Houston Chronicle

What to blame for your stomach bug? Not always the last thing you ate

- By Kate Murphy | New York Times

It happens like a bolt out of the blue. One minute you’re fine, and the next you begin to sweat as crippling cramps move wavelike through your belly. You vomit or have diarrhea, or both, fearing you won’t live to see another day.

And then it goes away. You’re back to your old self, maybe after a day or two of binge-watching Netflix and chasing dry crackers with ginger ale.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimates this scenario, known as an “acute gastrointe­stinal event,” happens to all of us at least once a year. The bouts, while extremely unpleasant, usually don’t occasion a trip to the doctor or require any medication.

But such events tend to make us spin our gears trying to pinpoint what made us so miserably sick. While it’s hard to know for sure, there are clues that might help you determine the source and reduce your risk in the future.

“People tend to blame the last thing they ate, but it’s probably the thing before the last thing they ate,” said Dr. Deborah Fisher, a gastroente­rologist and associate professor at Duke University School of Medicine.

It takes the stomach around four to six hours to empty a full meal, and then the small intestine takes about six to eight hours to squeeze out all the nutrients and empty into the colon. The remains linger there for another one to three days, fermenting and being formed into what ultimately is flushed down the toilet. So-called bowel transit time varies significan­tly from person to person, but gastroente­rologists said you can easily find out what’s normal for you by eating corn and watching for when the indigestib­le kernels appear in your stool.

Gross, perhaps, but with that baseline, the next time you get sick, you’ll be better able to estimate when you might have eaten the offending meal. For example, if you throw up something and don’t have diarrhea or roiling further down, it could be that what made you ill was something you ate within the last four to six hours. If you wake up in the middle of the night with cramps and diarrhea, it’s more likely something you consumed a good 18 to 48 hours earlier, depending on the results of your corn test.

Most food-borne illnesses are caused by viruses or bacteria, such as norovirus, Staphyloco­ccus aureus, campylobac­ter, salmonella, E. coli and Bacillus cereus.

So in addition to figuring out the correct time frame of consumptio­n, also consider what foods are more likely to be contaminat­ed. Items cited by the CDC and frequently on the Food and Drug Administra­tion’s food recall list include leafy greens, culinary herbs, melons with textured surfaces like cantaloupe, fresh tomatoes, cucumbers, jalapeño peppers, nut butters, shellfish, frozen peas, cheese and ice cream. Also suspicious are any foods left out for several hours, like the classic potato salad at the family picnic or fried rice at a Chinese buffet.

Restaurant food tends to be riskier in general not only because more hands are involved in the preparatio­n but also because the ingredient­s are ordered in bulk.

And sometimes your gut distress isn’t caused by a germ at all. It could be an overdose of fermentabl­e oligosacch­arides, disacchari­des, monosaccha­rides

and polyols, known in public health circles as Fodmaps. These are essentiall­y carbohydra­tes that, eaten in excess, are not well absorbed in the small intestine and then make their way into your colon to cause all kinds of trouble. They include myriad things we’re encouraged to eat including broccoli, brussels sprouts, radicchio, asparagus, avocados, mushrooms, peaches, whole grains and legumes.

“People are trying to eat so healthy these days, but a lot of those things are high in Fodmaps,” said Dr. Scott Gabbard, a gastroente­rologist at the Cleveland Clinic. “You could always eat a lot of salad, but on that certain day, that certain combinatio­n of fruits and vegetables in your salad was just high enough in Fodmaps that it overrode your system’s capability to absorb those carbohydra­tes and you ended up with something almost like a purging.”

Drugs are also a common source of acute gastrointe­stinal events. Fisher told the story of an otherwise healthy and active patient who had bouts of GI distress every few months or so. After many tests came back negative, she finally determined it was the ACE inhibitor he was taking to control his blood pressure.

Medication­s used to treat depression, allergies and gastrointe­stinal reflux can also make you more vulnerable to intense, short duration attacks of vomiting or diarrhea, or both.

Finally, there’s stress. What’s going on in your head has an enormous impact on your gut and vice versa. “The human brain and nervous system is very intimately mixed with another nervous system that is present in the walls of the intestine,” said Dr. Santhi Swaroop Vege, a gastroente­rologist at the Mayo Clinic.

So instead of something that you ate, it could be you’ve swallowed your fear, anxiety, anger or sadness and it’s wreaking havoc on the nerves, chemical secretions and microbiota that keep your bowels operating smoothly. Gastroente­rologists as well as psychiatri­sts said it’s not uncommon for acute gastrointe­stinal events to cease or become less frequent after a patient quits a bad job or leaves a bad relationsh­ip. That’s why, when making a difficult decision, you might just want to trust your gut.

 ??  ??
 ?? Oscar Gronner / New York Times ??
Oscar Gronner / New York Times

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States