Establish during history-taking whether the child or young person has constipation.
Two or more findings from the table below indicate constipation:
Key components
Potential findings in a child younger than 1 year
Potential findings in a child/young person older than 1 year
Stool patterns
fewer than three complete stools per week (type 3 or 4, see Bristol Stool Form Scale) this does not apply to exclusively breastfed babies after 6 weeks of age)
hard large stool
'rabbit droppings' (type 1, Bristol Stool Form Scale)
fewer than three complete stools per week (type 3 or 4, see Bristol Stool Form Scale)
overflow soiling (commonly very loose [no form], very smelly [smells more unpleasant than normal stools], stool passed without sensation. Can also be thick and sticky or dry and flaky.) "
'rabbit droppings' (type 1 Bristol Stool Form Scale )
large, infrequent stools that can block the toilet
Symptoms associated with defecation
distress on stooling
bleeding associated with hard stool
straining
poor appetite that improves with passage of large stool
waxing and waning of abdominal pain with passage of stool
evidence of retentive posturing: typical straight legged, tiptoed, back arching posture
straining
anal pain
History
previous episode(s) of constipation
previous or current anal fissure
previous episode(s) of constipation
previous or current anal fissure
painful bowel movements and bleeding associated with hard stools
Bristol Stool Scale or Bristol Stool Chart is a medical aid designed to classify the form of human faeces into seven categories. Sometimes referred to in the UK as the "Meyers Scale", it was developed by Heaton at the University of Bristol and was first published in the Scandinavian Journal of Gastroenterology in 1997)
form of the stool depends on the time it spends in the colon
Types 1 and 2 indicate constipation, with 3 and 4 being the "ideal stools" especially the latter, as they are the easiest to pass, and 5-7 being further tending towards diarrhoea or urgency.
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