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If you've ever been midway through a run and experienced that urgent, need-a-bathroom-right-now feeling in the pit of your stomach, you're not alone. Over 800 people a month search the question, "why does running make you poop?" looking for answers. So we talked to Linda Nguyen, MD, a gastroenterologist at Stanford Health Care, to find out.

It turns out that this dire need to go "number two" on a run, is also known as runner's trots and it happens to many runners. In fact, showed that runners typically experience at least one GI symptom on the majority of their runs (78–84%). While you can bank on the tried-and-true tradition of plotting running routes with bathroom stops, sometimes it's not deal to stop mid-run to hit up a public bathroom.



Other times, there's just not one around when you need it. That's why we asked Dr. Nguyen break down runner's trots and more importantly, is there any way to prevent it? , MD, is a gastroenterologist at Stanford Health Care.

Runner's trots happens because strenuous exercise (like running) triggers a response from your sympathetic nervous system, Dr. Nguyen tells PS. Your SNS is a part of your autonomic nervous system, which controls bodily functions that you don't have control over, like the beating of your heart, sweating, and digestion.

The sympathetic nervous system is also controls your "fight or flight" response, and revs your body up "when you're under stress," Dr. Nguyen explains, like during intense exercise such as running. That.

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