Nutrition for Parkinson’s is often overlooked, even though it plays an important role in managing the condition. When most people think about Parkinson’s disease, they picture tremors, stiffness, or difficulty with movement. But Parkinson’s disease affects far more than the brain and muscles. It can also disrupt digestion, appetite, bowel function, and the way medications are absorbed.
In fact, gut health in Parkinson’s disease is becoming an increasingly important part of symptom management. Many people living with Parkinson’s experience constipation, bloating, nausea, early fullness, and delayed gastric emptying. These symptoms can affect comfort, quality of life, and nutritional status.
The good news is that nutrition for Parkinson’s disease can make a meaningful difference. While diet cannot cure Parkinson’s disease, the right eating strategies may support digestive function, improve medication tolerance, and help people feel better day to day.
Why Parkinson’s Disease Affects the Gut: Nutrition for Parkinson’s
Parkinson’s disease is not only a movement disorder. It can affect the nervous system throughout the body, including the nerve networks that control digestion. This is one reason digestive symptoms are so common in Parkinson’s disease.
Several mechanisms may contribute to gut dysfunction, including changes in the autonomic nervous system, the enteric nervous system, dopamine signalling, and the gut microbiome. These changes can slow digestion, increase bloating, and make bowel movements less regular.
Understanding these mechanisms is important because different symptoms often need different nutrition strategies.
The Autonomic Nervous System and Digestion : Nutrition for Parkinson’s
The autonomic nervous system is often described as the body’s automatic control centre. It regulates many functions that happen without conscious thought, including digestion, heart rate, blood pressure, breathing, sweating, bladder control, and temperature regulation.
Under normal circumstances, the autonomic nervous system helps coordinate the rhythmic contractions that move food through the stomach and intestines. In Parkinson’s disease, these signals may become less effective, slowing digestive transit.
When this happens, food may remain in the stomach or intestines longer than it should. This can contribute to constipation, bloating, delayed gastric emptying, and inconsistent medication absorption.
The Enteric Nervous System: The “Second Brain” : Nutrition for Parkinson’s
The enteric nervous system is the network of nerves found in the walls of the digestive tract. It is often called the “second brain” because it contains more than 100 million nerve cells and can function independently of the brain.
The enteric nervous system helps control:
- Movement of food through the intestines
- Release of digestive enzymes
- Blood flow to the digestive tract
- Communication with immune cells
- Interaction with the gut microbiome
The brain and gut communicate constantly through the vagus nerve, hormones, neurotransmitters, and immune signalling. In Parkinson’s disease, this communication may be disrupted, which can slow bowel motility and contribute to digestive symptoms.
Dopamine and Gut Motility
Dopamine plays a role not only in movement, but also in gut function. Reduced dopamine activity in Parkinson’s disease may slow bowel movements and contribute to constipation.
This is one reason that digestive symptoms may appear early in the disease process, sometimes even before more obvious motor symptoms develop.
To read more about how to boost dopamine levels with food, click here.
Leaky Gut and Inflammation
Slower gut motility may also contribute to increased intestinal permeability, sometimes referred to as “leaky gut.” The lining of the intestines normally acts as a selective barrier, allowing nutrients to pass into the bloodstream while keeping unwanted substances inside the gut.
When this barrier is compromised, bacteria, toxins, and partially digested food particles may pass through more easily. This can stimulate the immune system and contribute to chronic, low-grade inflammation.
Although more research is still needed, these gut changes help explain why digestive symptoms are so common in Parkinson’s disease and why nutrition support is so important.
Constipation, Bloating and Gastroparesis
Digestive symptoms in Parkinson’s disease do not all mean the same thing. Constipation, bloating, and gastroparesis can overlap, but each has different causes and may respond to different strategies.
For this reason, it helps to identify which symptom is most prominent before making major dietary changes.
Constipation in Parkinson’s Disease
Constipation is one of the most common non-motor symptoms of Parkinson’s disease. It can begin early and may persist for years.
The foundation of natural constipation management is hydration. A general target is around two litres of fluid per day, unless a healthcare provider advises otherwise. If fluid intake is too low, increasing fibre may make constipation worse rather than better.
Dietary fibre is also essential. A mix of soluble and insoluble fibre is usually best. Good sources include oats, psyllium husk, chia seeds, flaxseed meal, legumes, broccoli, berries, avocados, artichokes, and ripe bananas.
Fibre should be increased gradually. Too much too quickly can cause gas, bloating, and discomfort. The goal is to give the digestive system time to adapt.
Fibre also supports cholesterol metabolism, helps remove metabolic waste, and feeds beneficial gut bacteria. This is one reason it plays such an important role in gut health in Parkinson’s disease.
Prebiotic foods can also help. These include onions, garlic, leeks, asparagus, chicory root, oats, barley, and ripe bananas. They nourish beneficial bacteria in the colon and may support bowel regularity.
Some fruits, including kiwifruit, papaya, pineapple, figs, and prunes, can also help encourage regular bowel movements naturally.
In some cases, magnesium citrate or selected probiotic strains may be useful. However, supplements should always be individualised rather than used as a one-size-fits-all approach.
Bloating in Parkinson’s Disease
Bloating in Parkinson’s disease can be more complex than constipation because it may have several causes. These can include slow motility, altered gut bacteria, excessive fermentation, food intolerances, or small intestinal bacterial overgrowth, also known as SIBO.
Because bloating can come from multiple mechanisms, treatment should be targeted rather than simply adding more fibre.
Helpful strategies may include:
- Drinking peppermint tea or using peppermint oil where appropriate
- Choosing cooked vegetables instead of large amounts of raw vegetables
- Eating smaller, more frequent meals
- Managing stress, which can strongly affect digestion
- Staying well hydrated
- Using digestive enzymes or probiotics when clinically indicated
One important point is that more fibre is not always better. For people with significant bloating, a sudden increase in fibre may worsen discomfort. The better approach is to identify what is driving the symptoms and respond accordingly.
Gastroparesis in Parkinson’s Disease
Gastroparesis, or delayed gastric emptying, occurs when food remains in the stomach longer than normal. This can lead to early fullness, nausea, bloating, and unpredictable medication absorption.
People with gastroparesis often tolerate:
- Smaller, more frequent meals
- Lower-fat meals
- Soft foods and soups
- Moderate amounts of soluble fibre rather than large amounts of coarse insoluble fibre.
Ginger tea or ginger supplements taken around 30 minutes before meals may help stimulate stomach motility in some individuals.
Supporting gastric emptying may improve comfort and may also help make levodopa absorption more consistent.
The Most Important Lifestyle Strategies
Nutrition is only one part of supporting Parkinson’s disease. In practice, several lifestyle strategies tend to be most important.
- Regular exercise
Aerobic exercise and resistance training are among the most effective strategies for maintaining mobility, strength, balance, and independence.
- Optimising gut health
An anti-inflammatory or Mediterranean-style eating pattern, combined with targeted support for constipation, bloating, and other digestive symptoms, can improve day-to-day wellbeing.
- Reducing toxin exposure
Reducing exposure to pesticides, heavy metals, and other environmental toxins may help lower oxidative stress and support healthy cellular function.
- Targeted supplementation
Supplements should be used to fill specific gaps or support individual needs. They should not replace foundational habits such as healthy eating, movement, sleep, and stress management.
Personalised Nutrition and Functional Testing
No two people with Parkinson’s disease are exactly alike. Symptoms, nutritional status, medications, genetics, gut health, and environmental exposures all vary from person to person.
That is why personalised nutrition is often more effective than a generic approach.
One tool that may help guide this process is the Organic Acid and Environmental Pollutants Test. Unlike standard blood tests, which provide a snapshot of nutrient levels in circulation, this type of functional testing can offer insight into how the body is functioning at a metabolic and cellular level.
It may help identify:
- Nutritional deficiencies and increased nutrient needs
- Mitochondrial function and cellular energy production
- Gut dysbiosis, bacterial overgrowth, and yeast overgrowth
- Oxidative stress
- Neurotransmitter metabolism
- Detoxification pathways
- Inflammation
- Methylation pathways
Some newer panels may also screen for:
- Mycotoxins associated with mould exposure
- Environmental pollutants
- Heavy metals and essential minerals
- Glyphosate exposure
Why This May Be Useful in Parkinson’s Disease
Parkinson’s disease is considered a multifactorial condition. Genetics may play a role, but so may environmental exposures, oxidative stress, mitochondrial dysfunction, inflammation, impaired detoxification, and nutritional deficiencies.
Functional testing cannot diagnose Parkinson’s disease, but it may help identify factors that are adding stress to the body and worsening symptoms.
For example:
- One person may mainly need support for constipation and nutrient deficiencies.
- Another may show signs of oxidative stress or mitochondrial dysfunction.
- Another may have higher exposure to environmental toxins or heavy metals.
This type of information can help shift nutrition planning from guesswork to a more targeted and personalised strategy.
Final Thoughts
Nutrition for Parkinson’s disease is about more than calories or food preferences. It is about supporting digestion, maintaining bowel function, improving medication consistency, and helping the body cope with the wider effects of the condition.
By focusing on gut health in Parkinson’s disease, it may be possible to improve comfort, reduce symptoms, and support quality of life. A personalised approach is often the most effective, especially when digestive symptoms, nutrient deficiencies, and environmental factors are all part of the picture.
Free downloadable file with practical tips to manage constipation, bloating and delayed gastric emptying in Parkinson’s, plus a 3-day meal plan with medication and nutrient timing:
Managing constipation and bloating in Parkinson’s
