Diarrhea Treatment Austin TX

There are certain times when it is not recommended that you treat diarrhea with OTC medicines (ex. when you're taking antibiotics). Here are a few tips that may help!

Local Companies

Austin/Travis County Community Health Centers
512-972-4242
15 Waller Street, Fifth Floor
Austin, TX
South Austin Clinic
512-276-8000
201 East Ben White Blvd.
Austin, TX
Chiropractic : Austin Chiropractor
512-416-7700
611 S. Congress Ave, Suite 135
Austin, TX
Access Co-Medical Clinic
512-447-2226
2919 Manchaca Road
Austin, TX
North Austin Urology
(512) 238-0762
1000 Hester's Crossing Road
Round Rock, TX
Healthcare 4 Her
512-751-2316
1 Chisholm Trail
Round Rock, TX
Austin Regional Clinic Leander
512-272-4636
Austin, TX
Hood Jerry MD Internal Medicine
(512) 460-3403
4315 James Casey St
Austin, TX
Aventa Tony
(512) 454-5171
1301 W 38th St Ste 601
Austin, TX
Klocek Jonathan R
(512) 454-5171
1301 W 38th St Ste 601
Austin, TX

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Steps

  1. Drink clear fluids - broth and juices - for the first twelve hours of your diarrhea.
  2. Follow the BRAT diet - bananas, rice, applesauce, and toast. Green bananas are best for diarrhea.
  3. Try to eat bland foods, such as chicken and Jell-O.
  4. Limit insoluble fibers. Insoluble fibers are called "insoluble" because they do not dissolve in water. Insoluble fibers accelerate the movement of food through the GI tract. Soluble fibers, such as pectin (found in applesauce), slow the movement of food through the GI tract by forming a gel when combined with water. Soluble fibers have a property called viscosity, and fibers with a higher viscosity are more beneficial for diarrhea.
  5. Try some yogurt. If the diarrhea is caused by antibiotics, yogurt with live cultures is often helpful to restore the balance in your digestive tract. Often the cause of antibiotic-related diarrhea is an overgrowth of the clostridium bacteria, and "good" bacteria often help keep that in check.
  6. Eliminate foods that might be contributing to your diarrhea, such as high-fructose foods, sugar-free foods sweetened with sugar alcohols, and dairy products. Dairy products may worsen diarrhea in people who are not lactose-intolerant because food usually travels through the intestines more quickly during diarrhea, which may reduce the absorption of lactose. The unabsorbed lactose may then draw water into the bowels.
  7. Drink herbal cleansing teas often. Cleansing tea consists of senna leaves, orange peels, lemongrass, orange flowers, mint, ginger pieces, tulsi, balm, apple blossoms and bay leaves.

Tips

  • Having diarrhea for more than 1 week means you need to change your diet. If it still persists, call your doctor ASAP.
  • If you have the urge to go, just go. We know it's disgusting but better out than in right? Do not hold it in as it the symptoms will get worse.

Warnings

  • The foods you want to avoid is anything that makes you go to the bathroom. Do NOT eat beans or chocolate. This makes you go.
  • When you are in the theaters, avoid the food.
  • Pediatricians no longer use or recommend this method.

Things You'll Need

  • A will power to avoid foods that make you go to the bathroom
  • A bland diet

Article provided by wikiHow, a wiki how-to manual. Please edit this article and find author credits at the original wikiHow article on How to How to Treat Diarrhea (BRAT Diet Method). All content on wikiHow can be shared under a Creative Commons license.

Featured Local Company

Austin/Travis County Community Health Centers

512-972-4242
15 Waller Street, Fifth Floor
Austin, TX
The Community Health Centers (CHC) help ensure access to primary medical and dental care for those who have difficulty obtaining services due to economic or geographic barriers. Patients served include the uninsured and those enrolled in Medicaid, Medicare, CHIP, and the City/County Medical Assistance Program (MAP).