What’s wrong with thin, black stools?

Thin and black stools may be related to physiological factors such as diet and cold, or pathological factors such as peptic ulcer with bleeding, rupture of esophageal varices with bleeding, acute erosive hemorrhagic gastritis.
1. Physiological factors: after consuming animal offal or blood products, the food consumed contains a lot of iron, and due to the daily consumption of cooled food, the abdomen is stimulated by cold, resulting in dilute and black stools.
2. Pathological factors: Pathological factors commonly include peptic ulcer with bleeding, esophageal variceal rupture bleeding, acute erosive hemorrhagic gastritis, etc. Such diseases are prone to varying degrees of bleeding, and gastrointestinal function is weakened by the influence of pathologic factors, resulting in the symptom of dilute and black stool.
There may be other reasons for the loose and black stools, so it is recommended to go to the hospital in time, complete the examination to clarify the cause of the disease, and then give targeted treatment or therapy under the guidance of the doctor.