Constipation after a cortisone shot is uncommon, but dehydration, pain meds, and short-term steroid effects can slow your gut for a few days.
Cortisone shots (steroid injections) are used to calm inflammation in places like joints, tendons, and around irritated nerves. Most side effects stay close to the injection site—temporary soreness, warmth, or a brief flare. Some people notice body-wide effects too, like facial flushing, sleep trouble, or a short bump in blood sugar. Mayo Clinic’s cortisone shot overview describes these typical patterns.
So where does constipation fit in? It’s not the headline side effect most clinics warn about. Still, it can show up, and when it does, it’s often from a few small changes stacking up: you drank less, moved less, ate differently, or took a pain medicine that slows bowel movement frequency. This guide breaks down the most realistic paths, plus a clear plan to prevent and fix it.
What A Cortisone Shot Does And Why Your Whole Body Can Notice
The medication in a “cortisone shot” is a corticosteroid. It turns down inflammatory signals so swelling eases and movement is less painful over the next several days. The injection is local, but some of the steroid can still be absorbed into the bloodstream. That’s one reason clinicians limit how often you get injections in the same area.
Published reviews note that both joint injections and epidural steroid injections can have systemic effects that last beyond the first day. This PubMed review on systemic absorption summarizes that local injections can affect the body for weeks in some cases. Most people still feel fine, but it helps explain why a “local” treatment can change sleep, appetite, or hydration—three things that can nudge constipation.
Cortisone Shot Constipation And What Can Trigger It
Constipation after a shot is usually indirect. Think of it as the gut responding to a different week than usual. These are the triggers that show up most often in real life.
Less Fluid And Drier Stool
Injection days mess with routines. You might drink less, skip your morning drink, or avoid fluids during travel. When you’re short on fluid, your colon pulls more water out of stool, so it becomes harder and slower to pass.
More Sitting And Less Walking
Even if the shot helps pain, you might rest more right after the procedure. A small drop in movement can slow gut motility. A short walk after meals is often enough to restart your usual rhythm.
Opioids And Other Medicines That Slow Motility
Opioids are the biggest medication driver of short-term constipation. If you used an opioid after the injection, treat constipation as part of the plan, not a surprise. Other medicines can add to it too: some muscle relaxers, some antihistamines, iron, and calcium supplements.
Sleep Disruption And A Missed Bathroom Window
Some people sleep poorly after steroid injections. Mayo Clinic notes sleep problems as a possible short-term effect of corticosteroid shots. Mayo Clinic’s corticosteroid shots guidance lists sleep trouble and other short-term systemic effects. If you’re up late, you may miss your usual morning bathroom time, eat at odd hours, and sit more the next day—all of which can slow stool.
Short-Term Appetite Shifts And Lower Fiber Choices
Even one or two low-fiber days can be enough. If your meals shift toward refined carbs and away from fruits, vegetables, beans, and whole grains, stool volume drops and movement slows. Pair fiber with fluids so it doesn’t back up.
Epidural Steroid Injections And Neurologic Red Flags
Some “cortisone shots” are epidural steroid injections for back or neck pain. Constipation from routine change is still common after any procedure day. The difference is that certain bowel or bladder changes after a spine procedure can be urgent. New leg weakness, numbness, saddle anesthesia, or loss of bladder or bowel control needs emergency care.
How Soon Constipation Can Start After The Injection
Timing can keep you from guessing. Constipation tied to injection day routines and pain medicine often starts within 24–72 hours. It can last a few days, then fade as your sleep, meals, and movement normalize.
If constipation starts a week later, look for other triggers first: a new medication, travel, illness, less activity, or a diet shift. The injection can still be part of the story if it changed sleep or appetite for longer than expected, but it’s rarely the only factor that late.
Also, don’t judge constipation only by frequency. Many adults don’t have a daily bowel movement. Watch for hard stool, straining, small output, and the “stuck” feeling.
Who Tends To Be More Prone To Constipation After A Shot
Some people are more sensitive to small routine changes. You may be more prone if you already deal with constipation, drink little fluid, eat low fiber, have limited mobility after the injection, or use opioids even briefly. Diabetes can raise risk too if a steroid-related blood sugar rise leads to more urination and less hydration.
Table 1 (broad, in-depth, 7+ rows)
| Possible Driver | What It Looks Like | What Often Helps |
|---|---|---|
| Low fluids | Dry mouth, darker urine, hard stool | Water through the day, warm drink in the morning |
| Low fiber days | Small, hard stools; more straining | Oats, prunes, kiwi, beans, lentils, chia; add fluids |
| Less movement | More sitting; sluggish belly | 10–15 minute walk after meals; gentle stretching |
| Opioids | Constipation within 1–2 days; no urge to go | Osmotic laxative; stool softener if stool is hard; ask about an opioid bowel plan |
| Sleep loss | Late nights; missed morning bathroom window | Same wake time; breakfast routine; short walk after eating |
| Pelvic floor tension | Urge to go but can’t relax; lots of straining | Footstool posture; slow breathing; don’t push hard |
| New meds (iron, calcium, anticholinergics) | Constipation starts after a new pill | Review timing and alternatives with a pharmacist or clinician |
| Urgent neurologic signs after epidural | Weakness, numbness, saddle anesthesia, loss of control | Emergency care right away |
Steps To Prevent Constipation Before And After The Injection
You don’t need a complicated routine. You need a few guardrails that keep your gut on track while all else is changing.
Hydrate On Purpose For Two Days
Start the day before the shot. Sip fluids across the day instead of trying to catch up at night. On injection day and the day after, keep a water bottle nearby and finish it by late afternoon, then keep sipping. If your clinician limits fluids for another condition, follow that plan.
Pick One Fiber Anchor You Tolerate
Choose one option you know sits well with you and repeat it for two days: oats, chia, ground flax, beans, lentils, prunes, or kiwi. Keep it simple. Too many new foods at once can cause gas and make you feel worse.
Keep Movement Gentle But Regular
Even a slow walk after meals can help. If your injection site is sore, pick flat ground and a short loop. The goal is steady movement, not a workout.
Plan For Opioid Side Effects If You Might Use Them
If you might take an opioid, ask ahead of time what bowel plan your clinician prefers. Many people do best with an osmotic laxative started early, then adjusted based on stool consistency. Avoid taking multiple stimulant laxatives for days in a row unless a clinician told you to do so.
What To Do If You’re Constipated Right Now
Most mild constipation can be handled at home. The goal is to soften stool and get your gut moving without overdoing stimulant laxatives.
Start With The Basics For 24 Hours
- Fluids across the day, not just at night
- One fiber anchor plus a normal meal pattern
- A short walk after breakfast and dinner
- Footstool posture on the toilet, slow breathing, no hard pushing
Add An Over-The-Counter Option If Nothing Moves
If you’re uncomfortable and nothing has moved after 24–48 hours, an osmotic laxative can help by drawing water into the bowel. Stool softeners can help when stool is hard and dry. A stimulant laxative can be a short, occasional option if other steps fail, following the package directions.
If you take other medicines, a pharmacist can help you time laxatives safely and avoid interactions. That’s especially useful if you take diuretics, heart medicines, or supplements that bind in the gut.
Table 2
| Time Window | What To Try | Call Or Seek Care If |
|---|---|---|
| 0–24 hours | Fluids, fiber anchor, short walks, footstool posture | Severe belly pain, vomiting, fever |
| 24–48 hours | Osmotic laxative if needed; keep meals simple | No gas passing, belly swelling that worsens |
| 48–72 hours | Review meds; label-guided stimulant laxative as a one-off option | Blood in stool, pain that escalates |
| After 3 days | Call a clinician, especially with opioid use | New weakness, numbness, saddle anesthesia, loss of control after epidural |
| Beyond 1 week | Set a steady fiber and hydration routine; daily walking | Ongoing constipation, unplanned weight loss, anemia, nighttime symptoms |
Can Cortisone Shots Cause Constipation? Signs That Need Care
Constipation is usually straightforward. These signs are not:
- Severe belly pain, a hard swollen abdomen, or pain that keeps climbing
- Vomiting or inability to keep fluids down
- No stool and no gas passing with worsening bloating
- Blood in stool or black, tarry stool
- Fever or chills after an injection
- New leg weakness, numbness, saddle anesthesia, or loss of bladder or bowel control after an epidural injection
These can point to bowel obstruction, infection, bleeding, or neurologic problems. If you’re unsure, reach out for medical care.
A Simple Checklist For Next Time
If you’ve had constipation after a steroid injection before, plan your next one like you plan a long flight: set yourself up so the basics don’t fall apart.
- Drink fluids steadily the day before and two days after.
- Keep one fiber anchor in meals for two days.
- Walk after meals, even briefly.
- If opioids are on the table, start a bowel plan early.
- Know the red flags after epidural injections.
Most people bounce back in a few days. If constipation keeps repeating after injections, tell your clinician. A different dose, a different injection schedule, or a different pain plan may fit you better.
References & Sources
- Mayo Clinic.“Cortisone shots.”Explains what cortisone shots are, typical results, and common short-term reactions.
- PubMed.“Systemic Absorption and Side Effects of Locally Injected Glucocorticoids.”Summarizes evidence that local steroid injections can have systemic effects that last beyond the first day.
- Mayo Clinic.“Prednisone and other corticosteroids: Balance the risks and benefits.”Lists short-term systemic effects linked to corticosteroid shots, including sleep trouble and blood sugar changes.
- Cleveland Clinic.“Cortisone Shots (Steroid Injections): Benefits & Side Effects.”Details what to expect after a cortisone shot and when to contact a clinician.
