The indigestion of children and the indigestion of adults are mostly similar, due to inadequate diet or reduced gastrointestinal function, but there are also some differences.
First, the indigestion of children due mainly to the incomplete development of their digestive organs and nervous systems, inadequate digestive fluids and difficulties in adapting to excessive food types and oily irritant foods, especially artificially fed children. Adult digestive organs are fully developed and have the capacity to digest and absorb all kinds of food.
Symptoms exhibit indigestion of the child: 1. Abdominal indigestion: When the child is indigestion, the food is stuck in the stomach and it is not able to go down smoothly, leading to abdominal ingestion. The abdominal swelling makes the baby particularly uncomfortable and may cause abdominal pain. Crying: due to abdominal swelling and abdominal abdominal pain, the baby may become particularly irritated, prone to weeping and sticky. 3. Desperate appetite: When a child has abdominal swelling, there is a great deal of gas in the abdominal cavity, so there is a particular lack of food, as well as a particularly low rate of refusal to eat or food, and there may be different tastes in the mouth. Defecation anomalies: In cases of indigestion, defecation may become unsophisticated, or defecation is difficult and takes a long time to release. Some of these children may have started to defecate, and may also have crying symptoms when they are defecated. 5. Oral anomalies: Tethers may be white and thick, and some of the children are accompanied by hiccups and gas. In addition, the indigestion of a child may cause the symptoms of tonsi inflammation, bronchitis, pneumonia, fever, cough, etc. and even affect emotions, leading to depression. Indigestion of adults: Symptoms of indigestion of adults may include abdominal swelling, diarrhoea, nausea, ablution or gas. Abdominal swelling may be due to reduced gastrointestinal function as a result of diseases such as food insufferability and chronic shallow stomachitis, which accumulates in the intestinal tract because the gas is not released in time. Diarrhoea is usually the result of damage to gastrointestinal mucous membranes due to infectious enteritis and bacterial dysentery, which affects normal digestive absorption. Disgusting is often a physical response to a direct irritation of stomachitis or other digestive tract diseases caused by cholesterococcal infections. Decreasing appetite may be associated with functional indigestion, at a time when stomach power is inadequate and food remains in the stomach for a long time, creating a feeling of saturation and affecting appetite.
III. Indigestion of children by treatment: Indigestion of children can be mitigated by a massage by pushing them, while diets are managed to be as light as possible and foods that are too high in heat or particularly sticky and difficult to digest are avoided. If the push is not effective, medical attention should be provided in a timely manner. In the case of therapeutics, a choice can be made between drugs that adjust gastrointestinal gas, such as twig soup. In addition, medications such as seven-star tea particles for children, spleen-resilent granules, mountain pellets and spleen-screen spleen-screen-scatters can be used to prepare for stomach and temper arrhythmia and to treat indigestion symptoms.
Adult indigestion: treatments for adult indigestion are relatively more diverse. In addition to dietary control, a combination of accelerants, such as lactate tablets, tedium, etc., can be used to promote gastrointestinal worm digestion. If symptoms persist, it is recommended that timely medical treatment be provided to determine the cause of the disease and to receive appropriate treatment, which may require such tests as stomach mirrors, blood and faeces to assess the state of the digestive system.
4. Prevention and health care, both for infants and adults, must maintain good eating habits and regular living times, which are important means of preventing indigestion. In addition, proper exercise helps to improve gastrointestinal function. More needs to be done for those who are already suffering from indigestion, especially those with a weak temperate stomach, to avoid increased cold. There are significant differences in the characteristics of the digestive system, symptoms, treatment methods, etc. Therefore, in the face of indigestion, appropriate treatment programmes need to be developed according to the age and circumstances of the patient. At the same time, maintaining good eating habits and lifestyles is an important measure to prevent indigestion.