Wind, Gas and bloating
Well I know that it is the stuff that a million jokes have been made from but if you suffer very badly from gas or wind it can rally be very debilitating.
Complaints about having too much wind or gas are pretty common. If you are otherwise healthy, windy symptoms are not due to disease. But if they are severe or troublesome or if you are worried about them you should seek the help of your doctor.
The gut is a muscular tube stretching from the gullet to the back passage. It is about 40 feet long when stretched out. It usually contains about 200ml of gas and every day we pass 400–2000ml of this gas out through the back passage as wind (or flatus, as it is technically known).
This flatus is made up mostly of 5 gases – nitrogen, oxygen, carbon dioxide, hydrogen and methane: the remaining 10% contains small amounts of other gases.
Nitrogen and Oxygen come from air which we swallow; the carbon dioxide is produced by stomach acid mixing with bicarbonate in bile and pancreatic juices. These gases get into the small intestine where most of the oxygen and carbon dioxide are absorbed into the blood stream; the nitrogen is passed down the large bowel.
The small intestine is the place where the food we eat is digested and absorbed; the residues, such as dietary fibre and some carbohydrates, pass on to the large bowel. The colon contains different kinds of bacteria which are essential to our good health and which ferment material from the small intestine, producing large volumes of hydrogen, methane, carbon dioxide and other gases. Most of these gases are absorbed into the blood stream and eventually excreted in the breath: the rest is passed as flatus through your bottom!
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