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Digestive Enzymes: Who Needs Them and When to Avoid Them

Digestive enzymes sit at the crossroads of two very different worlds: essential prescription therapy for people who cannot properly absorb nutrients, and a booming...

Digestive Symptom Checklist: What to Track Before Your Doctor Visit

A good digestive appointment starts before you walk into the clinic. When symptoms are unpredictable—bloating one day, loose stools the next—it is easy to...

Diverticulitis Diet: What to Eat During a Flare and After

When diverticulitis flares, eating can feel like a gamble: one meal seems fine, the next triggers cramping, pressure, or nausea. Diet will not “cure”...

Diverticulosis vs Diverticulitis: Symptoms, Diet, and Prevention

Diverticular disease is often described as a single condition, but it is really two related states with very different meanings. Diverticulosis refers to small...

Duodenal Ulcer: Symptoms, Causes, and Treatment

A duodenal ulcer is a small but meaningful injury to the lining of the first part of the small intestine. Because the duodenum sits...

Electrolytes for Diarrhea: What to Drink, What to Avoid, and When ORS Is Best

Diarrhea is often treated as a simple inconvenience, but it can quickly become a fluid-and-electrolyte problem—especially for children, older adults, and anyone already run...

Elemental Diet for SIBO: What It Is, Pros/Cons, and Safety Basics

If you have small intestinal bacterial overgrowth (SIBO), food can start to feel like a test you fail several times a day: eat, then...

Elimination Diet: How to Do It Safely Without Missing Nutrients

An elimination diet can be one of the clearest ways to understand whether specific foods are aggravating digestive symptoms. Done well, it turns a...

Emulsifiers and Gut Health: Carboxymethylcellulose, Polysorbate 80, and What the Research Shows

Emulsifiers are one of those “quiet” ingredients that can shape how a food behaves in your mouth and, potentially, how it behaves in your...

Endometriosis and IBS: Pelvic Pain, Bloating, and How to Tell the Conditions Apart

Pelvic pain and persistent bloating can feel like a daily puzzle—especially when symptoms overlap between gynecologic and digestive conditions. Endometriosis and irritable bowel syndrome...

Eosinophilic Esophagitis (EoE): Food Stuck Sensation, Allergy Links, and Diagnosis

Eosinophilic esophagitis (EoE) is a chronic inflammatory condition where the esophagus becomes irritated and “stiff” over time, often leading to the unsettling feeling that...

Esophageal Spasm: Symptoms, Triggers, and Treatment

Esophageal spasms can feel dramatic: a sudden clamp-like chest pain, food that seems to “stick,” or swallowing that becomes strangely difficult for a few...

Excessive Burping: Causes (GERD, Aerophagia) and How to Stop

Burping is a normal pressure-release valve: it helps vent swallowed air so your stomach can stay comfortable after eating and drinking. The problem starts...

Exocrine Pancreatic Insufficiency (EPI): Greasy Stool, Weight Loss, and Fecal Elastase Testing

When your pancreas is healthy, it quietly releases enzymes and bicarbonate that turn meals into absorbable fuel. In exocrine pancreatic insufficiency (EPI), that delivery...

Fat Malabsorption: Steatorrhea Causes, Tests, and What Helps

Fat malabsorption happens when your digestive system cannot break down or absorb enough dietary fat. The result can be steatorrhea—stools that look greasy, float,...

Fatty Food Intolerance: Gallbladder, Pancreas, or Gut?

“Fatty food intolerance” is a common way people describe nausea, cramping, diarrhea, or a heavy, unsettled feeling after meals like fried foods, pizza, creamy...

Fatty Liver and Gut Symptoms: Bloating, Reflux, and What Helps

Fatty liver disease is often discovered on routine bloodwork or imaging, yet many people seek help for something more immediate: bloating, reflux, and stubborn...

Fecal Calprotectin Test: IBS vs IBD, Cutoffs, and Next Steps

A fecal calprotectin test is a practical way to answer a common, stressful question: are your symptoms more likely to come from irritation and...

Fecal Microbiota Transplant (FMT) for Recurrent C. diff: Who It’s For, Risks, and What to Expect

A recurrent Clostridioides difficile infection can feel like a trap: antibiotics help the first time, yet each round can further disturb the gut ecosystem...

Feeling Full Quickly (Early Satiety): Causes and When to Worry

Feeling full quickly—often called early satiety—can be surprisingly disruptive. One week you’re finishing meals as usual; the next, a few bites feel like “too...

Fennel for Gas and Bloating: Tea, Seeds, and Evidence-Based Use

Bloating can feel deceptively simple—just “gas”—yet the causes range from fast eating and constipation to food sensitivities and stress-driven gut motility changes. Fennel (the...

Fermented Foods for Gut Health: How to Start Without Getting Gassy

Fermented foods sit at an interesting crossroads of tradition and modern gut science. When they are made with live cultures and eaten consistently, they...

Fiber for Constipation: How Much You Need and Best Sources

Constipation is often treated as a problem of “not enough laxatives,” but for many people it is first a problem of daily structure: too...

Fiber Supplements and Medications: Timing Rules to Avoid Interactions

Fiber supplements can be a steady, low-drama way to support regularity, cholesterol goals, and post-meal blood sugar control—especially when food-based fiber is hard to...