As children get older, they may start showing what are mostly ‘social symptoms’ at the time of joining school, by not using toilets because of lack of privacy or the cleanliness of the bathroom or even when their level of physical activity goes down.
You can tell its symptoms among infants and toddlers who have common withholding behavior (result of the fear that comes with the anxiety or avoidance of pain associated defecation) like squatting, crossed legs, stiffening of the body, holding on to the furniture, flushing, sweating while passing stool during defecation.
Children may show signs of persistent soiling, bleeding in the rectum, and passage of hard or small ‘goat like poops.’
If you ask our best paediatrician in Dubai, the general recommendation is that you keep track of your child’s bowel movements, the intervals during how and when they occur, how big and hard they are, and if there is any blood in your toddler’s stool.