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Diarrhoea (Running Stomach): Treatment in Nigeria

Updated July 2026 · Educational information — not a substitute for a doctor or pharmacist

Diarrhoea — 'running stomach' — is usually caused by viruses or by bacteria and parasites from contaminated food and water. Most episodes settle on their own within a few days. The danger, especially for young children, is not the diarrhoea itself but the fluid it drains away: dehydration remains a leading killer of under-fives in Nigeria.

That's why the core treatment is embarrassingly simple and evidence-backed: oral rehydration salts (ORS) to replace fluid and salts, plus zinc for children (it shortens the episode and protects against the next one). These two cheap items outperform every 'stomach medicine' for the outcomes that matter.

Antibiotics are usually unnecessary and often misused for diarrhoea. They're reserved for specific situations — bloody stool (dysentery), suspected cholera, or lab-confirmed parasites like amoeba — decided by a clinician, not the counter.

Signs & symptoms

  • Loose, watery stools three or more times a day
  • Stomach cramps; sometimes nausea or vomiting
  • Dehydration signs: intense thirst, dry mouth, sunken eyes, little or dark urine, weakness
  • In infants: sunken soft spot, no tears when crying, unusually quiet or floppy — urgent
  • Red flags: blood in stool, high fever, rice-water stools in large volumes (possible cholera)

Medicines used for diarrhoea (running stomach) in Nigeria

Each medicine links to its full guide — uses, dosage forms, current naira prices, and NAFDAC-registered brands. Diagnosis and dosing belong with a clinician or pharmacist.

How it's treated

Start ORS from the first loose stool — small, frequent sips, continuing food and breastfeeding. Homemade salt-sugar solution works when ORS sachets aren't at hand, but sachets get the balance right. Children under 5 should also get zinc daily for 10–14 days.

Loperamide can reduce stool frequency for adults with watery (non-bloody) diarrhoea when travel or work demands it — but it should never be given to young children, and never used when there's blood in the stool or high fever.

See a doctor if…

  • Any dehydration signs in a child, or a child who can't keep sips down — urgent
  • Blood in stool, or fever with severe illness
  • Profuse rice-water stools (possible cholera) — emergency, and report locally
  • Diarrhoea lasting more than 3 days in adults, or any prolonged course in infants, the elderly, or pregnancy
  • Recent antibiotic use followed by severe diarrhoea

Prevention

  • Safe water: boiled, treated, or trusted sealed sources — and clean storage containers
  • Wash hands with soap after the toilet, after changing nappies, and before food
  • Cook food thoroughly; refrigerate leftovers promptly; be cautious with roadside salads and ice
  • Rotavirus vaccination for infants (part of routine immunisation) and exclusive breastfeeding for the first 6 months protect children strongly

Frequently asked questions

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Related conditions

This page is educational information about how diarrhoea (running stomach) is generally managed in Nigeria. It is not medical advice, diagnosis, or a prescription. Always consult a licensed clinician or pharmacist, and verify any medicine's NAFDAC registration with our free checker before buying.