Dr. Fong has written an extraordinarily comprehensive book on a pervasively common concern--that of constipation. Her encyclopedic approach to this subject is truly remarkable. As a colon and rectal surgeon, myself, I learned considerably more about bowel evacuatory dysfunction than I had heretofore believed I understood. While written for a lay audience, it is at once a scientific, yet personal approach and is accompanied by an extensive bibliography. The author is to be congratulated on providing a worthy medical text for all individuals troubled by this condition.
--Marvin L. Corman, professor of Surgery, Renaissance School of Medicine at Stony Brook University, M.D.Dr. Carmen Fong makes talking about poop fun! This easy-to-read, helpful book is packed with medically backed information that helps patients poop better, start conversations with their doctors, and break the stigmas that keep so many silent.
--Danielle Ripley-Burgess, vice president of Disease Awareness, Fight Colorectal Cancer, and author of Blush: How I Barely Survived 17Colorectal surgeon Fong debuts with an informative guide to maintaining healthy bowel movements. She explains that the colon primarily serves to reabsorb water from food after it's been digested, and that constipation occurs when the colon either absorbs too much water or has trouble contracting. To keep things moving, she recommends consuming "at least sixty-four ounces of water" and 25-35 grams of fiber per day, noting that fiber helps with motility by bulking up stool while producing short-chain fatty acids that provide the colon with energy. She encourages readers to get their daily fiber through foods rather than supplements and includes recipes for roast broccoli, pumpkin pasta, and egg drop soup with spinach and chicken meatballs. Stressing moderation, Fong suggests that while "coffee stimulates enzymes in the saliva and stomach that help with digestion," too much can cause dehydration, and that while exercise generally aids motility, overly strenuous workouts can trigger a fight-or-flight response that "diverts blood flow from the gut to... the heart and the brain." Fong's conversational tone keeps things light without slipping into the scatological. It's everything readers always wanted to know about constipation but were too afraid to ask.
-- "Publishers Weekly"