You can expect to experience constipation or uncomfortable bowel related symptoms when your digestive system is upset and not working properly. Your many symptoms can include bloating, gas, loose stools, nausea, weakness, dizziness and sweatiness. Serious life threatening complications can also arise.

Your digestive system helps to break down the food that you eat for absorption and the remaining to be removed as waste. It extends from your mouth to your anus and includes all the organs in between; such as your mouth, esophagus, stomach, small intestine, large intestine, rectum and anus. When your digestive system does not function properly, many diseases and illnesses can happen. Here are 10 of them:

1. Fecal Compaction is also known as impaction. It occurs whenever hardened waste matter obstructs your natural bowel function. This condition occurs for numerous reasons, but an unhealthy diet is the biggest cause of this disease.

2. Viral Gastroenteritis results from a viral infection that also leads to vomiting or diarrhea. Viral gastroenteritis is often called the "stomach flu," although it is not caused by the influenza viruses. It is a disease that most people should be able to recover from without any major problems. However, if you get viral gastroenteritis, you must drink enough fluids to replace what is lost through vomiting and diarrhea. Not doing so can lead to serious complications.

3. Appendicitis happens with an inflamed appendix. It develops when the lumen of the appendix becomes obstructed, usually by fecal waste, a foreign invader or hyperplasia of lymphatic tissue that is normally present in the wall of the appendix. Your appendix is a small pouch that is attached to the area where your kidney starts on your lower right side. An inflamed appendix can burst and cause infection and possibly death. This is a condition that can affect anyone at any age, but it is more common in people who are between the age of 10 and 30.

4. Rapid Gastric Emptying is a digestive disease which is also known as dumping syndrome. It develops when the lower end of your small intestine fills up too rapidly with undigested food from your stomach. This causes nausea, vomiting, bloating, diarrhea and shortness of breath.

5. Late Dumping takes place between 1 to 3 hours after a meal. Late dumping is normally caused by an insulin response to the ingested food. You may feel flushed, fatigued, sweaty, dizzy and experience all the symptoms of hypoglycemia (low blood sugar) with late dumping.

6. Short Bowel Syndrome is a group of problems that can affect you if you have had at least half of your small intestine removed.

7. Mucoid Plaque is used to describe a harmful coating of mucus-like material that exists in your colon. Its presence reduces the absorption of nutrients, impairs digestion, provides a breeding ground for parasite microorganisms and reduces bowel transit time. It should be pointed out that scientific or medical studies do not support the existence of mucoid plaque, despite photo evidence published by many on mucoid plaque removed from their bodies through colon cleansing.

8. Collagenous Colitis and Lymphocytic Colitis are both bowel diseases that cause inflammation in your intestines. These are 2 types of bowel inflammation that affect the colon, which is also known as your large intestine.

9. Ulcerative Colitis is a condition arising from inflammation and sores, or ulcers, in the lining of your large intestine. With this digestive disease, an inflammation usually takes place in your rectum and the lower part of your colon. However, although this disease will rarely affect your small intestines, it is possible that it spreads to your entire colon.

10. Intestinal Pseudo-Obstruction, is also known as false blockage. It is a condition with symptoms that are similar to those of a bowel obstruction. However, for this condition, no obstructions can be observed when your intestines are examined. In fact, this disease is linked to problems in how the muscles and nerves in your intestines work. Some of the symptoms that you experience include cramps, nausea, stomach pain, vomiting, bloating, fewer bowel movements than usual and loose stools. Over the course of time, pseudo-obstruction can lead to bacterial infections, malnutrition and muscle problems in other parts of your body. Some people also experience bladder problems with this digestive disease.

Author's Bio: 

Got constipation, bad breath and weight that you need to lose? Sandra Kim Leong publishes free information on the benefits of colon cleansing and the importance of bowel health. Read free tips at http://www.Detox-Cleansing.net.