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{{Short description|Bodily function of expelling intestinal gas from the anus}}
{{SignSymptom infobox |
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Name = Flatulence |
{{Redirect|Fart|usage of the term|Fart (word)|other uses|Fart (disambiguation)}}
ICD10 = R14 |
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ICD9 = {{ICD9|787.3}} |
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{{Use mdy dates|date=August 2015}}
{{Infobox medical condition (new)
| name = Flatulence
| synonyms = Farting, breaking wind, passing gas, cutting the cheese, cutting one loose, ripping one, tooting <!-- enough; everyone has a term for it -->
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'''Flatulence''' (expelled through the anus in a process commonly known as 'farting' or 'emitting gas') is the presence of a mixture of gases known as '''flatus''' in the ] of ].
== Explanation ==
I made the biggest fart today with a cow!
Flatus is expelled under pressure through the ], whereby, as a result of the voluntary or involuntary tensing of the ], the rapid evacuation of ] from the lower ] occurs. Depending upon the relative state of the ] (relaxed/tense) or the positioning of each ], this generally results in an audible crackling or trumpeting ]. The process may also result in a relatively silent and slow emission of ], often deemed foul in character, resulting from the sensation of olfactory components such as ], ], and ]ous compounds.<ref>{{cite web
|url=http://www.patient.co.uk/showdoc/40000086/
|title=Flatulence, wind and bloating
|publisher=Patient UK
|accessdate=2006-12-11
}}</ref>


'''Flatulence''' is the expulsion of gas from the ] via the anus, commonly referred to as '''farting'''. "Flatus" is the medical word for gas generated in the ] or bowels.<ref>{{cite dictionary |url=http://www.merriam-webster.com/medlineplus/flatus |title=Medical Dictionary: Flatus |dictionary=] |access-date=August 24, 2015}}</ref> A proportion of intestinal gas may be swallowed environmental air, and hence flatus is not entirely generated in the stomach or bowels. The scientific study of this area of medicine is termed '''flatology'''.<ref name="Tangerman 2009" />
== Social considerations ==


Flatus is brought to the ] and pressurized by ] in the intestines. It is normal to pass flatus ("to fart"), though volume and frequency vary greatly among individuals. It is also normal for intestinal gas to have a ] or unpleasant odor, which may be intense. The noise commonly associated with flatulence is produced by the ] and ], which act together in a manner similar to that of an ]. Both the sound and odor are sources of ], annoyance or amusement (]). In many societies, flatus is a ]. Thus, many people either let their flatus out quietly or even hold it completely.<ref>, retrieved 19 February 2023.</ref><ref>, retrieved 19 February 2023.</ref> However, holding the gases inside is not healthy.<ref>{{cite journal | url=https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/51965/ | pmid=51965 | year=1975 | last1=Wynne-Jones | first1=G. | title=Flatus retention is the major factor in diverticular disease | journal=Lancet | volume=2 | issue=7927 | pages=211–212 | doi=10.1016/s0140-6736(75)90677-7 | s2cid=9443068 |issn=0140-6736 }}</ref><ref>, retrieved 7 March 2023, based upon </ref>
While the act of farting is generally considered to be an unfortunate (but sometimes intentionally contrived) occurrence in public settings, a flatus may, in casual circumstances, be used as either a humorous supplement to a joke, or as a comic activity in and of itself. Farting has been seen as having a particular fascination for boys<ref>"Walter the Fart Dog", Puffin books.</ref> with its tendency to provoke laughter proportional to the solemnity of the occasion, for example during a church service. In these situations the mirth of the younger members of the audience may cause anguish amongst older members who have trouble suppressing their own laughter. A fairly common misconception amongst boys is that girls do not fart.<ref>I Used to Believe</ref> Farting is usually accompanied by a distinct odor and sound. The non-odorous gases are mainly ] (ingested), ] (produced by ]s or ingested), and ] (produced by some microbes and consumed by others), as well as lesser amounts of ] (ingested) and ] (produced by ]s).<ref>{{cite journal| author=Suarez F| coauthors=Furne J, Springfield J, Levitt M| title=Insights into human colonic physiology obtained from the study of flatus composition| journal=Am J Physiol| year=1997| volume=272 (5 Pt 1)| pages=G1028–33}}</ref> Odors result from trace amounts of other components (often containing ] compounds, see below).


There are several general symptoms related to intestinal gas: pain, ] and abdominal distension, excessive flatus volume, excessive flatus odor, and gas incontinence. Furthermore, ] (colloquially known as "burping") is sometimes included under the topic of flatulence.<ref name="K C clinical medicine">{{cite book |editor=Parveen Kumar |editor-link=Parveen Kumar |editor2=Michael L. Clark |title=Kumar & Clark Clinical Medicine |year=2005 |edition=6th |publisher=] |location=Edinburgh |isbn=0702027634 |page=266 }}</ref> When excessive or malodorous, flatus can be a sign of a health disorder, such as ], ] or ].<ref name=NHS2017>{{cite web |title=Flatulence |url=https://www.nhs.uk/conditions/flatulence/ |publisher=NHS | date=12 December 2017}}</ref>
== Composition of flatus gases ==


==Terminology==
] is the primary ] released. ] and ], lesser components, are ], and so flatus is susceptible to catching ]. Not all humans produce flatus that contains methane. For example, in one study of the ] of nine adults, only five of the samples contained ] capable of producing methane.<ref>{{cite journal| author=Miller TL| coauthors=Wolin MJ, de Macario EC, Macario AJ| title=Isolation of Methanobrevibacter smithii from human feces| journal=Appl Environ Microbiol| year=1982| volume=43(1)| pages=227–232}}</ref> Similar results are found in samples of gas obtained from within the ].
Non-medical definitions of the term include "the uncomfortable condition of having gas in the stomach and bowels", or "a state of excessive gas in the alimentary canal". These definitions highlight that many people consider "bloating", ] or increased volume of intestinal gas, to be synonymous with the term flatulence (although this is technically inaccurate).


Colloquially, flatulence may be referred to as "farting", "pumping", "trumping",<ref>{{cite web |url=https://en.oxforddictionaries.com/definition/trump |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170623075303/https://en.oxforddictionaries.com/definition/trump |url-status=dead |archive-date=June 23, 2017 |title=trump |work=Oxford English Dictionary}}</ref> "blowing off", "pooting", "passing gas", "breaking wind", "backfiring", "tooting", "beefing", or simply (in ]) "gas" or (]) "wind". Derived terms include ], otherwise known as a ''queef''.
The gas released during a flatus event frequently has a foul odor which mainly results from low ] ] such as ] (] ] smell) and ] ] compounds such as ] (rotten egg smell) and ] that are the result of ] breakdown. The incidence of odoriferous compounds in flatus increases from ], such as ], through ] to ] ], such as ]s or ]. Flatulence odor can also be caused by the presence of large numbers of ] and/or the presence of feces in the ].


==Mechanism of action== ==Signs and symptoms==
The ]s commonly associated with flatulence are caused by the ] of the ] ], and not by the ]. The sound varies depending on the tightness of the ] ] and ] of the ] being propelled, as well as other factors such as ] and body ]. The auditory pitch (]) of the flatulence outburst can also be affected by the anal ]. Among humans, ]ing sometimes happens accidentally, such as incidentally to ]ing or ]; on other occasions, ]ing can be voluntarily elicited by tensing the ] or "bearing down" and subsequently releasing the ] ]. Humans are also known to flatulate during sleep, largely due to the relaxed state of body muscles, which results in the average person flatulating about 20-60 times through any given night.{{Fact|date=March 2007}}


Generally speaking, there are four different types of complaints that relate to intestinal gas, which may present individually or in combination.
Flatus is brought to the ] via ], which also causes ] to descend from the large intestine, and may cause a similar feeling of urgency and discomfort. ] endings in the rectum usually enable individuals to distinguish between flatus and ], although loose ] can confuse the individual, occasionally resulting in accidental ] (colloquially known as "following through", or "sharting", a portmanteau combining "shit" and "fart" — sometimes also called a "mush ]" or "] with a lump in the middle").


==Causes == ===Bloating and pain===
Patients may complain of bloating as ], discomfort and pain from "trapped wind". In the past, functional bowel disorders such as ] that produced symptoms of bloating were attributed to increased production of intestinal gas.
Intestinal gas is composed of varying quantities of exogenous sources (air that is ingested through the nose and mouth) and endogenous sources (gas produced within the digestive tract). The exogenous gases are swallowed (]) when eating or drinking or increased swallowing during times of excessive salivation (as might occur when nauseated or as the result of ] disease). The ] gases are produced either as a by-product of digesting certain types of ], or of incomplete ]. Anything that causes food to be incompletely digested by the ] and/or ] may cause flatulence when the material arrives in the large intestine due to ] by ] or ] normally or abnormally present in the ].


However, three significant pieces of evidence refute this theory. First, in normal subjects, even very high rates of gas infusion into the small intestine (30{{nbsp}}mL/min) is tolerated without complaints of pain or bloating and harmlessly passed as flatus per rectum.<ref name="Azpiroz 2005" /> Secondly, studies aiming to quantify the total volume of gas produced by patients with irritable bowel syndrome (some including gas emitted from the mouth by eructation) have consistently failed to demonstrate increased volumes compared to healthy subjects. The proportion of hydrogen produced may be increased in some patients with irritable bowel syndrome, but this does not affect the total volume.<ref name="King 1998">{{cite journal |last=King |first=TS |author2=Elia, M |author3=Hunter, JO |title=Abnormal colonic fermentation in irritable bowel syndrome |journal=] |date=October 10, 1998 |volume=352 |issue=9135 |pages=1187–9 |pmid=9777836 |doi=10.1016/S0140-6736(98)02146-1|s2cid=1750363 }}</ref> Thirdly, the volume of flatus produced by patients with irritable bowel syndrome who have pain and abdominal distension would be tolerated in normal subjects without any complaints of pain.
Flatulence-producing foods are typically high in certain ]s (especially ] such as ]) and include beans, lentils, milk, onions, radishes, sweet potatoes, cheese, cashews, ]s, oats, yeast in breads, and other vegetables. ], ] and other ] are commonly reputed to not only increase flatulence, but to increase the pungency of the flatus. In beans, endogenous gases seem to arise from complex ]s (]s) that are particularly resistant to digestion by mammals, but which are readily digestible by ] that inhabit the ]. These ]s pass through the upper ] largely unchanged, and when they reach the lower ], ] feed on them, producing copious amounts of flatus.<ref name="McGee">{{cite book| last=McGee| first=Harold| title=]| publisher=Scribner| year=1984| id=ISBN 0-684-84328-5| pages=257–8}}</ref> In the case of those with ], intestinal ] feeding on ] can give rise to excessive gas production when ] or lactose-containing substances have been consumed.


Patients who complain of bloating frequently can be shown to have objective increases in abdominal girth, often increased throughout the day and then resolving during ]. The increase in girth combined with the fact that the total volume of flatus is not increased led to studies aiming to image the distribution of intestinal gas in patients with bloating. They found that gas was not distributed normally in these patients: there was segmental gas pooling and focal distension.<ref name="Azpiroz 2005" /> In conclusion, abdominal distension, pain and bloating symptoms are the result of abnormal intestinal gas dynamics rather than increased flatus production.
Interest in the causes of flatulence was spurred by high-altitude ] and the ]; the low ], confined conditions, and stresses peculiar to those endeavours were cause for concern.<ref name="McGee"/>


===Excessive volume===
==Remedies==
The range of volumes of flatus in normal individuals varies hugely (476–1,491&thinsp;mL/24&thinsp;h).<ref name="Tangerman 2009" /> All intestinal gas is either swallowed environmental air, present intrinsically in foods and beverages, or the result of gut fermentation.
{{unreferenced||date=June 2006}}
===Dietary===
Certain ]s have been reported to counteract the production of intestinal gas, most notably ]{{Fact|date=February 2007}}, ]{{Fact|date=February 2007}}, ] and the closely related ], ], ] (hing), ], and ] ] (a Japanese ]).{{fact|date=March 2007}} Many people report that by reducing intake of foods containing ]s (such as rice, pasta, potatoes and bread), the amount of flatulence may decrease significantly.{{fact|date=March 2007}} The amount of water-soluble ] in beans that may contribute to production of intestinal gas is reputed to be reduced by a long period of soaking followed by boiling,{{fact|date=March 2007}} but at a cost of also leaching out other water-soluble nutrients.{{fact|date=March 2007}} Also, intestinal gas can be reduced by fermenting the beans, and making them less gas-inducing, and/or by cooking them in the liquor from a previous batch{{Fact|date=March 2007}}. '']'' and '']'' have recently been hypothesized<!-- Never, never, NEVER EVER use the word "PROVEN" in a scientific article. Science hypothesizes, tests hypotheses, and accepts hypotheses that have not yet been DISproven. Science never proves anything! --> as being responsible for this effect.<ref></ref> Some ]s also stand up to prolonged cooking, which can help break down the oligosaccharides into simple sugars. ] also breaks down oligosaccharides, which is why fermented bean products such as ] and ] are less likely to produce as much intestinal gas{{fact|date=March 2007}}).


Swallowing small amounts of air occurs while eating and drinking. This is emitted from the mouth by eructation (burping) and is normal. Excessive swallowing of environmental air is called ], and has been shown in a few case reports to be responsible for increased flatus volume. This is, however, considered a rare cause of increased flatus volume. Gases contained in food and beverages are likewise emitted largely through eructation, e.g., carbonated beverages.
]s (], ], etc.) are reputed to reduce flatulence when used to restore balance to the normal intestinal flora.{{fact|date=March 2007}} Yogurt contains '']'' which may be useful in reducing flatulence{{fact|date=March 2007}}). '']'' may make the intestines more acidic, thus maintaining the natural balance of fermentation processes.{{fact|date=March 2007}} '']'' is available in supplements (non-dairy is reputedly best{{fact|date=March 2007}}). ], which generally are non-digestible oligosaccharides, such as ], generally increase flatulence in a similar way as described for lactose intolerance.{{fact|date=March 2007}}


Endogenously produced intestinal gases make up 74 percent of flatus in normal subjects. The volume of gas produced is partially dependent upon the composition of the intestinal microbiota, which is normally very resistant to change, but is also very different in different individuals. Some patients are predisposed to increased endogenous gas production by virtue of their gut microbiota composition.<ref name="Azpiroz 2005" /> The greatest concentration of gut bacteria is in the colon, while the small intestine is normally nearly sterile. Fermentation occurs when unabsorbed food residues arrive in the colon.
Medicinal ] tablets have also been reported as effective in reducing both odor and quantity of flatus when taken immediately before food that is likely to cause flatulence later.{{fact|date=March 2007}}


Therefore, even more than the composition of the microbiota, diet is the primary factor that dictates the volume of flatus produced.<ref name="Azpiroz 2005" /> Diets that aim to reduce the amount of undigested fermentable food residues arriving in the colon have been shown to significantly reduce the volume of flatus produced. Again, increased volume of intestinal gas will not cause bloating and pain in normal subjects. Abnormal intestinal gas dynamics will create pain, distension, and bloating, regardless of whether there is high or low total flatus volume.
===Pharmacological===
] supplements may significantly reduce the amount of flatulence caused by some components of foods not being digested by the body and thereby promoting the action of microbes in the small and large ]. It has been suggested that ] ], which can digest certain complex sugars, are effective in reducing the volume and frequency of flatus.<ref>{{cite journal| author=Ganiats TG| coauthors=Norcross WA, Halverson AL, Burford PA, Palinkas LA| title=Does Beano prevent gas? A double-blind crossover study of oral alpha-galactosidase to treat dietary oligosaccharide intolerance| journal=J Fam Pract| year=1994| volume=39| pages=441–445}}</ref> The ] ] (brands ], Bean-zyme), ] (brand Lactaid), ], ], ], ], ], ], malt ], ], and ] are available, either individually or in combination blends, in commercial products.


===Odor===
The ] ], often used to treat ] caused by the ] '']'', may reduce both the production of intestinal gas and the frequency of flatus events.<ref>{{cite journal| author=Di Stefano M| coauthors=Strocchi A, Malservisi S, Veneto G, Ferrieri A, Corazza GR| title=Non-absorbable antibiotics for managing intestinal gas production and gas-related symptoms| journal=Aliment Pharmacol Ther| year=2000| volume=14| pages=1001–1008}}</ref>
Although flatus possesses an odor, this may be abnormally increased in some patients and cause social distress to the patient. Increased odor of flatus presents a distinct clinical issue from other complaints related to intestinal gas.<ref name="Bailey 2009">{{cite journal |last=Bailey |first=J |author2=Carter, NJ |author3=Neher, JO |title=FPIN's Clinical Inquiries: Effective management of flatulence |journal=] |date=June 15, 2009 |volume=79 |issue=12 |pages=1098–100 |pmid=19530642}}</ref> Some patients may exhibit over-sensitivity to bad flatus odor, and in extreme forms, ] may be diagnosed. Recent informal research found a correlation between flatus odor and both loudness and humidity content.<ref>{{cite web|last=Brain|first=Monkey|date=October 8, 2020|title=Bimodal Farts|url=https://flatology.com/bimodal-farts/|website=The Invisible College of Experimental Flatology}}</ref>


===Incontinence of flatus===
While not affecting the production of the gases themselves, ] (agents which lower ]) can reduce the disagreeable sensations associated with flatulence, by aiding the dissolution of the gases into liquid and solid fecal matter.{{fact|date=March 2007}} Preparations containing ] reportedly operate by promoting the coalescence of smaller bubbles into larger ones more easily passed from the body, either by ]ing or flatulence. Such preparations do not decrease the total amount of gas generated in or passed from the colon, but make the bubbles larger and thereby allowing them to be passed more easily.{{fact|date=March 2007}}
"Gas incontinence" could be defined as loss of voluntary control over the passage of flatus. It is a recognised subtype of ], and is usually related to minor disruptions of the continence mechanisms. Some consider gas incontinence to be the first, sometimes only, symptom of faecal incontinence.<ref name="ASCRS textbook">{{citation |editor=Bruce G. Wolff |editor2=James W. Fleshman |editor3=David E. Beck |editor4=John H. Pemberton |editor5=Steven D. Wexner |title=The ASCRS textbook of colon and rectal surgery |year=2007 |publisher=] |location=New York |isbn=978-0-387-24846-2}}</ref>


==Cause==
Often it may be helpful to ingest small quantities of ]ic liquids with meals, such as ] or ], to stimulate the production of ] ]. In turn, acid ingestion may increase normal ] and acid production, facilitating normal ] and perhaps limiting intestinal gas production. Ingestion of ]- or ]-containing supplements (such as ] or ], respectively, may be helpful.{{fact|date=March 2007}}
Intestinal gas is composed of varying quantities of exogenous sources and endogenous sources.<ref name="NIH Gas in the">{{cite web |url=http://www.niddk.nih.gov/health-information/health-topics/digestive-diseases/gas/Pages/facts.aspx |title=Gas in the Digestive Tract |publisher=] |access-date=August 24, 2015 |archive-date=August 13, 2015 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150813012551/http://www.niddk.nih.gov/health-information/health-topics/digestive-diseases/gas/Pages/facts.aspx |url-status=dead }}</ref> The exogenous gases are swallowed (]) when eating or drinking or increased swallowing during times of excessive salivation (as might occur when nauseated or as the result of ] disease). The ] gases are produced either as a by-product of digesting certain types of food, or of incomplete ], as is the case during ]. Anything that causes food to be incompletely digested by the ] or ] may cause flatulence when the material arrives in the large intestine, due to ] by ] or ] normally or abnormally present in the ].


Flatulence-producing foods are typically high in certain ]s, especially ] such as ]. Those foods include ]s, ]s, ]s, ]s, ], ], ]s, ]s, ], ]es, ]es, ], ]s, ]s, ]s, ], and ] in ]s. ], ], ], ] and other ] that belong to the genus '']'' are commonly reputed to not only increase flatulence, but to increase the pungency of the flatus.<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/7622.php|title=Flatulence: Causes, remedies, and complications|work=Medical News Today|access-date=2018-04-17}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|url=https://paleoleap.com/eat-brassicas-just-ones-know/|title=Paleo Foods: Brassicas (and not Just the Ones you Know) {{!}} Paleo Leap|date=2014-09-14|work=Paleo Leap {{!}} Paleo diet Recipes & Tips|access-date=2018-04-17}}</ref>
] from flatulence, caused by bacteria in the bowel, can be treated by taking ] (brand Devrom). ] is commonly used by individuals who have had ] surgery, ], ] and ].<ref>{{cite journal| author=Turnbull G| title=The Ostomy Files:The Issue of Oral Medications and a Fecal Ostomy| journal=Ostomy/Wound Management|year=2005| volume=51| pages=14-16}}</ref><ref>""</ref>


In beans, endogenous gases seem to arise from complex oligosaccharides (]s) that are particularly resistant to digestion by mammals, but are readily digestible by ] (] archaea; '']'') that inhabit the ]. These oligosaccharides pass through the small intestine largely unchanged, and when they reach the large intestine, ] ferment them, producing copious amounts of flatus.<ref name="McGee">{{cite book| last=McGee| first=Harold |author-link=Harold McGee |title=On Food and Cooking| publisher=] | year=1984| isbn=0-684-84328-5| pages=257–58| title-link=On Food and Cooking }}</ref>
===Practical===
Some patients experience relief from intestinal gas by helping it to pass faster. Positioning the body with the head down and posterior up can help gas to pass quicker. It can also help to alternate laying on the left side and then the right side for a few minutes at a time. This helps gas bubbles to move through the winding intestines quicker.


When excessive or malodorous, flatus can be a sign of a health disorder, such as ], ], ] or ]. It can also be caused by certain medicines, such as ], ]s, ] medicines or ]s.<ref name=NHS2017 /><ref name=CzajaBulsa2015>{{cite journal |author=Czaja-Bulsa G |title=Non coeliac gluten sensitivity – A new disease with gluten intolerance |journal=Clin Nutr|volume=34|issue=2|pages=189–94|date=Apr 2015|pmid=25245857 |doi=10.1016/j.clnu.2014.08.012|type=Review|doi-access=free}}</ref> Some infections, such as ], are also associated with flatulence.<ref>{{cite journal|pmc=2272232 | pmid=1499664 | volume=109 | issue=1 | title=Giardia – diagnosis, clinical course and epidemiology: A review |date= 1992|jstor=3863897 | author=Flanagan PA | journal=] | pages=1–22}}</ref>
Underwear and pads with activated charcoal are available.


Interest in the causes of flatulence was spurred by high-altitude ] and ]; the low ], confined conditions, and stresses peculiar to those endeavours were cause for concern.<ref name="McGee"/> In the field of mountaineering, the phenomenon of ] was first recorded over two hundred years ago.
==Health effects==
{{unreferenced||date=June 2006}}
As a normal body function, the action of flatulence is an important signal of normal ] activity and hence is often documented by nursing staff following surgical or other treatment of patients. However, symptoms of excessive flatulence ''can'' indicate the presence of ] or some other organic ]. In particular, the sudden occurrence of excessive flatulence together with the onset of new symptoms provide reason for seeking further medical examination.


==Mechanism==
Flatulence is not ]; it is a natural component of various intestinal contents. However, discomfort may develop from the build-up of gas pressure. In theory, pathological distension of the bowel, leading to ], could result if a person holds in flatus.


===Production, composition, and odor===
Not all flatus is released from the body via the anus. When the ] of any gas component of the intestinal ] is higher than its partial pressure in the ], that component enters into the bloodstream of the intestinal wall by the process of ]. As the blood passes through the ] this gas can diffuse back out of the blood and be exhaled. If a person holds in flatus during daytime, it will often be released during sleep when the body is relaxed. Some flatus can become trapped within the feces during its compaction and will exit the body, still contained within the fecal matter, during the process of ].
Flatus (intestinal gas) is mostly produced as a byproduct of bacterial fermentation in the gastrointestinal (GI) tract, especially the ].<ref name="Tomlin 1991" /> There are reports of ] (excessive air swallowing) causing excessive intestinal gas, but this is considered rare.<ref name="Hemmink 2009">{{cite journal |last=Hemmink |first=GJ |author2=Weusten, BL |author3=Bredenoord, AJ |author4=Timmer, R |author5= Smout, AJ |title=Aerophagia: excessive air swallowing demonstrated by esophageal impedance monitoring |journal=] |date=October 2009 |volume=7 |issue=10 |pages=1127–29 |pmid=19602452 |doi=10.1016/j.cgh.2009.06.029|doi-access=free }}</ref>


Over 99% of the volume of flatus is composed of odorless gases.<ref name="Tangerman 2009" /> These include ], ], ], ] and ]. Nitrogen is not produced in the gut, but a component of environmental air. Patients who have excessive intestinal gas that is mostly composed of nitrogen have aerophagia.<ref name="Levitt 1998" /> Hydrogen, carbon dioxide and methane are all produced in the gut and contribute 74% of the volume of flatus in normal subjects.<ref name="Suarez 1997" /> Methane and hydrogen are ], and so ] if it contains adequate amounts of these components.<ref name="Mercer2009">{{cite book |last=Mercer |first=Bobby |title=How Do You Light a Fart?: And 150 Other Essential Things Every Guy Should Know about Science |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=gV01_pPEO_AC&pg=PT88 |date=2009-04-18 |publisher=] |isbn=9781440519871 |page=71 |access-date=October 2, 2014 }}{{Dead link|date=March 2024 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}</ref>
=== Recording flatulence events ===
{{Unreferenced|date=March 2007}}
The term ] is defined as the presence of gas within the ] or intestines. However, it is sometimes also used to describe the condition of excessive flatulence. Since subjective judgments vary considerably about what constitutes normal and elevated levels of flatulence, ] personnel sometimes instruct a ] complaining about excessive flatulence to maintain a personal flatulence ]. Researchers studying flatulence have also developed what is called a ]. Its ] ] represents time (typically 24 hours, with each hour being marked on the time line). The subject is instructed to make a ] mark on this line at each point in time that they notice flatus passing through the ]. The ] volume of the event is indicated by the ] distance that the pencil mark rises above the time line. ] events are indicated by a short mark that extends only below the time line.


Not all humans produce flatus that contains methane. For example, in one study of the ] of nine adults, only five of the samples contained ] capable of producing methane.<ref>{{cite journal| author=Miller TL|author2=Wolin MJ |author3=de Macario EC |author4=Macario AJ | title=Isolation of ''Methanobrevibacter smithii'' from human faeces| journal=] | year=1982| volume=43| pages=227–32 |pmid=6798932 |pmc=241804 |doi= 10.1128/AEM.43.1.227-232.1982| issue=1|bibcode=1982ApEnM..43..227M }}</ref> The prevalence of methane over hydrogen in human flatus may correlate with obesity, constipation and irritable bowel syndrome, as archaea that oxidise hydrogen into methane promote the metabolism's ability to absorb fatty acids from food.<ref name="Pimentel2012">{{cite journal |last=Pimentel |first=Mark |author2=Robert P Gunsalus |author3=Satish SC Rao |author4=Husen Zhang |year=2012|title=Methanogens in Human Health and Disease |journal=] |volume=1 |issue=1 |pages=28–33|doi=10.1038/ajgsup.2012.6 |doi-access=free }}</ref>
==Environmental impact==
] may be a significant contributing factor to the ], accounting for around 20% of global ] emissions.<ref>{{cite web| url=http://www.newscientist.com/article.ns?id=dn6431| title=Burp vaccine cuts greenhouse gas| first=Rachel| last=Nowak| date=], ]| work=New Scientist}}</ref> Less than 10% of the total ] emissions from livestock are produced by animal flatulence; most emissions are produced by animal ]. Livestock in ] account for 60% of the country's greenhouse gas emissions.<ref>{{cite news| title=Farmers raise stink over New Zealand 'fart tax'| first=David| last=Fickling| url=http://www.guardian.co.uk/international/story/0,3604,1035851,00.html| work=Guardian Unlimited| date=], ]}}</ref> Livestock in ] contribute approximately 14% of that country's greenhouse gas emissions.<ref>{{cite web| first=Kathy| last=Marks| title=Australian Scientists Looking to Kangaroos to Reduce Greenhouse Gas of Livestock| work=The Independent (London)| url=http://www.mycattle.com/health/dsp_health_article.cfm?storyid=4086| date=], ]}}</ref>


The remaining trace (<1% volume) compounds contribute to the odor of flatus. Historically, compounds such as ], ], ] and ] were thought to cause the odor of flatus. More recent evidence proves that the major contribution to the odor of flatus comes from a combination of volatile ] compounds.<ref name="Tangerman 2009" /><ref name="Suarez 1998">{{cite journal |last=Suarez |first=FL |author2=Springfield, J |author3=Levitt, MD |title=Identification of gases responsible for the odour of human flatus and evaluation of a device purported to reduce this odour |journal=] |date=July 1998 |volume=43 |issue=1 |pages=100–04 |pmid=9771412 |pmc=1727181 |doi=10.1136/gut.43.1.100}}</ref> ], ] (also known as ]), ], ] and ] are present in flatus. The benzopyrrole volatiles ] and ] have an odor of mothballs, <!-- <ref name="Moore 1987" /> ref name not defined--> and therefore probably do not contribute greatly to the characteristic odor of flatus.
==Social context==
In many ]s, excessive human flatulence is regarded as embarrassing and repulsive, even to the point of being a ] subject. People will often strain to hold in the passing of gas when in polite company, or position themselves to conceal the noise and smell.


In one study, hydrogen sulfide concentration was shown to correlate convincingly with perceived bad odor of flatus, followed by methyl mercaptan and dimethyl sulfide.<ref name="Levitt 1998" /> This is supported by the fact that hydrogen sulfide may be the most abundant volatile sulfur compound present. These results were generated from subjects who were eating a diet high in ] to stimulate flatus production.
Flatulence is a potential source of humor, either due to the foul smell or the sounds produced. Some find humour in ], which is possible due to the presence of flammable gases such as hydrogen and methane, though the process can result in burn injuries to the rectum, anus and surrounding ].


Others report that methyl mercaptan was the greatest contributor to the odor of flatus in patients not under any specific dietary alterations.<ref name="Tangerman 2009" /><!-- <ref name="Moore 1987" /> no ref name defined --> It has now been demonstrated that methyl mercaptan, dimethyl sulfide, and hydrogen sulfide (described as decomposing vegetables, unpleasantly sweet/wild radish and rotten eggs respectively) are all present in human flatus in concentrations above their smell perception thresholds.<ref name="Tangerman 2009" />
''The History of Farting'', by Benjamin Bart, is a collection of assorted ]s, facts, and blurbs on farting,{{fact|date=March 2007}} while ''Who Cut the Cheese: A Cultural History of the Fart'', by Jim Dawson,{{fact|date=March 2007}} gives a more complete cultural discussion of the historical and social significance of farting.


It is recognized that increased dietary sulfur-containing amino acids significantly increases the odor of flatus. It is therefore likely that the odor of flatus is created by a combination of volatile sulfur compounds, with minimal contribution from non-sulfur volatiles.<ref name="Levitt 1998" /> This odor can also be caused by the presence of large numbers of microflora ] or the presence of faeces in the rectum. Diets high in protein, especially sulfur-containing amino acids, have been demonstrated to significantly increase the odor of flatus.
== Literature and the arts==


===Volume and intestinal gas dynamics===
{{seealso|Flatulence humor}}
Normal flatus volume is 476 to 1491 mL per 24 hours.<ref name="Tangerman 2009">{{cite journal |last=Tangerman |first=Albert |title=Measurement and biological significance of the volatile sulfur compounds hydrogen sulfide, methanethiol and dimethyl sulfide in various biological matrices |journal=] |date=October 1, 2009 |volume=877 |issue=28 |pages=3366–77|doi=10.1016/j.jchromb.2009.05.026|pmid=19505855}}</ref><ref name="Tomlin 1991">{{cite journal |last=Tomlin |first=J |author2=Lowis, C |author3=Read, NW |title=Investigation of normal flatus production in healthy volunteers |journal=] |date=June 1991 |volume=32 |issue=6 |pages=665–669 |pmid=1648028 |pmc=1378885 |doi=10.1136/gut.32.6.665}}</ref> This variability between individuals is greatly dependent upon diet. Similarly, the number of flatus episodes per day is variable; the normal range is given as 8–20 per day.<ref name="Levitt 1998">{{cite journal |last=Levitt |first=MD |author2=Furne, J |author3=Aeolus, MR |author4= Suarez, FL |title=Evaluation of an extremely flatulent patient: case report and proposed diagnostic and therapeutic approach |journal=] |date=November 1998 |volume=93 |issue=11 |pages=2276–81 |doi=10.1111/j.1572-0241.1998.00635.x |pmid=9820415 |s2cid=20991299 }}</ref><!-- <ref name="Levitt 1979" /> ref name not defined--> The volume of flatus associated with each flatulence event again varies (5–375&nbsp;mL).<ref name="Tangerman 2009" /><ref name="Tomlin 1991" /><ref name="Suarez 1997">{{cite journal |last=Suarez |first=F |author2=Furne, J |author3=Springfield, J |author4= Levitt, M |title=Insights into human colonic physiology obtained from the study of flatus composition |journal=] |date=May 1997 |volume=272 |issue=5 Pt 1 |pages=G1028–33 |pmid=9176210|doi=10.1152/ajpgi.1997.272.5.G1028 }}</ref> The volume of the first flatulence upon waking in the morning is significantly larger than those during the day.<ref name="Tangerman 2009" /> This may be due to buildup of intestinal gas in the colon during sleep, the peak in peristaltic activity in the first few hours after waking or the strong prokinetic effect of rectal distension on the rate of transit of intestinal gas.<ref name="Azpiroz 2005">{{cite journal |last=Azpiroz |first=F |title=Intestinal gas dynamics: mechanisms and clinical relevance |journal=] |date=July 1, 2005 |volume=54 |issue=7 |pages=893–95 |doi=10.1136/gut.2004.048868|pmid=15951528 |pmc=1774596 }}</ref> It is now known that gas is moved along the gut independently of solids and liquids, and this transit is more efficient in the erect position compared to when supine.<ref name="Azpiroz 2005" /> It is thought that large volumes of intestinal gas present low resistance, and can be propelled by subtle changes in gut tone, capacitance and proximal contraction and distal relaxation. This process is thought not to affect solid and liquid intra-lumenal contents.<ref name="Azpiroz 2005" />


Researchers investigating the role of sensory nerve endings in the anal canal did not find them to be essential for retaining fluids in the anus, and instead speculate that their role may be to distinguish between flatus and faeces, thereby helping detect a need to defecate or to signal the end of defecation.<ref>{{cite journal |author=Read, M. G. |author2=Read, N. W. |title=Role of anorectal sensation in preserving continence |journal=] |year=1982 |volume=23 |pages=345–47 |doi=10.1136/gut.23.4.345 |pmid=7076012 |pmc=1419736|issue=4}}</ref>
* In ]'s '']'', the giant teaches Sophie about the joys of "whizzpopping" (farting). In the book, whizpopping is caused by taking the drink Frobscottle.


The sound varies depending on the volume of gas, the size of the opening that the air is being pushed through, which is affected by the state of tension in the ], and the ] or ] of the ] being propelled, as well as other factors, such as whether the gas was caused by swallowed air.<ref name="Totten 2017 j939">{{cite web | last=Totten | first=Sanden | title=There is physics in every fart | website=WHYY | date=February 28, 2017 | url=https://whyy.org/segments/there-is-physics-in-every-fart/ | access-date=February 22, 2024}}</ref><ref name="Shiffer 2018 u561">{{cite web | last=Shiffer | first=Emily J. | title=Fart Noises: Why Some Farts Are Silent and Others Are Loud | website=Men's Health | date=January 2, 2018 | url=https://www.menshealth.com/health/a19545944/fart-noises/ | access-date=February 22, 2024}}</ref> Among humans, flatulence occasionally happens accidentally, such as incidentally to ]ing<ref name="Cavallari_2017">{{cite journal |last1=Cavallari |first1=Paolo |last2=Bolzoni |first2=Francesco |last3=Esposti |first3=Roberto |last4=Bruttini |first4=Carlo |date=2017-09-27 |title=Cough-Anal Reflex May Be the Expression of a Pre-Programmed Postural Action |journal=Frontiers in Human Neuroscience |volume=11 |issue=475 |page=475 |doi=10.3389/fnhum.2017.00475 |doi-access=free |pmid=29021750 |pmc=5624195 }}</ref> or ] or during ]; on other occasions, flatulence can be voluntarily elicited by tensing the rectum or "bearing down" on stomach or bowel muscles and subsequently relaxing the anal sphincter, resulting in the expulsion of flatus.{{Citation needed|date=September 2021}}
*In ]'s ''],'' Augustine, not otherwise noted for his levity, makes mention of men who "have such command of their bowels, that they can break wind continuously at will, so as to produce the effect of singing." That mankind in general has lost this ability he attributes to the first sin of Adam and Eve and it consequences with respect to body control. (''The City of God Against the Pagans'', ed and trans Philip Levine (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1966), XIV.24. St Augustine observation would be emulated in the nineteenth century by the performer ] who could fart the French national anthem, ].


==Management==
* In the the second verse of the traditional English ] "]" comes the line "Bulluc sterteþ, bucke uerteþ" ("The bullock jumps, the billy-goat farts").


Since problems involving intestinal gas present as different (but sometimes combined) complaints, the management is cause-related.
*In ]'s ''],'' the last line of Inferno Chapter XXI reads: ''ed elli avea del cul fatto trombetta'' ("and he made a trumpet of his buttocks"), in the last example the use of this natural body function underlined a demoniac condition.


===Pain and bloating===
*]'s ] work, ''] et Grobiana'', appeared in ] in ] as ''The Schoole of Slovenrie: Or, Cato turnd wrong side outward'', published by one "R.F.". The "Schoole" taught its students that holding back the desire to ], ], and ] was bad for one's health; thus, one has to indulge freely in all three activities.
{{Main|Abdominal distension|Bloating}}
While not affecting the production of the gases themselves, ] (agents that lower ]) can reduce the disagreeable sensations associated with flatulence, by aiding the dissolution of the gases into liquid and solid faecal matter.<ref name="brecevic">{{cite journal |vauthors=Brecević L, Bosan-Kilibarda I, Strajnar F |title=Mechanism of antifoaming action of simethicone |journal=] |volume=14 |issue=3 |pages=207–11 |year=1994 |pmid=8083482 |doi=10.1002/jat.2550140311|s2cid=7453218 }}
</ref> Preparations containing ] reportedly operate by promoting the coalescence of smaller bubbles into larger ones more easily passed from the body, either by ]ing or flatulence. Such preparations do not decrease the total amount of gas generated in or passed from the colon, but make the bubbles larger and thereby allowing them to be passed more easily.<ref name="brecevic" />


Other drugs including ], ], antibiotics and probiotics are also used to treat bloating in patients with functional bowel disorders such as irritable bowel syndrome, and there is some evidence that these measures may reduce symptoms.<ref name="Schmulson 2011">{{cite journal |last=Schmulson |first=M |author2=Chang, L |title=Review article: the treatment of functional abdominal bloating and distension |journal=Alimentary Pharmacology & Therapeutics |date=May 2011 |volume=33 |issue=10 |pages=1071–86 |pmid=21488913|doi=10.1111/j.1365-2036.2011.04637.x|s2cid=20718176 |doi-access=free }}</ref>
*], in his essay "''Of the Force of Imagination''", includes a discussion of flatulence. Of "''the vessels that serve to discharge the belly''", he writes "''I myself knew one so rude and ungoverned, as for forty years together made his master vent with one continued and unintermitted outbursting, and 'tis like will do so till he die of it''".<ref>{{cite book| url=http://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/3/5/8/3583/3583.txt| title=The Essays of Montaigne, Volume 3| author=Michel de Montaigne| origyear=1877| editor=William Carew Hazilitt (ed.)| chapter=Of the Force of Imagination| date=2004-11-01| publisher=Project Gutenberg| others=trans. Charles Cotton}}</ref>


A flexible tube, inserted into the ], can be used to collect intestinal gas in a flatus bag. This method is occasionally needed in a hospital setting, when the patient is unable to pass gas normally.<ref>{{cite web|title=Flatus tube|url=http://www.gastrotraining.com/product-information/colorectal/flatus-tube|website=Gastro Training|access-date=3 April 2016}}</ref>
*In ]'s ''La Terre'' (the 15th volume of the series ]), the eldest Fouan son can fart at will and keeps winning free drinks by betting on his skill.


===Volume===
*In ]'s '']'', the main character ] breaks wind in the "Sirens" chapter of the book.<ref></ref>
{{Main|Antiflatulent|Carminative}}
One method of reducing the volume of flatus produced is dietary modification, reducing the amount of fermentable carbohydrates. This is the theory behind diets such as the ] (a diet low in fermentable oligosaccharides, disaccharides, monosaccharides, alcohols, and polyols).<ref name="Staudacher 2011">{{cite journal |last=Staudacher |first=HM |author2=Whelan, K |author3=Irving, PM |author4= Lomer, MC |title=Comparison of symptom response following advice for a diet low in fermentable carbohydrates (FODMAPs) versus standard dietary advice in patients with irritable bowel syndrome |journal=Journal of Human Nutrition and Dietetics |date=October 2011 |volume=24 |issue=5 |pages=487–95 |pmid=21615553 |doi=10.1111/j.1365-277X.2011.01162.x}}</ref>


Most starches, including potatoes, corn, noodles, and wheat, produce gas as they are broken down in the large intestine.<ref name="NIH Gas in the"/> Intestinal gas can be reduced by fermenting the beans, and making them less gas-inducing, or by cooking them in the liquor from a previous batch. For example, the fermented bean product ] is less likely to produce as much intestinal gas. Some ]s also stand up to prolonged cooking, which can help break down the oligosaccharides into simple sugars. Fermentative lactic acid bacteria such as '']'' and '']'' reduce flatulence in the human intestinal tract.<ref>{{cite web |title=Study shows secret to gas-free beans |url=http://reuters.myway.com/article/20060426/2006-04-26T170153Z_01_N25328545_RTRIDST_0_ODD-BEANS-DC-DC.html |date=2006-04-26|access-date=2007-09-10 |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20060502110835/http://reuters.myway.com/article/20060426/2006-04-26T170153Z_01_N25328545_RTRIDST_0_ODD-BEANS-DC-DC.html |archive-date = 2006-05-02}}</ref>
*'']'' is a popular children's book in the United States about flatulence.


]s (], ], etc.) are reputed to reduce flatulence when used to restore balance to the normal ].<ref>{{cite book |last=Rubin |first=Jordan S. |author-link=Jordan S. Rubin |author2=Joseph Brasco |title=Restoring Your Digestive Health |year=2003 |publisher=] |isbn=978-0758202826 |url-access=registration |url=https://archive.org/details/restoringyourdig00rubi }}{{page needed|date=August 2015}}</ref> Live (bioactive) yogurt contains, among other lactic bacteria, '']'', which may be useful in reducing flatulence. '']'' may make the intestinal environment more acidic, supporting a natural balance of the fermentative processes. '']'' is available in supplements. ], which generally are non-digestible oligosaccharides, such as ], generally increase flatulence in a similar way as described for lactose intolerance.
*The film '']'' features a boy lighting a fart as an act in a talent show. Additionally, the film's DVD features an optional "fart track" that adds fart noises to the film's audio.


] supplements may significantly reduce the amount of flatulence caused by some components of foods not being digested by the body and thereby promoting the action of microbes in the small and large ]. It has been suggested that ] ], which can digest certain complex sugars, are effective in reducing the volume and frequency of flatus.<ref>{{cite journal| author=Ganiats TG |author2=Norcross WA |author3=Halverson AL |author4=Burford PA |author5=Palinkas LA | title=Does Beano prevent gas? A double-blind crossover study of oral alpha-galactosidase to treat dietary oligosaccharide intolerance| journal=The Journal of Family Practice | year=1994| volume=39| pages=441–45 |pmid=7964541| issue=5 }}</ref> The ] ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], malt ], ], and ] are available, either individually or in combination blends, in commercial products.
*An episode of '']'' featured myths about flatulence and determined the chemical composition of a typical flatus.


The ] ], often used to treat ] caused by the ] '']'', may reduce both the production of intestinal gas and the frequency of flatus events.<ref>{{cite journal| author=Di Stefano M |author2=Strocchi A |author3=Malservisi S |author4=Veneto G |author5=Ferrieri A |author6=Corazza GR | title=Non-absorbable antibiotics for managing intestinal gas production and gas-related symptoms| journal=] | year=2000| volume=14| pages=1001–08| doi=10.1046/j.1365-2036.2000.00808.x |pmid=10930893 | issue=8|s2cid=19613386 | doi-access=free }}</ref>
* ]'s character in the movie '']'' suffered from uncontrolled flatulence any time he broke into a fit of evil laughter.


===Odor===
* The lighting of flatulence is used as a device of social acceptance in a dream sequence of ].


'''Bismuth'''
* In the movie '']'', "The Spleen" (played by ]) is a "superhero" who, due to a gypsy curse, can aim his highly noxious flatulence with deadly precision.


The ] created by flatulence is commonly treated with ], available under the name Devrom. Bismuth subgallate is commonly used by individuals who have had ] surgery, ], ] and ].<ref>{{cite journal| author=Turnbull G| url=https://www.o-wm.com/content/the-issue-oral-medications-and-a-fecal-ostomy| title=The Ostomy Files:The Issue of Oral Medications and a Fecal Ostomy| journal=]| year=2005| volume=51| pages=14–16| access-date=September 22, 2019| archive-date=September 22, 2019| archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190922113523/https://www.o-wm.com/content/the-issue-oral-medications-and-a-fecal-ostomy| url-status=dead}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.cancer.org/docroot/CRI/content/CRI_2_6x_Colostomy.asp |title=Colostomy Guide |date=2006-01-04 |access-date=2007-09-10 |archive-date=September 22, 2007 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070922170051/http://www.cancer.org/docroot/CRI/content/CRI_2_6x_Colostomy.asp |url-status=dead }}</ref> ] is a compound that binds hydrogen sulfide, and one study reported a dose of 524&nbsp;mg four times a day for 3–7 days bismuth subsalicylate yielded a >95% reduction in faecal hydrogen sulfide release in both humans and rats.<ref name="SuarezFurne1998">{{cite journal|last1=Suarez|first1=F.L.|last2=Furne|first2=J.K.|last3=Springfield|first3=J.R.|last4=Levitt|first4=M.D.|title=Bismuth subsalicylate markedly decreases hydrogen sulfide release in the human colon|journal=Gastroenterology|volume=114|issue=5|year=1998|pages=923–29|pmid=9558280|doi=10.1016/S0016-5085(98)81700-9}}</ref>
* The animated series '']'' features two comedians, named Terrance and Philip, who star in a television program the main characters frequently watch. Their act features a lot of flatulence which causes a great deal of offence to the more conservative residents of South Park.
Another bismuth compound, bismuth subnitrate was also shown to bind to hydrogen sulfide.<ref name="Levitt 2002">{{cite journal |last=Levitt |first=MD |author2=Springfield, J |author3=Furne, J |author4=Koenig, T |author5= Suarez, FL |title=Physiology of sulfide in the rat colon: use of bismuth to assess colonic sulfide production |journal=] |date=April 2002 |volume=92 |issue=4 |pages=1655–60 |pmid=11896034 |doi=10.1152/japplphysiol.00907.2001|s2cid=37217656 }}</ref> Another study showed that bismuth acted synergistically with various antibiotics to inhibit sulfate-reducing gut bacteria and sulfide production.<ref name="Ohge 2003">{{cite journal |last=Ohge |first=H |author2=Furne, JK |author3=Springfield, J |author4=Sueda, T |author5=Madoff, RD |author6= Levitt, MD |title=The effect of antibiotics and bismuth on fecal hydrogen sulfide and sulfate-reducing bacteria in the rat |journal=] |date=November 7, 2003 |volume=228 |issue=1 |pages=137–42|pmid=14612249 |doi=10.1016/s0378-1097(03)00748-1|doi-access=free }}</ref> Some authors proposed a theory that hydrogen sulfide was involved in the development of ] and that bismuth might be helpful in the management of this condition.<ref name="Furne 2000">{{cite journal |last=Furne |first=JK |author2=Suarez, FL |author3=Ewing, SL |author4=Springfield, J |author5= Levitt, MD |title=Binding of hydrogen sulfide by bismuth does not prevent dextran sulfate-induced colitis in rats |journal=] |date=July 2000 |volume=45 |issue=7 |pages=1439–43 |pmid=10961726|doi=10.1023/A:1005580709390 |s2cid=740767 }}</ref> However, bismuth administration in rats did not prevent them from developing ulcerative colitis despite reduced hydrogen sulfide production.<ref name="Furne 2000" /> Also, evidence suggests that colonic hydrogen sulfide is largely present in bound forms, probably sulfides of iron and other metals.<ref name="Tangerman 2009" /> Rarely, serious bismuth toxicity may occur with higher doses.<ref name="Gordon 1995">{{cite journal |last=Gordon |first=MF |author2=Abrams, RI |author3=Rubin, DB |author4=Barr, WB |author5= Correa, DD |title=Bismuth subsalicylate toxicity as a cause of prolonged encephalopathy with myoclonus |journal=] |date=March 1995 |volume=10 |issue=2 |pages=220–22 |pmid=7753066 |doi=10.1002/mds.870100215|s2cid=11723220 }}</ref>


''' Activated charcoal'''
* A scene in the comedy film '']'' in which a posse of cowboys sitting around a camp fire eat baked beans, causing extreme flatulence.


Despite being an ancient treatment for various digestive complaints, ] did not produce reduction in both the total flatus volume nor the release of sulfur-containing gasses, and there was no reduction in abdominal symptoms (after 0.52{{nbsp}}g activated charcoal four times a day for one week).<ref name="Suarez 1999">{{cite journal |last=Suarez |first=FL |author2=Furne, J |author3=Springfield, J |author4= Levitt, MD |title=Failure of activated charcoal to reduce the release of gases produced by the colonic flora |journal=] |date=January 1999 |volume=94 |issue=1 |pages=208–12 |doi=10.1111/j.1572-0241.1999.00798.x |pmid=9934757|s2cid=20729051 }}</ref> The authors suggested that saturation of charcoal binding sites during its passage through the gut was the reason for this. A further study concluded that activated charcoal (4{{nbsp}}g) does not influence gas formation in vitro or in vivo.<ref name="Potter 1985">{{cite journal |last=Potter |first=T |author2=Ellis, C |author3=Levitt, M |title=Activated charcoal: in vivo and in vitro studies of effect on gas formation |journal=] |date=March 1985 |volume=88 |issue=3 |pages=620–24 |pmid=3917957 |doi=10.1016/0016-5085(85)90129-5|doi-access=free }}</ref> Other authors reported that activated charcoal was effective. A study in 8 dogs concluded activated charcoal (unknown oral dose) reduced hydrogen sulfide levels by 71%. In combination with yucca schidigera, and zinc acetate, this was increased to an 86% reduction in hydrogen sulfide, although flatus volume and number was unchanged.<ref name="Giffard 2001">{{cite journal |last=Giffard |first=CJ |author2=Collins, SB |author3=Stoodley, NC |author4=Butterwick, RF |author5= Batt, RM |title=Administration of charcoal, Yucca schidigera, and zinc acetate to reduce malodorous flatulence in dogs |journal=] |date=March 15, 2001 |volume=218 |issue=6 |pages=892–96 |pmid=11294313 |doi=10.2460/javma.2001.218.892|doi-access=free }}</ref> An early study reported activated charcoal (unknown oral dose) prevented a large increase in the number of flatus events and increased breath hydrogen concentrations that normally occur following a gas-producing meal.<ref name="Hall 1981">{{cite journal |last=Hall RG |first=Jr |author2=Thompson, H |author3=Strother, A |title=Effects of orally administered activated charcoal on intestinal gas |journal=] |date=March 1981 |volume=75 |issue=3 |pages=192–96 |pmid=7015846}}</ref>
* The film '']'' has a theater scene in which the main actor plays a role of a fart-man. He is requested by the audience to produce many farts.


'''Garments and external devices'''
* In the movie '']'' one of the drifters in the desert remarks "Do you wanna see something really cool" and then proceeds to fart into a campfire igniting a nuclear bomb like mushroom cloud.


In 1998, Chester "Buck" Weimer of ], received a patent for the first ] that contained a replaceable ]. The undergarments are ] and provide a pocketed ] in which a charcoal filter can be inserted.<ref name="weimer">{{cite web |last=Weimer |first=Chester |url=http://patft.uspto.gov/netacgi/nph-Parser?TERM1=5593398&u=/netahtml/srchnum.htm&Sect1=PTO1&Sect2=HITOFF&p=1&r=0&l=50&f=S&d=PALL |title=Protective underwear with malodorous flatus filter |date=1997-01-14 |access-date=2007-07-27 |archive-date=October 7, 2013 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131007065218/http://patft.uspto.gov/netacgi/nph-Parser?TERM1=5593398&u=/netahtml/srchnum.htm&Sect1=PTO1&Sect2=HITOFF&p=1&r=0&l=50&f=S&d=PALL |url-status=dead }}</ref> In 2001 Weimer received the ] for Biology for his invention.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.improb.com/ig/ig-pastwinners.html#ig2001 |title=The 2001 Ig Nobel Prize Winners |access-date=June 22, 2010 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110225074430/http://www.improb.com/ig/ig-pastwinners.html#ig2001 |archive-date=February 25, 2011 |df=mdy-all }}</ref>
* In '']'', the Hero can fart when ever the player wants to at the push of a button.


A similar product was released in 2002, but rather than an entire undergarment, consumers are able to purchase an insert similar to a ] that contains activated charcoal.<ref>{{cite web |last= Conant |first= Brian J. |author2= Myra M. Conant |url= http://patft.uspto.gov/netacgi/nph-Parser?TERM1=6313371&u=/netahtml/srchnum.htm&Sect1=PTO1&Sect2=HITOFF&p=1&r=0&l=50&f=S&d=PALL |title= Flatulence deodorizer |date= 2001-11-06 |access-date= 2007-09-10 |archive-date= October 7, 2013 |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20131007072913/http://patft.uspto.gov/netacgi/nph-Parser?TERM1=6313371&u=/netahtml/srchnum.htm&Sect1=PTO1&Sect2=HITOFF&p=1&r=0&l=50&f=S&d=PALL |url-status= dead }}</ref> The inventors, Myra and Brian Conant of ], still claim on their website to have discovered the undergarment product in 2002 (four years after Chester Weimer filed for a patent for his product), but state that their tests "concluded" that they should release an insert instead.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.flat-d.com/american-inventor.html |publisher=Flat-D Innovations Inc. |title=About the Inventor |access-date=2007-09-10}}</ref>
* "I fart in your general direction, you English wiper of other people's bottoms!" was a taunt delivered from the top of a castle wall to King Arthur and his company in ].


===Incontinence===
* A scene in the ] sitcom ] depicts character Addie Singer (played by ]) farting while giving an English class presentation.
{{Main|Faecal incontinence}}
Flatus incontinence where there is involuntary passage of gas, is a type of ], and is managed similarly.


==Society and culture==
* In an episode of ] ]'s character, ], believes her relationship with Mr. Big is over after she accidentally farts while lying in bed with him.
]'' (detail), an art scroll depicting a battle of flatulence, from Japan during the ]]]
] print employing ]]]
In many ]s, flatulence in public is regarded as embarrassing, but, depending on context, may also be considered humorous.<ref>{{cite book |last=Dawson |first=Jim |title=Who Cut the Cheese? A Cultural History of the Fart |publisher=Ten Speed Press |year=1999 |location=Berkeley, California}}</ref> People will often strain to hold in the passing of gas when in polite company, or position themselves to silence or conceal the passing of gas. In other cultures,{{Examples|date=January 2011}} it may be no more embarrassing than ]ing.


While the act of passing flatus in some cultures is generally considered to be an unfortunate occurrence in public settings, flatulence may, in casual circumstances and especially among children, be used as either a humorous supplement to a joke ("pull my finger"), or as a comic activity in and of itself. The social acceptability of flatulence-based humour in entertainment and the mass media varies over the course of time and between cultures. A sufficient number of entertainers have performed using their flatus to lead to the coining of the term ]. The ] is a joking device invented in the early 20th century for simulating a fart. In 2008, a farting application for the ] earned nearly $10,000 in one day.<ref>{{cite news |url=https://www.wired.com/gadgetlab/2008/12/iphone-fart-app/ |title=iPhone Fart App Rakes in $10,000 a Day |last=Chen |first=Brian X. |date=December 24, 2008 |work=]}}</ref>
==Curiosities==
*According to "The Great Fart Survey" , 39% of those who participated like the smell of their own farts.


A ] game named ''Touch Wood'' was documented by ] in the 1890s.<ref name="pennlive essay on farting">{{cite news |url=http://www.pennlive.com/midstate/index.ssf/2011/06/penn_state_professors_essay_on.html |title=Penn State professor's essay on farting takes the prize |newspaper=The Patriot-News |location=Harrisburg, Pennsylvania |date=June 8, 2011 |access-date=December 28, 2011 |author=Fishlock, Diana |quote=Trevor Blank found Pennsylvania boys playing "Safety," a farting game, the same as Blank had as a kid in Maryland, and the same game John Bourke documented in the 1890s, when it was called "Touch Wood." Basically, a boy who farts must say "Safety" or touch wood before his friends say another key phrase. If not, they're allowed to punch him. (It usually is boys who make farting a game or a weapon.)}}</ref> It was known as ''Safety'' in the 20th century in the U.S., and is still played by children as of 2011.<ref name="pennlive essay on farting" />
*] "the Fartiste" a famous French performer in the nineteenth century as well as many ]s before him did flatulence impressions and held shows. ] named his fictional governor (played by himself) William J. LePetomaine in the Western spoof film ].


In January 2011, the ] ], ], said that ] would make public "farting" illegal in his country. When reporting the story, the media satirised Chaponda's statement with punning headlines. Later, the minister withdrew his statement.<ref name=MaraviPost>{{cite web |url=http://maravipost.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=4663:chaponda-oops-i-goofed-you-can-fart&catid=74:general&Itemid=160#ixzz1D8VQamqG |title=Chaponda: Oops I goofed, you can fart! |date=February 4, 2011 |access-date=2011-03-02 |author=Joe Chibewa |work=Marevi Post |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110714032623/http://maravipost.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=4663%3Achaponda-oops-i-goofed-you-can-fart&catid=74%3Ageneral&Itemid=160#ixzz1D8VQamqG |archive-date=July 14, 2011 |df=mdy-all }}</ref>
*] passed a law legalizing farting at banquets out of concern for people's health.<ref>'''' by ]</ref> There was a widespread misconception that a person could be poisoned by retaining flatus.


===Environmental impact===
*] reports in '']'' that a Roman soldier raised his clothes and farted at the ]. This profane act so enraged the Jews that it caused a riot, during which many thousands were killed.<ref>'''' by ], 2.223, translator William Whiston</ref>
] is only a small portion (around one-twentieth) of cows' methane release. Cows also '']'' methane, due to the physiology of their digestive systems.<ref name="Distillations"/> ]]


Flatulence is often blamed as a significant source of ]es, owing to the erroneous belief that the methane released by ] is in the flatus.<ref> February 3, 2006. Example of error. Although the article doesn't specify whether the methane is released by flatulence or eructation, it appears the headline-writer assumes it's through flatulence. {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071014025622/http://www.abc.net.au/southqld/stories/s1560903.htm?backyard |date=October 14, 2007 }}</ref> While livestock account for around 20% of global ],<ref>{{cite web| url=https://www.newscientist.com/article.ns?id=dn6431| title=Burp vaccine cuts greenhouse gas| first=Rachel| last=Nowak| date=September 24, 2004| work=New Scientist}}</ref> 90–95% of that is released by ] or ].<ref> {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20040813063303/http://www.mycattle.com/health/dsp_health_article.cfm?storyid=10045 |date=August 13, 2004 }} By Gary Polakovic. ''Los Angeles Times'', July 13, 2003.</ref> In cows, gas and burps are produced by methane-generating microbes called ], which live inside the cow's digestive system. Proposals for reducing methane production in cows include the feeding of supplements such as ] and ], and the genetic engineering of gut biome microbes to produce less methane.<ref name="Distillations">{{cite journal|last1=Kean |first1=Sam |title=Tummy Trouble |journal=Distillations |publisher=] |date=2018|volume=4|issue=1 |page=5 |url=https://www.sciencehistory.org/distillations/magazine/tummy-trouble |access-date=June 26, 2018}}</ref>
*An apocryphal story about ] is that he farted while swearing loyalty to ] and consequently went into self-imposed ] for seven years. After his return, the Queen was reported to have reassured de Vere: "My Lord, I had quite forgotten the fart." (], '']'')


Since New Zealand produces large amounts of agricultural products, it has the unique position of having higher methane emissions from livestock compared to other greenhouse gas sources. The New Zealand government is a signatory to the ] and therefore attempts to reduce ]. To achieve this, an ] was proposed, which promptly became known as a "]" or "flatulence tax". It encountered opposition from farmers, farming lobby groups and opposition politicians.
*In August ], '']'' magazine reported that inventors Michael Zanakis and Philip Femano had been awarded a US patent ({{US patent|6,055,910}}) for a "toy gas-fired missile and launcher assembly". The abstract of the patent makes it clear that this is, in fact, a fart-powered ]:
*:"A ... missile is composed of a soft head and a tail extending therefrom formed by a piston. The piston is telescoped into the barrel of a launcher having a closed end on which is mounted an electrically activated igniter, the air space between the end of the piston and the closed end of the barrel defining a combustion chamber. Joined to the barrel, and communicating with the chamber therein, is a gas intake tube having a normally closed inlet valve. To operate the assembly, the operator places the inlet tube with its valve open adjacent his anal region, from which a colonic gas is discharged. The piston is then withdrawn to a degree producing a negative pressure to inhale the gas into the combustion chamber to intermix with the air therein to create a combustible mixture. The igniter is then activated to explode the mixture in the chamber and fire the missile into space."


===Entertainment===
*British inventors have also patented fart-related ideas, such as "A fart collecting device," which includes a drawing of the invention deployed and ready for action, with helpful numbers to identify the various components. "It comprises a gas-tight collecting tube 10 for insertion into the rectum of the subject. The tube 10 is connected to a gas-tight collecting bag (not shown). The end of the tube inserted into the subject is apertured and covered with a gauze filter and a gas permeable bladder 28."
{{Main|Flatulist}}


Historical comment on the ability to fart at will is observed as early as ]'s '']'' (5th century A.D.). Augustine mentions "people who produce at will without any stench such rhythmical sounds from their fundament that they appear to be making music even from that quarter."<ref>{{cite book |url=https://archive.org/details/cityofgodagainst0000augu/page/388/mode/2up |title=The City of God Against the Pagans |translator-first=Philip |translator-last=Levine |location=Cambridge, Massachusetts |author=Saint Augustine |authorlink=Saint Augustine|publisher=] |year=1966 |volume=IV |language=Latin |section=Book XIV, XXIV |pages=389–391 }}</ref> Intentional passing of gas and its use as entertainment for others appear to have been somewhat well known in pre-modern Europe, according to mentions of it in medieval and later literature, including ].{{cn|date=November 2023}}
*], an Australian surfwear label, features the iconic "Farting Dog" design in its lineup. Here the flatulence is depicted as a musical note emanating from the dog's backside.


] ("the Fartomaniac") was a famous French performer in the 19th century who, as well as many ]s before him, did flatulence impressions and held shows. The performer ] carries on le Pétomane's tradition today. Also, a 2002 fiction film '']'' revolves around a boy named Patrick Smash who has an ongoing flatulence problem from the time of his birth.<ref>{{Citation |last=Hewitt |first=Peter |title=Thunderpants |date=2002-05-24 |url=https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0283054/ |type=Comedy, Family, Sci-Fi |publisher=CP Medien AG, Mission Pictures, Pathé Pictures International |access-date=2022-09-08}}</ref>
* Former ] ] ] was (and still is by those who remember him) referred to in ] as "petit pét", or "little fart" because of his initials ('''PET'''). This could be considered a mildly affectionate or highly derogatory nickname, depending on the tone. Those who enjoy a bilingual pun also note that this usage gives new meaning to having a ] for someone.


Since the 1970s, farting has increasingly been featured in film, especially comedies such as '']'' and '']''.<ref>{{Citation |title=Scooby-Doo (5/10) Movie CLIP - Burping and Farting (2002) HD | date=January 6, 2015 |url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FgYr00Scelc |language=en |access-date=2022-09-08}}</ref>
* ], scientist and originator of the ] by ], was severely troubled by flatulence in his later years.<ref>{{cite book |last=Stone |first=Irving |title=The Origin: A Biographical Novel of Charles Darwin |origyear=1980 |publisher=DoubleDay |isbn=0385120648}}</ref>

In the popular vulgar cartoon series "]," characters sometimes watch a ] called "The ] Show" whose humor primarily revolves around flatulence.

==Personal experiences==
People find other peoples' flatus unpleasant, but are unfazed by, and may even enjoy, the scent of their own.<ref>{{cite web|last=Engelhaupt|first=Erika|title=People Sometimes Like Stinky Things—Here's Why|website=Nationalgeographic.com|publisher=National Geographic|date=30 September 2015|url=https://www.nationalgeographic.com/science/article/why-do-people-sometimes-like-stinky-things|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210509010317/https://www.nationalgeographic.com/science/article/why-do-people-sometimes-like-stinky-things|url-status=dead|archive-date=May 9, 2021|access-date=3 September 2021}}</ref> While there has been little research carried out upon the subject, some speculative guesses have been made as to why this might be so. For example, one explanation for this phenomenon is that people are very familiar with the scent of their own flatus, and that survival in nature may depend on the detection of and reaction to foreign scents.<ref>{{cite web|last=Millard|first=Elizabeth|title=Why You Like the Smell Of Your Own Farts|website=www.menshealth.com |publisher=Men's Health|date=10 November 2017|url=https://www.menshealth.com/health/a19542002/why-you-like-the-smell-of-your-own-farts/|access-date=3 September 2021}}</ref>

Some people have Eproctophilla, the ] of flatulence, finding ] and ] from either the sound of the gas, smells from the gas, feeling of the gas, some combination of the three, or all three.


==See also== ==See also==
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==References== ==References==
=== Citations ===
{{wikisourcepar|Harper%27s_New_Monthly_Magazine/Vol. XLIV/No._261/February_1872/Editor%27s_Scientific_Record/Cure_of_Flatulence|A cure for flatulence from 1872}}
{{Reflist}}
<div class="refereces-small">
<references />
</div>


=== General and cited references ===
===Nontechnical resources===
* Allen, V. (2007). ''On Farting: Language and Laughter in the Middle Ages''. Palgrave MacMillan. {{ISBN|978-0-312-23493-5}}.
* {{cite book | author = Franklin, Benjamin | editor = Japikse, Carl (Ed.) | title = Fart Proudly | publisher = Frog Ltd/Blue Snake | year = 2003 | edition = (Reprint) | id = ISBN 1-58394-079-0 }}
* {{cite book | author = Dawson, Jim | title = Who Cut the Cheese?: A Cultural History of the Fart | publisher = Ten Speed Press | year = 1999 | id = ISBN 1-58008-011-1 }} * {{cite book |last1=Bolin |first1=T. D. |last2=Stanton |first2=R. |title=Wind Breaks |publisher=Allen & Unwin |year=1997 |isbn=978-1-86448-321-5 |author-link=Terry Bolin}}
* {{cite book | author = Dawson, Jim | title = Blame it on the Dog: A Modern History of the Fart | publisher = Ten Speed Press | year = 2006 | id = ISBN 1-58008-751-5 }} * {{cite book | author = Dawson, Jim | title = Who Cut the Cheese?: A Cultural History of the Fart | publisher = Ten Speed Press | year = 1999 | isbn = 1-58008-011-1 }}
* {{cite book | author = D. von Schmausen | title = Official Rules, New World Odor International Freestyle Farting Championship | publisher = LULU | year 2002 }} * {{cite book | author = Dawson, Jim | title = Blame it on the Dog: A Modern History of the Fart | publisher = Ten Speed Press | year = 2006 | isbn = 1-58008-751-5 }}
* {{cite book | author = Franklin, Benjamin | editor = Japikse, Carl| title = Fart Proudly | publisher = Frog Ltd/Blue Snake | year = 2003 | edition = (Reprint) | isbn = 1-58394-079-0 | title-link = Fart Proudly}}
* Persels, J., & Ganim, R. (2004). ''Fecal Matters in Early Modern Literature and Art: Studies in Scatology''. (Chap. 1: "The Honorable Art of Farting in Continental Renaissance"). {{ISBN|0-7546-4116-3}}.
* {{cite book | author = von Schmausen, D. | title = Official Rules, New World Odor International Freestyle Farting Championship | publisher = LULU | isbn = 1435709195 | year = 2002}}


==External links== == External links ==
{{wiktionarypar2|flatus|flatulence}} {{Wiktionary|flatus|flatulence}}
{{Commons category}}
* - a comprehensive, worldwide survey about farts and farting.
{{Wikisource|Harper%27s_New_Monthly_Magazine/Vol. XLIV/No._261/February_1872/Editor%27s_Scientific_Record/Cure_of_Flatulence|A cure for flatulence from 1872}}
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* MythBusters Video


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| MeshID = D005414
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Latest revision as of 02:05, 30 December 2024

Bodily function of expelling intestinal gas from the anus

"Fart" redirects here. For usage of the term, see Fart (word). For other uses, see Fart (disambiguation).

Medical condition
Flatulence
Other namesFarting, breaking wind, passing gas, cutting the cheese, cutting one loose, ripping one, tooting
SpecialtyGastroenterology

Flatulence is the expulsion of gas from the intestines via the anus, commonly referred to as farting. "Flatus" is the medical word for gas generated in the stomach or bowels. A proportion of intestinal gas may be swallowed environmental air, and hence flatus is not entirely generated in the stomach or bowels. The scientific study of this area of medicine is termed flatology.

Flatus is brought to the rectum and pressurized by muscles in the intestines. It is normal to pass flatus ("to fart"), though volume and frequency vary greatly among individuals. It is also normal for intestinal gas to have a feculent or unpleasant odor, which may be intense. The noise commonly associated with flatulence is produced by the anus and buttocks, which act together in a manner similar to that of an embouchure. Both the sound and odor are sources of embarrassment, annoyance or amusement (flatulence humor). In many societies, flatus is a taboo. Thus, many people either let their flatus out quietly or even hold it completely. However, holding the gases inside is not healthy.

There are several general symptoms related to intestinal gas: pain, bloating and abdominal distension, excessive flatus volume, excessive flatus odor, and gas incontinence. Furthermore, eructation (colloquially known as "burping") is sometimes included under the topic of flatulence. When excessive or malodorous, flatus can be a sign of a health disorder, such as irritable bowel syndrome, celiac disease or lactose intolerance.

Terminology

Non-medical definitions of the term include "the uncomfortable condition of having gas in the stomach and bowels", or "a state of excessive gas in the alimentary canal". These definitions highlight that many people consider "bloating", abdominal distension or increased volume of intestinal gas, to be synonymous with the term flatulence (although this is technically inaccurate).

Colloquially, flatulence may be referred to as "farting", "pumping", "trumping", "blowing off", "pooting", "passing gas", "breaking wind", "backfiring", "tooting", "beefing", or simply (in American English) "gas" or (British English) "wind". Derived terms include vaginal flatulence, otherwise known as a queef.

Signs and symptoms

Generally speaking, there are four different types of complaints that relate to intestinal gas, which may present individually or in combination.

Bloating and pain

Patients may complain of bloating as abdominal distension, discomfort and pain from "trapped wind". In the past, functional bowel disorders such as irritable bowel syndrome that produced symptoms of bloating were attributed to increased production of intestinal gas.

However, three significant pieces of evidence refute this theory. First, in normal subjects, even very high rates of gas infusion into the small intestine (30 mL/min) is tolerated without complaints of pain or bloating and harmlessly passed as flatus per rectum. Secondly, studies aiming to quantify the total volume of gas produced by patients with irritable bowel syndrome (some including gas emitted from the mouth by eructation) have consistently failed to demonstrate increased volumes compared to healthy subjects. The proportion of hydrogen produced may be increased in some patients with irritable bowel syndrome, but this does not affect the total volume. Thirdly, the volume of flatus produced by patients with irritable bowel syndrome who have pain and abdominal distension would be tolerated in normal subjects without any complaints of pain.

Patients who complain of bloating frequently can be shown to have objective increases in abdominal girth, often increased throughout the day and then resolving during sleep. The increase in girth combined with the fact that the total volume of flatus is not increased led to studies aiming to image the distribution of intestinal gas in patients with bloating. They found that gas was not distributed normally in these patients: there was segmental gas pooling and focal distension. In conclusion, abdominal distension, pain and bloating symptoms are the result of abnormal intestinal gas dynamics rather than increased flatus production.

Excessive volume

The range of volumes of flatus in normal individuals varies hugely (476–1,491 mL/24 h). All intestinal gas is either swallowed environmental air, present intrinsically in foods and beverages, or the result of gut fermentation.

Swallowing small amounts of air occurs while eating and drinking. This is emitted from the mouth by eructation (burping) and is normal. Excessive swallowing of environmental air is called aerophagia, and has been shown in a few case reports to be responsible for increased flatus volume. This is, however, considered a rare cause of increased flatus volume. Gases contained in food and beverages are likewise emitted largely through eructation, e.g., carbonated beverages.

Endogenously produced intestinal gases make up 74 percent of flatus in normal subjects. The volume of gas produced is partially dependent upon the composition of the intestinal microbiota, which is normally very resistant to change, but is also very different in different individuals. Some patients are predisposed to increased endogenous gas production by virtue of their gut microbiota composition. The greatest concentration of gut bacteria is in the colon, while the small intestine is normally nearly sterile. Fermentation occurs when unabsorbed food residues arrive in the colon.

Therefore, even more than the composition of the microbiota, diet is the primary factor that dictates the volume of flatus produced. Diets that aim to reduce the amount of undigested fermentable food residues arriving in the colon have been shown to significantly reduce the volume of flatus produced. Again, increased volume of intestinal gas will not cause bloating and pain in normal subjects. Abnormal intestinal gas dynamics will create pain, distension, and bloating, regardless of whether there is high or low total flatus volume.

Odor

Although flatus possesses an odor, this may be abnormally increased in some patients and cause social distress to the patient. Increased odor of flatus presents a distinct clinical issue from other complaints related to intestinal gas. Some patients may exhibit over-sensitivity to bad flatus odor, and in extreme forms, olfactory reference syndrome may be diagnosed. Recent informal research found a correlation between flatus odor and both loudness and humidity content.

Incontinence of flatus

"Gas incontinence" could be defined as loss of voluntary control over the passage of flatus. It is a recognised subtype of faecal incontinence, and is usually related to minor disruptions of the continence mechanisms. Some consider gas incontinence to be the first, sometimes only, symptom of faecal incontinence.

Cause

Intestinal gas is composed of varying quantities of exogenous sources and endogenous sources. The exogenous gases are swallowed (aerophagia) when eating or drinking or increased swallowing during times of excessive salivation (as might occur when nauseated or as the result of gastroesophageal reflux disease). The endogenous gases are produced either as a by-product of digesting certain types of food, or of incomplete digestion, as is the case during steatorrhea. Anything that causes food to be incompletely digested by the stomach or small intestine may cause flatulence when the material arrives in the large intestine, due to fermentation by yeast or prokaryotes normally or abnormally present in the gastrointestinal tract.

Flatulence-producing foods are typically high in certain polysaccharides, especially oligosaccharides such as inulin. Those foods include beans, lentils, dairy products, onions, garlic, spring onions, leeks, turnips, swedes, radishes, sweet potatoes, potatoes, cashews, Jerusalem artichokes, oats, wheat, and yeast in breads. Cauliflower, broccoli, cabbage, Brussels sprouts and other cruciferous vegetables that belong to the genus Brassica are commonly reputed to not only increase flatulence, but to increase the pungency of the flatus.

In beans, endogenous gases seem to arise from complex oligosaccharides (carbohydrates) that are particularly resistant to digestion by mammals, but are readily digestible by microorganisms (methane-producing archaea; Methanobrevibacter smithii) that inhabit the digestive tract. These oligosaccharides pass through the small intestine largely unchanged, and when they reach the large intestine, bacteria ferment them, producing copious amounts of flatus.

When excessive or malodorous, flatus can be a sign of a health disorder, such as irritable bowel syndrome, celiac disease, non-celiac gluten sensitivity or lactose intolerance. It can also be caused by certain medicines, such as ibuprofen, laxatives, antifungal medicines or statins. Some infections, such as giardiasis, are also associated with flatulence.

Interest in the causes of flatulence was spurred by high-altitude flight and human spaceflight; the low atmospheric pressure, confined conditions, and stresses peculiar to those endeavours were cause for concern. In the field of mountaineering, the phenomenon of high altitude flatus expulsion was first recorded over two hundred years ago.

Mechanism

Production, composition, and odor

Flatus (intestinal gas) is mostly produced as a byproduct of bacterial fermentation in the gastrointestinal (GI) tract, especially the colon. There are reports of aerophagia (excessive air swallowing) causing excessive intestinal gas, but this is considered rare.

Over 99% of the volume of flatus is composed of odorless gases. These include oxygen, nitrogen, carbon dioxide, hydrogen and methane. Nitrogen is not produced in the gut, but a component of environmental air. Patients who have excessive intestinal gas that is mostly composed of nitrogen have aerophagia. Hydrogen, carbon dioxide and methane are all produced in the gut and contribute 74% of the volume of flatus in normal subjects. Methane and hydrogen are flammable, and so flatus can be ignited if it contains adequate amounts of these components.

Not all humans produce flatus that contains methane. For example, in one study of the faeces of nine adults, only five of the samples contained archaea capable of producing methane. The prevalence of methane over hydrogen in human flatus may correlate with obesity, constipation and irritable bowel syndrome, as archaea that oxidise hydrogen into methane promote the metabolism's ability to absorb fatty acids from food.

The remaining trace (<1% volume) compounds contribute to the odor of flatus. Historically, compounds such as indole, skatole, ammonia and short chain fatty acids were thought to cause the odor of flatus. More recent evidence proves that the major contribution to the odor of flatus comes from a combination of volatile sulfur compounds. Hydrogen sulfide, methyl mercaptan (also known as methanethiol), dimethyl sulfide, dimethyl disulfide and dimethyl trisulfide are present in flatus. The benzopyrrole volatiles indole and skatole have an odor of mothballs, and therefore probably do not contribute greatly to the characteristic odor of flatus.

In one study, hydrogen sulfide concentration was shown to correlate convincingly with perceived bad odor of flatus, followed by methyl mercaptan and dimethyl sulfide. This is supported by the fact that hydrogen sulfide may be the most abundant volatile sulfur compound present. These results were generated from subjects who were eating a diet high in pinto beans to stimulate flatus production.

Others report that methyl mercaptan was the greatest contributor to the odor of flatus in patients not under any specific dietary alterations. It has now been demonstrated that methyl mercaptan, dimethyl sulfide, and hydrogen sulfide (described as decomposing vegetables, unpleasantly sweet/wild radish and rotten eggs respectively) are all present in human flatus in concentrations above their smell perception thresholds.

It is recognized that increased dietary sulfur-containing amino acids significantly increases the odor of flatus. It is therefore likely that the odor of flatus is created by a combination of volatile sulfur compounds, with minimal contribution from non-sulfur volatiles. This odor can also be caused by the presence of large numbers of microflora bacteria or the presence of faeces in the rectum. Diets high in protein, especially sulfur-containing amino acids, have been demonstrated to significantly increase the odor of flatus.

Volume and intestinal gas dynamics

Normal flatus volume is 476 to 1491 mL per 24 hours. This variability between individuals is greatly dependent upon diet. Similarly, the number of flatus episodes per day is variable; the normal range is given as 8–20 per day. The volume of flatus associated with each flatulence event again varies (5–375 mL). The volume of the first flatulence upon waking in the morning is significantly larger than those during the day. This may be due to buildup of intestinal gas in the colon during sleep, the peak in peristaltic activity in the first few hours after waking or the strong prokinetic effect of rectal distension on the rate of transit of intestinal gas. It is now known that gas is moved along the gut independently of solids and liquids, and this transit is more efficient in the erect position compared to when supine. It is thought that large volumes of intestinal gas present low resistance, and can be propelled by subtle changes in gut tone, capacitance and proximal contraction and distal relaxation. This process is thought not to affect solid and liquid intra-lumenal contents.

Researchers investigating the role of sensory nerve endings in the anal canal did not find them to be essential for retaining fluids in the anus, and instead speculate that their role may be to distinguish between flatus and faeces, thereby helping detect a need to defecate or to signal the end of defecation.

The sound varies depending on the volume of gas, the size of the opening that the air is being pushed through, which is affected by the state of tension in the sphincter muscle, and the force or velocity of the gas being propelled, as well as other factors, such as whether the gas was caused by swallowed air. Among humans, flatulence occasionally happens accidentally, such as incidentally to coughing or sneezing or during orgasm; on other occasions, flatulence can be voluntarily elicited by tensing the rectum or "bearing down" on stomach or bowel muscles and subsequently relaxing the anal sphincter, resulting in the expulsion of flatus.

Management

Since problems involving intestinal gas present as different (but sometimes combined) complaints, the management is cause-related.

Pain and bloating

Main articles: Abdominal distension and Bloating

While not affecting the production of the gases themselves, surfactants (agents that lower surface tension) can reduce the disagreeable sensations associated with flatulence, by aiding the dissolution of the gases into liquid and solid faecal matter. Preparations containing simethicone reportedly operate by promoting the coalescence of smaller bubbles into larger ones more easily passed from the body, either by burping or flatulence. Such preparations do not decrease the total amount of gas generated in or passed from the colon, but make the bubbles larger and thereby allowing them to be passed more easily.

Other drugs including prokinetics, lubiprostone, antibiotics and probiotics are also used to treat bloating in patients with functional bowel disorders such as irritable bowel syndrome, and there is some evidence that these measures may reduce symptoms.

A flexible tube, inserted into the rectum, can be used to collect intestinal gas in a flatus bag. This method is occasionally needed in a hospital setting, when the patient is unable to pass gas normally.

Volume

Main articles: Antiflatulent and Carminative

One method of reducing the volume of flatus produced is dietary modification, reducing the amount of fermentable carbohydrates. This is the theory behind diets such as the low-FODMAP diet (a diet low in fermentable oligosaccharides, disaccharides, monosaccharides, alcohols, and polyols).

Most starches, including potatoes, corn, noodles, and wheat, produce gas as they are broken down in the large intestine. Intestinal gas can be reduced by fermenting the beans, and making them less gas-inducing, or by cooking them in the liquor from a previous batch. For example, the fermented bean product miso is less likely to produce as much intestinal gas. Some legumes also stand up to prolonged cooking, which can help break down the oligosaccharides into simple sugars. Fermentative lactic acid bacteria such as Lactobacillus casei and Lactobacillus plantarum reduce flatulence in the human intestinal tract.

Probiotics (live yogurt, kefir, etc.) are reputed to reduce flatulence when used to restore balance to the normal intestinal flora. Live (bioactive) yogurt contains, among other lactic bacteria, Lactobacillus acidophilus, which may be useful in reducing flatulence. L. acidophilus may make the intestinal environment more acidic, supporting a natural balance of the fermentative processes. L. acidophilus is available in supplements. Prebiotics, which generally are non-digestible oligosaccharides, such as fructooligosaccharide, generally increase flatulence in a similar way as described for lactose intolerance.

Digestive enzyme supplements may significantly reduce the amount of flatulence caused by some components of foods not being digested by the body and thereby promoting the action of microbes in the small and large intestines. It has been suggested that alpha-galactosidase enzymes, which can digest certain complex sugars, are effective in reducing the volume and frequency of flatus. The enzymes alpha-galactosidase, lactase, amylase, lipase, protease, cellulase, glucoamylase, invertase, malt diastase, pectinase, and bromelain are available, either individually or in combination blends, in commercial products.

The antibiotic rifaximin, often used to treat diarrhea caused by the microorganism E. coli, may reduce both the production of intestinal gas and the frequency of flatus events.

Odor

Bismuth

The odor created by flatulence is commonly treated with bismuth subgallate, available under the name Devrom. Bismuth subgallate is commonly used by individuals who have had ostomy surgery, bariatric surgery, faecal incontinence and irritable bowel syndrome. Bismuth subsalicylate is a compound that binds hydrogen sulfide, and one study reported a dose of 524 mg four times a day for 3–7 days bismuth subsalicylate yielded a >95% reduction in faecal hydrogen sulfide release in both humans and rats. Another bismuth compound, bismuth subnitrate was also shown to bind to hydrogen sulfide. Another study showed that bismuth acted synergistically with various antibiotics to inhibit sulfate-reducing gut bacteria and sulfide production. Some authors proposed a theory that hydrogen sulfide was involved in the development of ulcerative colitis and that bismuth might be helpful in the management of this condition. However, bismuth administration in rats did not prevent them from developing ulcerative colitis despite reduced hydrogen sulfide production. Also, evidence suggests that colonic hydrogen sulfide is largely present in bound forms, probably sulfides of iron and other metals. Rarely, serious bismuth toxicity may occur with higher doses.

Activated charcoal

Despite being an ancient treatment for various digestive complaints, activated charcoal did not produce reduction in both the total flatus volume nor the release of sulfur-containing gasses, and there was no reduction in abdominal symptoms (after 0.52 g activated charcoal four times a day for one week). The authors suggested that saturation of charcoal binding sites during its passage through the gut was the reason for this. A further study concluded that activated charcoal (4 g) does not influence gas formation in vitro or in vivo. Other authors reported that activated charcoal was effective. A study in 8 dogs concluded activated charcoal (unknown oral dose) reduced hydrogen sulfide levels by 71%. In combination with yucca schidigera, and zinc acetate, this was increased to an 86% reduction in hydrogen sulfide, although flatus volume and number was unchanged. An early study reported activated charcoal (unknown oral dose) prevented a large increase in the number of flatus events and increased breath hydrogen concentrations that normally occur following a gas-producing meal.

Garments and external devices

In 1998, Chester "Buck" Weimer of Pueblo, Colorado, received a patent for the first undergarment that contained a replaceable charcoal filter. The undergarments are air-tight and provide a pocketed escape hole in which a charcoal filter can be inserted. In 2001 Weimer received the Ig Nobel Prize for Biology for his invention.

A similar product was released in 2002, but rather than an entire undergarment, consumers are able to purchase an insert similar to a pantiliner that contains activated charcoal. The inventors, Myra and Brian Conant of Mililani, Hawaii, still claim on their website to have discovered the undergarment product in 2002 (four years after Chester Weimer filed for a patent for his product), but state that their tests "concluded" that they should release an insert instead.

Incontinence

Main article: Faecal incontinence

Flatus incontinence where there is involuntary passage of gas, is a type of faecal incontinence, and is managed similarly.

Society and culture

He-gassen (detail), an art scroll depicting a battle of flatulence, from Japan during the Edo period
A Japanese ukiyo-e print employing fart humor

In many cultures, flatulence in public is regarded as embarrassing, but, depending on context, may also be considered humorous. People will often strain to hold in the passing of gas when in polite company, or position themselves to silence or conceal the passing of gas. In other cultures, it may be no more embarrassing than coughing.

While the act of passing flatus in some cultures is generally considered to be an unfortunate occurrence in public settings, flatulence may, in casual circumstances and especially among children, be used as either a humorous supplement to a joke ("pull my finger"), or as a comic activity in and of itself. The social acceptability of flatulence-based humour in entertainment and the mass media varies over the course of time and between cultures. A sufficient number of entertainers have performed using their flatus to lead to the coining of the term flatulist. The whoopee cushion is a joking device invented in the early 20th century for simulating a fart. In 2008, a farting application for the iPhone earned nearly $10,000 in one day.

A farting game named Touch Wood was documented by John Gregory Bourke in the 1890s. It was known as Safety in the 20th century in the U.S., and is still played by children as of 2011.

In January 2011, the Malawi Minister of Justice, George Chaponda, said that Air Fouling Legislation would make public "farting" illegal in his country. When reporting the story, the media satirised Chaponda's statement with punning headlines. Later, the minister withdrew his statement.

Environmental impact

The flatulence of cows is only a small portion (around one-twentieth) of cows' methane release. Cows also burp methane, due to the physiology of their digestive systems.

Flatulence is often blamed as a significant source of greenhouse gases, owing to the erroneous belief that the methane released by livestock is in the flatus. While livestock account for around 20% of global methane emissions, 90–95% of that is released by exhaling or burping. In cows, gas and burps are produced by methane-generating microbes called methanogens, which live inside the cow's digestive system. Proposals for reducing methane production in cows include the feeding of supplements such as oregano and seaweed, and the genetic engineering of gut biome microbes to produce less methane.

Since New Zealand produces large amounts of agricultural products, it has the unique position of having higher methane emissions from livestock compared to other greenhouse gas sources. The New Zealand government is a signatory to the Kyoto Protocol and therefore attempts to reduce greenhouse emissions. To achieve this, an agricultural emissions research levy was proposed, which promptly became known as a "fart tax" or "flatulence tax". It encountered opposition from farmers, farming lobby groups and opposition politicians.

Entertainment

Main article: Flatulist

Historical comment on the ability to fart at will is observed as early as Saint Augustine's The City of God (5th century A.D.). Augustine mentions "people who produce at will without any stench such rhythmical sounds from their fundament that they appear to be making music even from that quarter." Intentional passing of gas and its use as entertainment for others appear to have been somewhat well known in pre-modern Europe, according to mentions of it in medieval and later literature, including Rabelais.

Le Pétomane ("the Fartomaniac") was a famous French performer in the 19th century who, as well as many professional farters before him, did flatulence impressions and held shows. The performer Mr. Methane carries on le Pétomane's tradition today. Also, a 2002 fiction film Thunderpants revolves around a boy named Patrick Smash who has an ongoing flatulence problem from the time of his birth.

Since the 1970s, farting has increasingly been featured in film, especially comedies such as Blazing Saddles and Scooby-Doo.

In the popular vulgar cartoon series "South Park," characters sometimes watch a show-within-a-show called "The Terrance and Phillip Show" whose humor primarily revolves around flatulence.

Personal experiences

People find other peoples' flatus unpleasant, but are unfazed by, and may even enjoy, the scent of their own. While there has been little research carried out upon the subject, some speculative guesses have been made as to why this might be so. For example, one explanation for this phenomenon is that people are very familiar with the scent of their own flatus, and that survival in nature may depend on the detection of and reaction to foreign scents.

Some people have Eproctophilla, the fetish of flatulence, finding sexual gratification and pleasure from either the sound of the gas, smells from the gas, feeling of the gas, some combination of the three, or all three.

See also

References

Citations

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General and cited references

  • Allen, V. (2007). On Farting: Language and Laughter in the Middle Ages. Palgrave MacMillan. ISBN 978-0-312-23493-5.
  • Bolin TD, Stanton R (1997). Wind Breaks. Allen & Unwin. ISBN 978-1-86448-321-5.
  • Dawson, Jim (1999). Who Cut the Cheese?: A Cultural History of the Fart. Ten Speed Press. ISBN 1-58008-011-1.
  • Dawson, Jim (2006). Blame it on the Dog: A Modern History of the Fart. Ten Speed Press. ISBN 1-58008-751-5.
  • Franklin, Benjamin (2003). Japikse, Carl (ed.). Fart Proudly ((Reprint) ed.). Frog Ltd/Blue Snake. ISBN 1-58394-079-0.
  • Persels, J., & Ganim, R. (2004). Fecal Matters in Early Modern Literature and Art: Studies in Scatology. (Chap. 1: "The Honorable Art of Farting in Continental Renaissance"). ISBN 0-7546-4116-3.
  • von Schmausen, D. (2002). Official Rules, New World Odor International Freestyle Farting Championship. LULU. ISBN 1435709195.

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