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  2. Oct 8, 2022 · Stool comes in a range of colors. All shades of brown and even green are considered normal. Only rarely does stool color indicate a potentially serious intestinal condition. Stool color is generally influenced by what you eat as well as by the amount of bile — a yellow-green fluid that digests fats — in your stool.

    • White Stool

      Bile is a digestive fluid produced by the liver and stored...

    • Narrow Stools

      Check with a healthcare professional if you notice any...

    • You’Re A Baby
    • It’S Something You Ate
    • You Picked Up An Infection
    • You Picked Up The Parasite, Giardia
    • Food Intolerance
    • Celiac Disease
    • There’S Something Wrong with Your Biliary System
    • The Bottom Line

    Mustard-colored stool is actually normal for newborns, according to Dr. Traxler. If you’re not nursing, your baby’s stool should turn to brown after the first couple of days. For breastfed babies, yellow stool is normal until formula or solid food is introduced.

    Assuming you’re not a baby, if you notice yellow poop, Dr. Traxler suggests the first thing to do is consider what you’ve eaten in the last day or so. Stool may appear yellow because you’ve had a large quantity of carrots, sweet potatoes, or other beta-carotene-rich produce. Or perhaps you enjoyed a meal rich in turmeric. Even artificially colored ...

    When food moves faster than usual through your gastrointestinal (GI) tract, it’s more likely to come out on the other end looking yellow (or even greenish or green, although there are many reasons that you might pass green poop). In addition to stress, another cause of food moving rapidly through the GI tract is foodborne infection, according to Ku...

    Although it’s not normal, it’s not exactly uncommon either, to pick up an intestinal parasite. An intestinal parasite is an actual organism living in your intestinal tract. Many intestinal parasites are transmitted through food and water, although some can be shared by person-to-person contact. One of the most common intestinal parasites in the Uni...

    Any sort of food intolerance, including lactose intolerance, can irritate the GI tract, causing food to move too quickly to pick up the normal brown color. (Here’s the difference between a food allergy and a food intolerance.)

    Celiac disease is sometimes mistaken for other digestive conditions, including gluten intolerance. Celiac disease, which is an autoimmune condition in which the small intestine reacts to gluten (proteins found in wheat and other grains), may cause diarrhea, cramps, fatigue, or no obvious symptoms at all. (The condition is serious and can lead to ma...

    When none of these other causes seem to fit, your yellow poop could be a sign of excess fat in your stool. You might even notice your stool looks oily or leaves an oily residue behind. Excess fat in the stool can be caused by any disruption in digestion, but when it is frothy, particularly foul-smelling and/or floats in the bowl, it’s a sign there ...

    Yellow stool, alone, without other symptoms, is unlikely to signify anything serious. But if you are experiencing the other symptoms discussed above, if you’re losing weight without trying, or if you’re in any kind of pain whatsoever, Dr. Traxler recommends that you consult a doctor. Get The Healthy @Reader’s Digest newsletter for what’s happening ...

  3. Apr 27, 2023 · What Does an Unhealthy Stool Look Like? Poop color that suddenly changes without an obvious reason may indicate an issue, especially if you have other unusual symptoms like pain or bleeding. Red or maroon stool as well as black or tarry stool requires immediate medical attention.

  4. Aug 7, 2023 · Brown stool indicates a healthy balance of bilirubin (a yellow substance found in the liver, the product of the breakdown of old red blood cells) and bile (a dark brown or green substance...

  5. May 1, 2023 · Digestive Health. Daily Care. How to Know When Pale or Clay-Colored Stool May Be a Problem. By Amber J. Tresca. Updated on May 01, 2023. Medically reviewed by Robert Burakoff, MD. Fact checked by Nick Blackmer. Print. Table of Contents. What Stool Colors Mean. Causes. Diagnosis. Treatment. Prevention.

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