Why Does Poop Float? What It Could Say About Your Health

Summary: A fitness influencer stares into the toilet bowl in utter disbelief, questioning their entire morning routine. Occasional floating stools are totally normal, often just a sign of excess gas or a sudden change in your diet.

Panel 2: The influencer is now aggressively chewing a massive bowl of broccoli while proudly displaying their vintage collection of 90s pogs. High-fiber foods, trapped gas from swallowed air, or sugar intolerances (like lactose or sorbitol) can easily turn your stool into a buoyant raft.

Panel 3: A dramatic medical diagram overlay shows the influencer's confused pancreas and small intestine dropping fat molecules. Sometimes, chronic floaters mean your body isn't absorbing fat properly, hinting at steatorrhea, Celiac disease, Crohn's, or bile duct blockages.

Panel 4: The influencer confidently hands a detailed "food diary" to a doctor, looking triumphant. If your floating stool brings along uninvited guests like abdominal pain, unintended weight loss, or a foul oily odor, it's time to seek medical care!

When your meal prep is 90% broccoli and your poop starts auditioning for the Navy. 🚢🥦


Tags

Gastroenterology
Pain
Infections
Weight Loss
Bathroom Equipment