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Real Life Pharmacology - Pharmacology Education for Health Care Professionals

Bisacodyl (Dulcolax) Pharmacology

Real Life Pharmacology - Pharmacology Education for Health Care Professionals

Eric Christianson, PharmD; Pharmacology Expert and Clinical Pharmacist

Education, Health & Fitness, Medicine

5716 Ratings

🗓️ 13 November 2025

⏱️ 16 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Bisacodyl, commonly known by the brand name Dulcolax, is a stimulant laxative widely used for short-term relief of constipation and bowel preparation before procedures. It works by directly stimulating the enteric nerves in the colon, increasing peristalsis, and promoting bowel evacuation.



Mechanism of Action:Bisacodyl acts primarily on the large intestine. It stimulates intestinal smooth muscle and alters water and electrolyte transport, increasing fluid accumulation in the bowel and triggering defecation. The result is a bowel movement typically within 6–12 hours orally or within 15–60 minutes when given rectally.



Dosage Forms and Dosing:Bisacodyl is available as oral tablets (5 mg) and rectal suppositories (10 mg). Typical adult dosing is 5–15 mg by mouth once daily or 10 mg rectally as needed. It’s often used for acute constipation, bowel prep, or to prevent straining in specific medical situations.



Adverse Effects:Common side effects include abdominal cramping, diarrhea, and nausea. Chronic or excessive use may lead to electrolyte imbalances, dehydration, and laxative dependence.



Drug Interactions and Monitoring:Concurrent use with antacids, proton pump inhibitors, or milk may cause premature dissolution of enteric-coated tablets, leading to gastric irritation. Monitoring for bowel regularity, hydration status, and signs of electrolyte imbalance is important—especially in elderly or debilitated patients.

Transcript

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0:00.0

Hey all, welcome back to the real-life pharmacology podcast. I'm your host, pharmacist, Eric Christensen.

0:05.8

Thank you so much for listening today. As always, go snag that free PDF. It's a 31-page

0:13.1

PDF on the top 200 drugs. It's a great study guide, great refresher for anybody in pharmacy school, nursing school, or if you're just out

0:23.1

in practice and would like a refresher on some of the most important medications in practice.

0:29.6

So again, go check that out.

0:31.3

Simply an email.

0:32.2

We'll get you access to that.

0:34.0

And that's at real life pharmacology.com.

0:38.2

All right. The drug of the day today is Bizzicodal.

0:43.7

Brand name of this medication is docalax.

0:47.4

Now, this isn't over-the-counter laxative type medication, and there are numerous other brand names.

0:56.5

So I'm not going to go through the entire list looking that up,

1:01.0

but you should be aware that any type of medication where you see,

1:08.4

you know, laxative, that type of thing over the counter.

1:12.5

It's best to go ahead and look at the back of that box,

1:15.6

back of that pill bottle, and actually see what's in there.

1:20.3

So the generic name that you're going to see is Bizzicotal.

1:25.6

Again, stimulant, laxative, and mechanistically, it stimulates peristulses.

1:33.4

Let's define peristolsus quick. So this is the wave-like involuntary muscle contraction

1:41.2

that pushes substances through the digestive tract.

1:49.1

Okay.

1:49.6

So again, we don't control those movements, right?

...

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