Some conditions reshape a person’s entire life through daily, minor, or ordinary routines. Neurogenic bowel is one of them. For those living with neurological conditions across the UK, it is a reality that millions navigate every single day – often in silence, and often without the support they truly deserve.
At Secure Healthcare Solutions, we believe that understanding a condition fully is a first step toward managing it with confidence. This guide is for their families, carers, and those who are living with neurogenic bowel.
What Is Neurogenic Bowel?
Neurogenic bowel is a condition or dysfunction in an individual with neurological disease or injuries, failing to evacuate the bowel or failing to contain the stool. This is not a condition but rather a consequence of damage or a disease affecting the nervous system.
The bowel is a sophisticated organ. It follows a series of nerve signals between the brain, the spinal cord, and the muscles of the gut, which keep the bowel functional and allow us to maintain control over when and where to empty the bowel. The profound impact of neurogenic bowel on the quality of life deserves an open conversation about how it changes your daily routines.
Neurogenic Bowel Symptoms
The bowel, without nerve control and normal functioning, can swing between extremes. Living with neurogenic bowel, maintaining a shifting landscape of symptoms can be challenging.
Neurogenic symptoms that affect your daily routine:
- Constipation: It is the most common effect of neurogenic bowel. A UK postal survey of spinal cord-injured individuals found that up to 30 minutes was spent on each bowel care episode by 58% of respondents, with 22% spending between 31 and 60 minutes, and 14% spending over an hour.
- Faecal Incontinence: This symptom causes the most psychological burden on a person, causing unexpected and unwanted passing of stool. Within the spinal cord injury population, 75% experience faecal incontinence.
- Abdominal Symptoms: Neurogenic bowel dysfunction often causes a range of upper and lower abdominal symptoms such as cramping, pain, nausea, and a general feeling of discomfort in the abdomen.
Neurogenic Bowel Causes and Risk Factors
Neurogenic Bowel can cause different symptoms in each individual, which is why understanding its causes and risk factors is important. The cause is always a neurological disruption of the brain nerves that control the bowel.
This disruption can occur in many ways:
- Spinal Cord Injury: The spinal cord acts as the main communication bridge between the nervous system and the bowel. The injury due to traumatic or non-traumatic causes can interrupt the communication. Spinal cord injury, both traumatic and non-traumatic, has an estimated prevalence of 15 per million in the UK.
- Multiple Sclerosis(MS): MS is a progressive condition that affects the brain’s central nervous system and disrupts the brain signals. Within the MS population, it is usually estimated that a minimum of two-thirds suffer from bowel symptoms.
- Parkinson’s: The loss of nerve cells in Parkinson’s disease weakens the autonomic nervous system, which governs bowel functions.
- Stroke: The brain damage from strokes can result in constipation and faecal incontinence, sometimes resulting in permanent symptoms.
- Neurological Conditions: Brain injuries and various forms of peripheral nerve damage can all lead to neurogenic bowel dysfunction.
Types of Neurogenic Bowel Dysfunction
Neurogenic bowel is typically classified into two types of dysfunction based on which part of the brain’s nervous system is damaged:
Upper Motor Neurone (UMN) / Reflexic Bowel
Reflexic Bowel occurs when the sacral region of the spinal cord (above S2-S4) is damaged. It affects the enteric nervous system, which connects the brain and the bowel’s own local network.
Due to this condition, the bowel retains automatic reflex activity, and voluntary control is lost. This results in constipation and hard stools. This is the type most commonly associated with cervical and thoracic level spinal cord injuries.
Lower Motor Neurone (LMN) / Areflexic Bowel
Areflexic bowel occurs when damage affects the sacral spinal cord or peripheral nerves, leading to the bowel. The bowel loses muscle tone, and the stool cannot move effectively, causing severe constipation. The anal sphincter may also become weak, which can lead to accidental stool leakage.
Understanding which type of dysfunction a person has guides everything from the techniques for bowel care to the medications prescribed and the management of outcomes.
How Neurogenic Bowel Is Diagnosed
Diagnosis of neurogenic bowel is a process rather than a single test, which may require a range of assessments and a thoughtful conversation between the patient and their clinical team.
- Clinical History: Patient’s bowel history is taken carefully, exploring the nature, consistency, and frequency; symptoms such as bloating, pain; the impact on daily life. Assessment of prior bowel function is complete.
- Neurogenic Bowel Dysfunction (NBD) Score: The NBD Score is a validated questionnaire that identifies the severity of the symptoms and is useful for initial assessment.
- Imaging and Specialist Tests: In some cases, imaging such as plain abdominal X-rays may be used to assess faecal loading. Anorectal manometry, colonic transit studies, and neurophysiological tests may be arranged for more complex cases or where surgical intervention seems necessary.
- Multidisciplinary Assessment: For many people, the most effective diagnostic and management pathway is delivered through a multidisciplinary team. In the UK, specialist centres such as spinal cord injury units typically have established pathways for this kind of comprehensive assessment.
Neurogenic Bowel Management
To manage neurogenic bowel, we need to find the right daily routine. A predictable, effective, and dignified routine that allows a person to get on with their life with as much independence and confidence as possible.
- Conservative Management: The Foundation: The first-line approach includes:
- Regular bowel routines timed after meals.
- Suppositories and enemas to stimulate bowel emptying.
- Digital rectal stimulation (DRS) for reflex bowel evacuation.
- Digital removal of faeces (DRF) for severe impaction.
- Transanal Irrigation (TAI)
- TAI uses warm water introduced into the bowel through a rectal catheter or cone to achieve controlled evacuation. It improves symptoms and quality of life in many patients when conservative methods fail and is supported by NICE guidance in the UK.
- TAI uses warm water introduced into the bowel through a rectal catheter or cone to achieve controlled evacuation. It improves symptoms and quality of life in many patients when conservative methods fail and is supported by NICE guidance in the UK.
- Medications
- Laxatives for constipation.
- Anti-diarrhoeal agents (e.g., loperamide) for faecal incontinence.
- Treatment should be tailored to the individual’s neurological condition.
Bowel Care Support at Home
Bowel care is a deeply personal territory that requires a level of trust, skill, and sensitivity. For people with neurogenic bowel, the majority of their care takes place at home, with the support of their family member or professional carer. Life with neurogenic bowel can be lived fully and actively if practical and professional help is given with the right management plan.
At Secure Healthcare Solutions, we provide specialist bowel care in Wolverhampton and across the West Midlands for people living with neurological conditions. Our compassionate, highly trained carers deliver personalised support that promotes comfort, dignity, and independence. If you or a loved one needs specialist care at home, we’re here to help.

