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I understand what you're going through. Especially about having to keep outings to a minimum due to an overactive tummy. My dad had the same problem and nothing I did helped. Diet, immodium, medication changes.....

We were coming back from somewhere when the urge hit my dad. I swung into a QT and got him out of the car but he didn't make it. He stood by the hood of the car with such a pained look on his face, I'll never forget it. I ran into the store and begged for a roll of towels and tried to clean him up the best I could. It was coming out of his pants leg into his shoes (sorry to be so graphic). I papered the entire front seat with towels and got him home but from the garage to the bedroom was a trail. Then there was the bathroom to clean up. It was an all day task. From then on when we'd go out I'd make sure he was wearing Depends (even though he had them on that one time) and I stockpiled my car with incontinence supplies: Extra Depends, wipes, a sheet to lay down over the seat and then a quilted pad to go on top of that plus some plastic from Home Depot to lay on the floor of the car. It might have seemed excessive but I saw first hand what can happen. Cleaning up the house was bad enough without having to then move on to car clean up.

I wish I had some magic pill that would work but my dad had this problem for the rest of his life. Not all the time but he'd have 2 or 3 days in a row of diarrhea and none of the remedies I tried ever worked. We also talked to the Dr. about it and he suggested immodium which I had already been giving my dad and the Dr. tweaked his meds a little but the issue never really went away.
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Not only the elderly seem to be having more problems with diarrhea and constipation these days.A balanced natural food diet seems to work best and it takes a lot of fine tuning to get a package together that works best for each persons body type.Stress is a big factor too.My personal feeling is a lot of the fat free substitutes that are added to food products are causing many of the problems we experience.Many pharma meds can cause GI tract problems and the dosages need to be adjusted for what works best for the body chemistry.Limit caffeine intake and try to drink clean water (if you live in a big city bottled water is almost a given these days).
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Riding, what you can do will largely depend on the cause of the diarrhea and your mother's age. My mother is 90 and has had non-stop diarrhea for several years. We give her Immodium every day, but that doesn't stop the problem, it just makes the attacks a little less frequent. Her doc said that she may have IBS, but the meds he gave her for that don't really do much. He then said that she may just be at an age where her digestive system is breaking down.

When she has to leave the house for any reason, we give her some Kaopectate (in addition to the Immodium) which delays the problem, but still doesn't give her normal bowel movements. Even when we give her Kao and her bowel movements are more solid, it is extremely uncomfortable for her because she's so used to having diarrhea that a normal bowel movement is hard for her to pass.

So I guess what I'm saying is, unless the diarrhea is only a result of the antibiotics, which then makes it temporary, you may be in for a long, gross, time. We try to track the foods that trigger bad bouts, and have found that dairy and fatty foods seem to aggravate things. She eats Activia every day, but the BRAT foods actually make things worse.
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Totally agree with drsuze. The product I mentioned above is in the refrigerated section. I happened to get mine at Sprouts.
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My mother has issues with this and her doctor suggested a daily dose of physillium (sp?). It has helped. Also my dentist suggested I take "Good Belly" a probiotic after a course of antibiotics for dental work. Its a liquid and has pleasant flavors.
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In Europe whenever ANTIbiotics are given, its a no-brainer that they also give PRO biotics, to help restore balance of good bacteria in gut. Go to a health foods store and get quality, high bacteria count probiotics. Usually the better, live ones are kept refrigerated. In difficult cases, higher bacteria count, and more bacteria types are needed which yogurt just cant supply enough.
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Beware of too many antibiotics. In 1994 when Yale-New Haven Hospital told me to come and get my dad, he had C-Diff. His medicare had run out and they let him out of the hospital with C-Diff. They had him on three antibiotics. I was able to get him from CT to VA by using Immodium. Afterward he had the runs for about a month, I was ready to put him in a nursing home when Lo and Behold the Dr. on weekend duty said-- How many antibiotics is he on? Take them off all of them and he prescribed methodozaline (?) and the runs stopped immediately. Even the nurse from my mother's nursing home knew about D-Diff. Today hospitals and nursing homes are more aware of C-Diff. This does not sound like your mother's problem though. My Dr. also put me on zoloft and I still take a 1/2 a pill. You are going through a rough time and my heart goes out to you.
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Oh I feel for you, this is so very hard on top of plain old caregiving. All I know is antibiotics give me diarrhea and everyone else I know, and they upset the stomach terribly. I would think combinations of immodium and antibiotics or some foods she is eating would make her system feel like it was doing the rumba. I thought it odd that the doctor would say give her immodium, but I am not a doctor and so be it, but I always have input in my own or my mother's healthcare, as I am sure you do too. I give my mother bran flakes, bananas and other fruit which naturally makes her go to the bathroom and keeps her stool from being loose, before I came she had bouts of constipation and diarrhea. I would think the more natural and less chemical route would be better for the body. Lots of water, vegetables and such. Good luck with this, I hope it works out for you, this would be a nightmare for me on top of all the other crazy stuff I have to go through with my mother, she was acting particularily crazy last couple of days and it coincidentally coincided with my cat having diarrhea for the first time in his life of 12years, go figure, arggh.
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I was advised many years ago when I had diarrhea problems while taking antibiotic to eat a cup of yogurt containing live culture each day. This is done to help maintain the normal bacterial balance in the digestive tract which is upset by the antibiotic. It has worked well for me when I've started the yogurt immediately when starting the antibiotic, not waiting until the diarrhea episodes start. Its definitely worth a try.
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Try giving her one or two yogurts per day. There are some that are especially for digestive track issues. I just give him one for breakfast. Dried blueberries are a good snack or you can put some in her cereal. The BRAT diet does help also. Chicken can also be constipating in some people so if she has diarrhea you might try that.
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