disorders

Hypothyroidism (underactive thyroid) slows metabolic processes throughout the body, including gut motility. Diabetes damages nerves controlling intestinal movement. Hypercalcaemia (elevated calcium levels in the blood) from parathyroid disorders or malignancy affects smooth muscle function. Blood tests can identify these conditions when constipation doesn’t respond to standard measures.

Neurological Conditions

Parkinson’s disease affects the autonomic nervous system, including the enteric nervous system (the network of nerves in the gut that controls digestion), often years before motor symptoms (such as tremors or stiffness) appear. Research suggests α-synuclein, the protein implicated in PD, may first accumulate in gut neurons before spreading to the brain.

Medications

Opioid pain medications (such as morphine, oxycodone, or codeine) are commonly associated with constipation, affecting many users by binding receptors in the gut wall and slowing peristalsis. Calcium channel blockers, antihistamines, antidepressants, and iron supplements also contribute. Reviewing all medications, including over-the-counter products, helps identify reversible causes.

Structural Abnormalities

Colorectal strictures (narrowed sections of the colon or rectum) from previous surgery, radiation, or inflammatory bowel disease physically obstruct stool passage. Tumours, though less common, require exclusion in patients with new-onset constipation, particularly those over 50 or with warning symptoms (such as rectal bleeding, unexplained weight loss, or severe abdominal pain).

Why Lifestyle Changes Sometimes Fail

Fibre works by adding bulk to stool, stimulating stretch receptors in the colon wall, and triggering propulsive contractions. In slow-transit constipation, the colon’s response to this stretching is impaired, adding more fibre may worsen bloating and discomfort without improving bowel frequency.

Exercise promotes gut motility through mechanical stimulation and hormonal effects. However, defecatory disorders involve muscular coordination problems that exercise cannot address. The pelvic floor requires specific retraining rather than general physical activity.

Hydration prevents excessive water absorption from stool, but cannot compensate for delayed colonic transit. Drinking additional fluids beyond normal requirements doesn’t accelerate colonic movement—it simply dilutes urine.

Diagnostic Evaluation for Persistent Constipation

When empirical treatment fails, specialised testing identifies the underlying mechanism. The choice of tests depends on clinical presentation and initial assessment findings.

Colonoscopy

Direct visualisation of the colon (a procedure where a doctor uses a flexible tube with a camera to examine the inside of your colon) helps identify or rule out structural causes—polyps, tumours, strictures, and inflammation.

Guidelines recommend colonoscopy when alarm features are present (such as rectal bleeding, unexplained weight loss, or anaemia), when age-appropriate colorectal cancer screening has not yet been performed, or when there is a strong clinical suspicion of structural disease. It is not routinely indicated simply because initial treatment has been ineffective.

Colonic Transit Study

Patients swallow a capsule containing radio-opaque markers (small markers visible on X-ray) and undergo abdominal X-rays over several days. Marker distribution reveals whether transit is normal, globally delayed, or segmentally impaired. This test differentiates slow-transit constipation from defecatory disorders and guides treatment selection.

Defecography

Specialised imaging, either fluoroscopic or MRI-based, visualises the pelvic floor and rectum during attempted defecation (this test uses real-time imaging to see how your pelvic floor muscles and rectum work when you try to pass stool). The study identifies structural abnormalities like rectocele, intussusception, or rectal prolapse (when the rectum slides down or protrudes through the anus), and demonstrates pelvic floor muscle coordination. MRI defecography provides additional soft tissue detail without radiation exposure.

Anorectal Manometry

Pressure sensors in the anal canal and rectum measure sphincter function and the coordination between increased abdominal pressure and sphincter relaxation (this test uses a thin tube with sensors to measure how well the muscles around your anus and rectum are working). This test confirms dyssynergic defecation, paradoxical contraction of the pelvic floor during straining, which requires specific treatment.

Balloon Expulsion Test

A simple screening test where patients attempt to expel a small water-filled balloon from the rectum. Inability to expel the balloon within one minute suggests pelvic floor dysfunction requiring further evaluation.

Treatment Options Beyond Lifestyle Modification

Prescription Medications

Several medication classes target different aspects of constipation:

Osmotic Laxatives

Osmotic laxatives (such as polyethene glycol or lactulose) draw water into the colon, softening stool and increasing volume. They work for normal-transit and some slow-transit constipation, but may cause bloating.

Secretagogues

Secretagogues stimulate fluid secretion into the intestinal lumen through different mechanisms. Lubiprostone activates chloride channels in intestinal cells, whilst linaclotide works as a guanylate cyclase-C agonist, increasing fluid secretion by a separate pathway. Both are designed to improve stool consistency and bowel frequency, and may be considered when over-the-counter laxatives prove ineffective.

These medications are indicated for chronic idiopathic constipation broadly, including normal-transit and slow-transit subtypes, and are recommended when over-the-counter laxatives have not provided adequate relief. They are not established as superior to traditional laxatives, but offer an alternative mechanism for patients who have not responded to first-line options.

Prokinetics

Prokinetics (such as prucalopride) accelerate colonic transit through serotonin receptor activation (by stimulating specific receptors that trigger muscle contractions in the colon). They work independently of stool consistency and benefit patients with documented slow transit.

Biofeedback Therapy

For defecatory disorders, biofeedback retrains pelvic floor muscle coordination (a therapy where you learn to control your pelvic floor muscles using visual or auditory feedback from sensors). Sensors provide real-time visual or auditory feedback whilst patients practise correct relaxation patterns. This treatment may support lasting improvement in suitable candidates, without the need for ongoing medication.

Surgical Options

When necessary, surgery becomes relevant when medical management fails in appropriately selected patients. Your doctor will determine if you’re a suitable candidate based on thorough testing and your individual condition:

Subtotal Colectomy with Ileorectal Anastomosis

Subtotal colectomy with ileorectal anastomosis (surgery where the surgeon removes most of the colon whilst preserving the rectum and reconnects the small intestine to the remaining rectum) removes most of the colon whilst preserving the rectum. This procedure may benefit patients with confirmed slow-transit constipation affecting the entire colon, provided defecatory function is normal. Patient selection requires thorough preoperative testing to exclude pelvic floor dysfunction.

Rectopexy

Rectopexy (a surgical procedure where the surgeon repositions and secures the rectum in its normal location) addresses rectal prolapse or significant intussusception contributing to obstructed defecation. Various techniques—open, laparoscopic, or robotic—suspend the rectum in its normal position.

Rectocele Repair

Rectocele repair (surgery to strengthen the wall between the rectum and vagina) may benefit patients with symptomatic anterior rectal wall bulging, though outcomes depend on appropriate case selection and often combine with pelvic floor rehabilitation.

Recognising Patterns That Suggest Specific Causes

Symptom characteristics often point towards the underlying mechanism:

Infrequent urge to defecate with comfortable intervals between bowel movements suggests slow-transit constipation. Some patients may underreport frequency as a concern, focusing instead on straining or bloating rather than bowel movement count.

Daily urge with prolonged straining and incomplete evacuation may indicate defecatory disorders. Patients may spend extended periods attempting bowel movements with minimal results.

Position-dependent defecation—needing to lean forward, support the perineum, or apply vaginal pressure—suggests structural pelvic floor abnormalities.

Post-meal urge without successful defecation may indicate intact gastrocolic reflex with outlet obstruction.

Alternating constipation and diarrhoea may represent irritable bowel syndrome, medication effects, or overflow incontinence (liquid stool leaking around hard, impacted stool) from impaction.

When to Seek Professional Help

  • Constipation persisting beyond six weeks despite adequate fibre, fluids, and exercise
  • Fewer than one bowel movement weekly on a regular basis
  • Bleeding with bowel movements or blood in stool
  • Unintentional weight loss alongside constipation
  • New constipation developing after age 45
  • Severe abdominal pain or distension
  • Need for digital manipulation to evacuate stool
  • Family history of colorectal cancer or inflammatory bowel disease

Commonly Asked Questions

How long should i try lifestyle changes before seeking medical evaluation?

Allow four to six weeks of consistent effort—adequate fibre intake (a reasonable daily amount), sufficient fluids, and regular physical activity. If symptoms persist or worsen despite these measures, medical evaluation helps identify whether underlying conditions require different approaches.

Can chronic constipation lead to serious complications?

Prolonged straining contributes to haemorrhoid development, anal fissures (small tears in the lining of the anus), and potentially rectal prolapse. Severe constipation can cause faecal impaction (when hard stool becomes stuck in the rectum and cannot be passed normally), requiring manual removal. Chronic distension may eventually impair colonic function further, creating a cycle of worsening symptoms.

Is It Safe to Use Laxatives Regularly?

Osmotic laxatives (such as polyethene glycol) are safe for long-term use under medical guidance. Stimulant laxatives vary in their evidence base. Current clinical guidelines suggest bisacodyl and sodium picosulfate for short-term or rescue use, whilst senna is listed with a more conditional recommendation. Concerns about long-term dependence on bisacodyl have not been substantiated in available studies, though the evidence base remains limited.

What dietary changes work for chronic constipation?

Soluble fibre (a type of fibre that dissolves in water and forms a gel-like substance) from oats, psyllium, and fruits generally causes less bloating than insoluble fibre (a type of fibre that doesn’t dissolve in water and adds bulk to stool) from wheat bran. Increasing fibre gradually over several weeks reduces gas and discomfort. Prunes contain both fibre and sorbitol (a natural sugar alcohol with laxative properties), providing dual mechanisms. However, dietary changes work for normal-transit constipation. Other types may need different approaches.

Do probiotics help with constipation?

Some probiotic strains (specific types of beneficial bacteria) show modest benefit in clinical studies, though results vary considerably between individuals. Probiotics work as part of comprehensive management rather than sole treatment. They don’t address structural or significant motility problems.

Next Steps

Identify the specific mechanism causing your constipation, such as slow transit, pelvic floor dysfunction, or secondary causes, through targeted diagnostic testing. Appropriate evaluation prevents prolonged ineffective therapy and addresses treatable underlying conditions.

If you’re experiencing infrequent bowel movements, prolonged straining, or incomplete evacuation despite dietary changes and increased activity, consult a colorectal and general surgeon for comprehensive evaluation and personalised treatment.

Dr Chong Choon Seng

  • Senior Consultant Colorectal & General Surgeon

MBBS (NUS) |  MRCS (Edinburgh) |  Masters in Medicine (Surgery)(NUS) |  FRCS (Edinburgh) | 

Being a respected expert in minimally invasive surgery, Dr Chong stays committed to achieving optimal surgical outcomes for all surgical conditions, ranging from haemorrhoids to cancer treatment.

Having trained in various skillsets including robotic and trans-anal platforms, Dr Chong is able to provide the ideal surgery for each individual and firmly believes in the saying: The right tool for every rightly identified problem.

He is also an academic surgeon and has over 100 publications while he served in NUS as an Associate Professor and was also appointed as an Assistant Dean in view of his contributions to teaching and research. Furthermore, being appointed as Programme Director for Surgery Residency in NUHS, he was privileged to have the opportunity to serve others in honing their surgical skills and grateful to have mentored many in the values needed for a surgeon.

Dr Ng Jing Yu

  • SENIOR CONSULTANT COLORECTAL & GENERAL SURGEON

MBBS (NUS) |  MRCS (Edinburgh) |  Masters in Medicine (Surgery)(NUS) |  FRCS (Edinburgh) | 

Dr. Ng Jing Yu is a general and colorectal surgeon with over 15 years of experience, specialising in minimally invasive techniques including laparoscopic, robotic-assisted, and transanal surgery. He has developed particular expertise in laser perianal procedures such as laser hemorrhoidoplasty.

Having trained in both robotic and advanced transanal platforms, Dr. Ng is dedicated to providing patient-tailored solutions with minimally invasive precision.

He completed his medical degree at the National University of Singapore (NUS) in 2008 and pursued advanced training in colorectal surgery at the Sun Yat Sen Cancer Centre in Taiwan, supported by the MOH Health Manpower Development Plan (HMDP) scholarship. His training focused on robotic and transanal techniques for rectal cancers.

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