What Are The Symptoms Of Short Bowel Syndrome?

Steatorrhea

HuffPostUK

Steatorrhea is the term that describes too much fat presence in the stool. It can take on a frothy, foamy, or mucous-filled appearance with a foul smell. This type of stool often presents as yellow, green, grey, or light brown. When too much fat is in the stool, the body is not adequately breaking food down. The stomach digests food and moves it into the small intestine where enzymes are released. Each enzyme has a role in the further breakdown of nutrients. Certain enzymes break proteins down into amino acids, starches into glucose, and fats into fatty acids. The substance responsible for the conversion of fats into fatty acids is called bile, and it is produced in the liver and stored in the gallbladder. When bile is needed, it is secreted into the small intestine. The ilium part of the small intestine is responsible for reabsorbing bile so it can be recycled. However, some short bowel syndrome patients do not have the full ilium section of their small intestine. This absence means bile is not reabsorbed for reuse, and the body is unable to compensate with enough bile production to fully digest fats. The undigested fat is what forms steatorrhea.

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