Test Overview
A bowel transit time test measures how long it takes for food to
travel through the
digestive
tract
. After you chew and swallow your food, it moves into your stomach,
where it is mixed with acid and digestive
enzymes. After your food leaves your stomach, it is
squeezed through your small intestine, where nutrients are absorbed for use by
your body. The food then goes into your large intestine (colon) where water is
absorbed. Whatever hasn't been digested and absorbed by your intestines
combines with bacteria and other waste products and becomes stool (feces).
Stool is expelled from your body through your anus. The time it takes for food
to travel from your mouth through your digestive tract to your anus is your
bowel transit time.
Bowel transit time depends on what types of
food you eat and how much you drink. For example, people who eat lots of
fruits, vegetables, and whole grains tend to have shorter transit times than
people who eat mostly sugars and starches. Because different people have
different transit times, experts disagree about how useful this test is. Some
doctors do not recommend bowel transit time testing.
Pellet test
For a pellet test, you swallow small
pills (pellets) before having
X-rays of your belly. The pellets look like white
spots or rings in the X-ray pictures. You will have X-rays over 2 or 3 days to
keep track of how fast the pellets move through your intestines.