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APA

MLA

CareSearch. "Bowels". CareSearch. Flinders University, 13 Apr. 2026, https://staging.caresearch.com.au/health-professionals/general-practitioner/symptoms/bowels/

Harvard

Vancouver

CareSearch. Bowels [Internet]. Adelaide SA: CareSearch, Flinders University; [updated 2026 Apr 13; cited 2026 Jun 16]. Available from: https://staging.caresearch.com.au/health-professionals/general-practitioner/symptoms/bowels/

Bowel issues need to be addressed

Constipation is a frequent complaint in the general community, and more common in palliative care patients. Opioid induced constipation should be considered during the assessment of constipation.

Key points

  • Constipation is a common problem in palliative care patients and is frequently multifactorial. Prevalence and severity of constipation increases as patients become more functionally dependent.
  • Symptoms should be assessed in relation to the person’s previous bowel habit.
  • The goal of management is prevention. Always ask about the symptom and manage pre-emptively.
  • Failure to manage constipation can lead to reduced adherence to medications, avoidable admissions, and is very distressing.

Assessment

  • Always consider the possibility of bowel obstruction – especially in high risk patients (ovarian or bowel cancer, or those with peritoneal disease). They may present with symptoms of incomplete or intermittent obstruction.
  • The main role for an abdominal x-ray (AXR) is to exclude obstruction.
  • Faecal impaction may present with spurious diarrhoea, called ‘overflow’ diarrhoea.
  • Rectal examination should include an assessment of pelvic floor and sphincter functioning, checking for anal pathology, and looking for sources of pain on defecation.
  • Exclude metabolic causes eg, hypothyroidism, hypercalcemia.
  • Many medicines contribute to constipation. Review the drug chart. Some of the medications associated with constipation include opioids, serotonin (5HT3) blocking antiemetics like ondansetron, anticholinergics, calcium and iron tablets.
  • Assess hydration.

Approach to management

  • The person will generally require the use of aperients to manage constipation
  • Patient education.
  • Address any reversible contributors including pain, fluid intake, mobility and activity levels, toileting arrangements.
  • Reduce polypharmacy, and select less constipating opioids where appropriate.

Key GP resources

Last updated 22 May 2026