Slow Transit Constipation

What is Slow Transit Constipation

In this type of constipation, the intestines move very slowly — meaning food takes longer to travel through the gut. As a result, stool becomes dry, hard, and infrequent. Patients may pass stool only 2–3 times a week or even less.

Homeopathy plays an important role here by:

  • Stimulating the sluggish intestines naturally.
  • Improving the nerve and muscle activity of the gut.
  • Preventing long-term dependency on harsh laxatives.
  • Treating the whole person — addressing digestion, emotions, and habits together.

Causes

  • Eating too much fast food, less fruits and vegetables.
  • Less water intake — body dries the stool.
  • No exercise / sitting all day lifestyle.
  • Long-term use of painkillers, antacids, or iron tablets.
  • Natural bowel muscles becoming weak with age.
  • Stress or worry slowing down digestion.

Symptoms

  • Passing stool only 1–2 times a week.
  • Stool is very hard, dry, and large.
  • Feeling bloated or heavy in stomach.
  • Pain or straining while passing stool.
  • Sometimes feeling tired, dull, or even headache due to irregular bowels.

Homeopathy’s Role & Example Remedies

Homeopathy works deeply in slow transit constipation by gently stimulating the bowel without irritation. It restores the body’s own rhythm instead of forcing it like a laxative. Over time, the patient develops a natural, regular urge.

Some commonly indicated remedies (chosen after case study):

  • Sulphur – Long-standing constipation; frequent urge but incomplete stool.
  • Graphites – Hard, large stools with much straining; constipation linked to skin troubles.
  • Plumbum metallicum – Extremely sluggish intestines; no desire for stool for many days.
  • Calcarea carbonica – Constipation in those with weak digestion, sluggish metabolism, and sedentary lifestyle.

Summary

Slow transit constipation is due to sluggish bowel movement. Homeopathy helps by re-activating the intestines, correcting the underlying cause, and providing long-term natural relief without dependency on laxatives.

Precautions & Lifestyle

  • Eat more fibrous foods: oats, green vegetables, apples, papaya.
  • Drink plenty of warm water throughout the day.
  • Do walking, yoga, or light exercise daily.
  • Fix a daily toilet routine — try going at the same time each morning.
  • Avoid excess tea, coffee, fried food, which slow the bowel more.