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“Runner’s Diarrhea”: Why Marathon Runners Poop Themselves An Astonishing Amount

“I thought, ‘I don’t know if it’s possible to poop while running, but I will try’,” runner Tamara Torlakson said of her all-time-best run, which was only marred slightly by a mid-race bowel movement. “I didn’t want one poop to mess it all up.”

Torlakson, like so many other athletes, focused on the race and decided to poop in her shorts rather than stop, shouting to her family “I pooped my pants” as she crossed the finish line and broke her personal best. 

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Compared to other athletes, long-distance runners and walkers poop themselves an extraordinary amount. In 2016, French walker Yohann Diniz soiled himself and heroically continued, and was able to finish in eighth place, despite fainting several times due to his gastrointestinal distress. Paula Radcliffe stopped by the roadside during the 2005 London Marathon to relieve herself, while cameras caught the whole incident on film.

Julie Moss – who entered the Hawaii Ironman Triathlon as part of her research for her exercise physiology thesis – unfortunately lost control of her legs and bowels at roughly the same time during the marathon event, which is as messy as you’d imagine. If you need further help imagining it, she described the incident as the “ultimate, giant, chocolate mess”.

So what is it about the sport that makes so many participants poo their pants?

First off, runner’s diarrhea, as it is known, is a real thing. A study published in the Journal of Clinical Gastroenterology in 1992 asked 109 long-distance athletes about their bowel movements around their runs. Sixty-two percent reported that they had stopped for a bowel movement during training, 43 percent said that they had “nervous” diarrhea before a race, 47 percent said that they had experienced diarrhea after a race, and 12 percent reported full-on fecal incontinence while running.

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Often these episodes occurred alongside abdominal pain and rectal bleeding. The study states that “any form of ‘runners’ diarrhea’ was unrelated to age, previous intestinal infection or food poisoning, food allergies, or dietary fiber.” A separate study found that up to 90 percent of participants in endurance races experience some sort of gastrointestinal symptom.

As for the cause, it’s a mixture of factors. “During physical exercise, the increased activity of the sympathetic nervous system […] redistributes blood flow from the splanchnic organs to the working muscles,” one review suggests. “A severely reduced [blood flow to the abdominal gastrointestinal organs] may frequently cause GI [gastrointestinal] ischaemia [a condition that causes the symptoms of diarrhea and abdominal pain, among others]”.

On top of that, runners may find it difficult to control their anal sphincters while they work so hard with their other muscles.

“Someone in the middle of a strenuous physical activity, it’s really hard to voluntarily keep the muscle closed while engaging in other activities with other muscles in the legs and pelvis,” colon and rectal surgeon with Novant Health in Charlotte, North Carolina Michael Dobson told Mental Floss. “You can’t control the muscle when using muscle.”

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The constant jostling up and down as you run – sending your food sloshing around in there – and the stress experienced before a race likely also contribute to the phenomenon. Or in Paula Radcliffe’s case, it may have been bad salmon.

An earlier version of this article was published in December 2022.

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