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  • Low-Residue Diet

    Your doctor has prescribed a low-residue diet. “Residue” is the word for parts of food (such as fiber) that pass undigested through the bowel. This is what forms stool. Low-residue foods are easily digested and absorbed. They leave the least residue, which results in less stool. This lets the intestine rest. You will likely be on this diet for a short time because low-residue foods usually don't give you all the nutrients you need to keep healthy. Your doctor will tell you how long you need to be on this diet and you may be told to take certain vitamins to ensure you get enough nutrients.  

    Foods OK for low-residue diet: hot cereal, white bread, saltines, rice, banana, milk, lettuce, and fish.

    Reasons to Eat a Low-Residue Diet

    The goal of a low-residue diet is to limit the size and number of stools. It may be prescribed if you:

    • Are having chemotherapy or radiation treatments

    • Have had intestinal surgery

    • Have a condition that affects the intestine, such as Crohn’s disease, ulcerative colitis, or diverticulitis

    General Guidelines for a Low-Residue Diet

    Your doctor may give you a list of things you can and can’t eat or drink. Read food labels and choose foods and drinks that have as close to zero grams as possible of fiber. Here are general guidelines:

    • Breads, pasta, cereal, rice, and other starches (6 to 11 servings daily)

      • What to choose: white bread, biscuits, muffins, and rolls; plain crackers; white pasta; white rice; cream of wheat; grits; white pancakes; cornflakes; cooked potatoes without skin.  Fiber content of these foods should be less than 0.5 (half) gram per serving.

      • What to avoid: Whole-wheat or whole-grain breads, crackers, and pasta; breads with seeds or nuts; cornbread; wild or brown rice; whole-grain cereals, bran cereals, granola cereals, cereals with seeds, nuts, coconut, or dried fruit; potatoes with skin

    • Milk and dairy (2 servings daily)

      • What to choose: milk, smooth yogurt, ice cream, custard, cheese and cottage cheese

      • What to avoid: ice cream and yogurt with seeds or nuts, or with chunks of fruit

    • Fruit (2 to 4 servings daily)

      • What to choose: ripe banana; ripe nectarine, peach, apricot, papaya, plum; soft honeydew melon and cantaloupe; cooked or canned fruit without skin or seeds; applesauce; strained fruit juice (without pulp)

      • What to avoid: raw or dried fruit; all berries; raisins; canned and raw pineapple; prunes and prune juice

    • Vegetables (3 to 5 servings daily)

      • What to choose: well-cooked or canned vegetables without seeds, such as spinach, eggplant, green and wax beans, carrots, yellow squash, pumpkin, beets; raw lettuce; raw onions; raw zucchini

      • What to avoid: vegetables with seeds, such as unstrained tomato sauce; green peas; lima beans; broccoli; corn; parsnips

    • Meats and protein (4 to 6 oz daily)

      • What to choose: tender, well-cooked meat, including ground meat, poultry, and fish; eggs; tofu; creamy peanut butter

      • What to avoid: tough, chewy meat with gristle; peas, including split, yellow, black-eyed; beans, including navy, lima, black, garbanzo, soy, pinto, lentil; peanuts and crunchy peanut butter 

    • Fats, oils, sauces, condiments

      • What to choose: butter, magarine, oils, whipped cream, sour cream, mayonnaise, smooth dressings and sauces; plain gravy; smooth condiments

      • What to avoid: dressing with seeds or fruit chunks; pickles and relishes

    • Other foods and drinks

      • What to choose: plain gelatin; plain puddings; pretzels; plain cookies and cakes; honey, syrup, caffeinated drinks, including tea and coffee (ask your doctor first); soda 

      • What to avoid: popcorn; spicy foods; foods made with cocoa powder; alcohol (ask your doctor); marmalade, jam, preserves; desserts that have seeds, nuts, coconut, dried fruit, whole grains or bran; candy that has seeds or nuts