Constipation in children occurs most frequently during toilet training, with an increased prevalence in boys.
Constipation in children occurs most frequently during toilet training, with an increased prevalence in boys. Jasly Koo, Dietitian, Nutrition and Dietetics Department, and the Gastroenterology Service, from KK Women’s and Children’s Hospital, offers simple remedies to relieve constipation in children.
Average stool frequency in a child’s first week of life is estimated to be four times daily. This drops to twice per day at one year of age. By four years of age, the stool pattern resembles the adult pattern of between three times a day to three times a week.
Chronic constipation can result in poor appetite, diminished food intake and poor growth. In the most severe cases of constipation with frequent stool retention, the rectum can become insensitive to distension and (faecal incontinence) encopresis may result.
The 2010 National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) guidelines emphasise that dietary interventions alone should not be used as the first line of treatment.
“Constipation should be first treated with laxatives and a combination of age-appropriate behavioural interventions,” says Jasly Koo, Dietitian, from the Nutrition and Dietetics Department, and the Gastroenterology Service, both from KK Women’s and Children’s Hospital (KKH), a member of the SingHealth group.
Home remedies to relieve constipation in children
Read on to find out how much fibre and fluids is needed to help children relieve constipation.
Ref: N18
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