Symptoms of food retention in children

Symptoms of food accumulation in children include loss of appetite, abdominal distension, abdominal pain, constipation or sour and smelly stools.
Accumulation of food is easily induced when children have improper diet, weak spleen and stomach, or are out of balance after illness. Usually the common symptoms of children with food accumulation include loss of appetite, abdominal distension, constipation or sour and smelly stools, vomiting, belching and anorexia. Some children may also have symptoms such as yellowish color, emaciation and fatigue, which seriously affects their quality of life and development.
Accumulation of food is mostly related to diet. Families should pay attention to adjusting their dietary structure, focusing on light diets, eating more food containing dietary fiber and vitamins, and eating less cold and greasy food. Adhere to scientific feeding, avoid overeating.
It is recommended that when children accumulate food, follow the doctor’s instructions to use medication to regulate, not indiscriminate use of drugs. Daily physical exercise can be appropriate to help promote gastrointestinal peristalsis, to help improve the accumulation of food. Parents should also pay attention to the rationality of the diet, as far as possible to light, easy to digest food.