Why is my poop GREEN
Color can be an alarming experience

Seeing unexpected stool color can be an alarming experience, but often, the reason behind green poop is harmless and related simply to what you ate. Understanding the science of digestion helps demystify why this change occurs.
The standard brown color of stool comes from a combination of bile, digestive juices, and bacteria. Bile is a fluid produced in your liver and stored in the gallbladder. It actually starts out as a greenish-yellow color. As it travels through your intestinal tract, it interacts with digestive enzymes and bacteria in your gut, transforming its hue into the brown shades we typically see.
Common Reasons for the Green Machine
Dietary Culprits (The Most Common Cause): The food you eat is the leading reason for green stool. High chlorophyll plants are classic culprits: spinach, kale, lettuce, and broccoli. Additionally, food dyes in products like drink mixes, candies, frosting, or even naturally colored purple foods can appear green in the toilet.
Fast Transit Time: If food moves too quickly through your large intestine such as during diarrhea or a stomach upset the bile doesn't have enough time to be broken down properly by your gut bacteria. It exits your body while still in its greenish phase.
Medications: Certain medications or supplements can alter stool color. Iron supplements are known to turn stool dark green or black. Some antibiotics can also affect the normal balance of gut bacteria, disrupting the color transformation process.
When to Worry
While green stool is usually harmless, if it is accompanied by other severe symptoms such as prolonged diarrhea, fever, severe abdominal pain, or blood, you should consult a doctor. However, if you wake up with green stool after a night of eating leafy greens or drinking colored drinks, your body is likely just telling you what it digested!



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