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Postgraduate Medical Journal 2003;79:616-621
© 2003 Fellowship of Postgraduate Medicine


REVIEW

Management of childhood constipation

G Clayden , A S Keshtgar

Guy’s, King’s, St Thomas’ School of Medicine, Paediatrics, St Thomas’ Hospital, London

Correspondence to:
Correspondence to:
Dr Graham Clayden
Guy’s, King’s, St Thomas’ School of Medicine, Paediatrics, 4th Floor, North Wing, St Thomas’ Hospital, Lambeth Palace Road, London SE1 7EH, UK; graham.clayden{at}kcl.ac.uk

The effective management of constipation in childhood requires an understanding of the ways that the physical and psychological factors interact. The early difficulty with defecation that leads to pain, fear, and refusal to use the pot or lavatory often progresses to the formation of vicious cycles of increasing faecal retention as the rectum increases in capacity and the experience of passing large, hard stools is repeated. There is increasing distress as overflow faecal incontinence compounds the problem for the older child. The medical, psychological, and surgical management strategies are reviewed together with the rationale for their use.


Keywords: constipation; faecal incontinence; encopresis







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