Can Your Stomach Explode

Can Your Stomach Explode

What Happens to Your Body When You Eat Too Much

No, your stomach will not explode. Read on to find out what happens in your body after an oversized meal.

Lainey is a weight-loss dietitian who helps people ditch diets, change their habits and create a healthy lifestyle that lasts. She has Master’s in Nutrition Communication from the Tufts Friedman School of Nutrition Science and Policy and completed her dietetics training at Massachusetts General Hospital, a Harvard teaching hospital. She writes on a variety of topics including weight loss, gut health, pregnancy, breastfeeding and trendy diets. When she’s not writing or counseling, you can find her on a run, out to brunch, or with coffee in hand trying to keep up with her two little boys.

Christa Brown is a registered dietitian and business owner with a practice focus on diabetes management and content development for brands and fitness influencers. She is a licensed dietitian with a Master of Science in Nutrition Education and a certification in gut health by the Institute of Integrative Nutrition.

You can probably guess what happens if you eat too much over time. But what about when you overeat at meals? Beyond feeling a little bit stuffed, there are some things happening in your body. We interviewed two dietitians to get the deets on what happens to digestion and your body when you eat too much. They also shared tips for what to do when you feel stuffed.

Short-Term Effects of Eating Too Much

  • Acid reflux or heartburn
  • Feeling sluggish
  • Stomach discomfort
  • Elevated blood sugar

When you eat, your stomach expands to hold what you have consumed. A stretched, or full, stomach sends signals to the brain that you are full. Eating too much can cause the stomach to stretch past its normal capacity, leading to feeling overly full. This can lead to pressure and discomfort as the contents of the stomach pass into the small intestine.

“In the short term, an extra large meal can cause digestive discomfort and possibly acid reflux, which can be very unpleasant,” says registered dietitian, Lauren Harris-Pincus, M.S., RDN, founder of NutritionStarringYOU.com and author of The Protein-Packed Breakfast Club. Acid reflux occurs when stomach acid flows back into the esophagus and causes a sour taste or burning sensation. “This is especially problematic when the meal is consumed close to bedtime because laying down will worsen the effects and interfere with sleep,” says Harris-Pincus.

Speaking of sleep, “Eating beyond your point of satisfaction can also cause a sense of drowsiness or feeling sluggish as the body is redirecting its attention to digesting the excess food,” says Harris-Pincus.

Your blood sugar can also become elevated, especially if you eat a large amount of carbohydrates, says Lauren Manaker, M.S., RDN, LD, a Charleston-based registered dietitian and owner of Nutrition Now. Blood sugar (glucose) rises after a meal, but refined carbohydrates spike blood sugar the most, compared to high-fiber carbs or carbs paired with protein and fat. When blood sugar rises, the pancreas releases the hormone insulin, which brings glucose from your blood to your cells for energy. Extra glucose is stored as glycogen in the liver and muscles. When the liver and muscles can’t store any more, the leftover glucose is stored as fat.

Long-Term Effects of Eating Too Much

  • Weight gain
  • Increased risk of Type 2 diabetes
  • Insulin resistance
  • Leptin resistance
  • Elevated triglycerides

“Eating more calories than you expend will cause weight gain in the long term,” says Harris-Pincus. “It can also cause your blood sugar to spike, especially if the larger meals are heavy in processed carbohydrates and sugar.”

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Overeating, even in the short term, can cause insulin resistance, in which cells are resistant to taking up the glucose that insulin is trying to deliver. According to a 2022 Journal of Eating Disorders study, binge eating high-fat and high-calorie foods results in elevated fasting blood sugar levels and increased insulin resistance. This, in turn, keeps blood sugar levels high and, over time, can lead to conditions like obesity and Type 2 diabetes.

Eating too much over time can also lead to leptin resistance, according to a 2019 Nutrients article. Leptin is a hormone produced by fat cells that tells the brain you are full. The more body fat someone has, the more leptin they will have. However, in leptin resistance, the brain doesn’t receive the signal from leptin to stop eating. Therefore, appetite remains high, leading to a vicious cycle of continuing to overeat, which can lead to more fat gain. Overeating can also raise triglyceride levels, especially if you consume too many high-sugar foods or drink too much alcohol.

Regarding your stomach, “One big meal like Thanksgiving won’t cause your stomach to ‘stretch’ [permanently] because it is meant to expand and contract to accommodate your daily food consumption,” Harris-Pincus says, but “consistently eating beyond when you are satisfied can cause your stomach to expand to handle the chronic extra food. This will require you to eat more food to become satisfied on a daily basis. The best way to avoid this is to listen to your body and its hunger and fullness signals to avoid overeating.”

What to Do When You’ve Eaten Too Much

First things first, don’t beat yourself up about it, says Manaker. What you do most of the time matters more than what you do every once in a while. “To get some short-term relief, you can chew on some ginger, sip on ginger tea or take some black licorice root. Taking a walk can help offer some relief too. Staying upright and avoiding lying down can also be a good step to reduce the risk of experiencing heartburn. Don’t drink carbonated beverages and instead stick with flat water,” she says.

“If you find that you are constantly overeating, pay attention to whether anything is triggering this behavior,” says Manaker. For example, are you physically hungry or eating because you are stressed? Often, people will overeat in the evening because they didn’t eat enough throughout the day, whether intentionally or unintentionally. Aim to get protein, fiber and healthy fats at each meal and to eat every three to four hours. Show up to meals hungry but not starving. If you show up starving, you are likely to eat quickly and then overeat because you don’t give your stomach time to tell your brain you are full. You are also more likely to reach for simple carbohydrates first because your blood sugar has dipped so low that your body is craving the quickest source of energy—sugar. Use a hunger scale of 1-10 that goes from not hungry to feeling stuffed to help you assess hunger and fullness throughout the day. Slow down while eating and try to take 20 minutes to finish a meal.

“Being mindful of portions can help prevent this behavior from continuing. Having a snack, like a handful of nuts, before a meal can help you feel less ravenous at mealtime and possibly help you manage your portion sizes,” says Manaker.

The Bottom Line

Overeating can cause discomfort in the short term but eating too much long term can lead to weight gain, along with other metabolic issues such as insulin and leptin resistance, high triglycerides and increased risk for obesity and diabetes. Don’t beat yourself up for overeating every once in a while, but if it becomes a habit, talk to your doctor or work with a registered dietitian nutritionist (RDN) who can help you determine the root causes and provide solutions.

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Can you eat enough to make your stomach explode?

After eating a large meal last night, I noticed that my tummy had significantly enlarged. After that, I started wondering if eating too much could cause a stomach to explode. Could this actually happen?

Question

Are you able to explode your stomach by eating too much? Can it pop or break?

I assume your body would just regurgitate the extra food.

What if you held in the regurgitation? Then would you explode?

2 Answers 2

Here’s a simple cross-section of the stomach (from here):

The stomach accomplishes much of its function by mechanically breaking down the swallowed food particles and mixing them with acid and enzymes into a sort of slurry. To do this, there are three major layers of muscle surround the stomach – from the outside, the longitudinal layer, the circular layer, and the oblique layer. The stomach also has two holes in it – the gastroesophageal opening, coming from the esophagus with the swallowed food/saliva mix, and the pylorus, where the food/acid/enzyme slurry exits into the duodenum, which is the beginning of the small intestine.

Due to the three layers of (rather strong) muscle, the stomach doesn’t have a lot of expansion capability once it is filled completely to capacity. Fortunately, this almost never occurs (despite how we may feel after a large meal) because material is always leaving the stomach on its way to enzymatic digestion in the intestines. Additionally, once the stomach is filled to a certain extent, hormones such as leptin are secreted that give you the feeling of being sated, or full, triggering the brain to make you stop eating.

Of course, as we can see with the current epidemic of obesity around the world, the stomach can change its size over time. However, this is a rather slow process (weeks to months to years) of adapting to continuously consuming large meals.

But what would happen if you completely ignored these internal warnings, or were being force-fed, or whatever? Instead of rupturing (the biological equivalent of “exploding”), food would most likely be expelled either into the small intestine or back into the esophagus and back up the way it came down, i.e. causing vomiting.

For this answer to be complete, however, I should point out that stomach or gastric rupture is technically possible, although it is an extremely rare occurrence. Cases have been described in the literature (1, 2, 3, etc.), but they are rarely correlated with overeating or eating disorders like bulemia. In cases that are, other pre-existing conditions such as gastric ulcer have been found on autopsy that likely weakened the stomach wall in the first place. The bottom line – if you’re an otherwise healthy person, a single instance of massive binge eating is very unlikely to end in stomach rupture, as vomiting will most likely begin well before you are in significant physical danger.

Dr Narelle Bleasel FACD
Dr Narelle Bleasel FACD

Dermatologist in Battery Point, Australia

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