Persimmon looks innocent on the plate yet behaves like a chemical trap in the stomach. Its sweet flesh delivers soluble fiber, carotenoids, and vitamin C, nutrients praised in nutrition guidelines for supporting gut motility and oxidative stress control. Under specific conditions, though, that same fruit becomes raw material for a medical problem that sends patients to endoscopy suites.
The real culprit is not the sugar, it is the tannin load concentrated in some astringent varieties. In a highly acidic gastric environment, tannins can polymerize, binding to mucin, undigested plant fibers, and dietary protein to form dense aggregates known in gastroenterology as phytobezoars. Add rapid intake of large quantities of persimmon, especially after heavy protein or starch meals, and the risk compounds as gastric emptying slows.
Clinicians argue that the fruit itself is not the villain, the eating pattern is. Case reports describe hard, stone like masses that resist peristalsis, sometimes requiring endoscopic fragmentation or even surgery, particularly in people with prior gastric surgery, poor mastication, or use of anticholinergic drugs that blunt motility. For most healthy consumers, moderation, thorough chewing, and avoiding binge combinations with bulky, low digestibility foods keep persimmon in the category it deserves, a nutrient dense ingredient rather than a source of stomach stones.