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9. Gas and Bloating / W.G. Thompson
| 9.1 Synonyms and Related Terms |
page 15 |
Burbulence, flatulence, burp, belch,
borborygmi, gaseous distention, wind, flatus, fart.
Gas and bloating embrace three unrelated
phenomena. Farting is a physiologic phenomenon due to the production of gas by colon
bacteria. Excessive belching or burping is associated with aerophagia (air swallowing).
This is also partly physiological, but it may become exaggerated through habit. The
mechanism of bloating is obscure. These phenomena are unrelated, yet they often occur
together.
| 9.2 Gas, Wind, Flatus |
page 16 |
9.2.1 MECHANISM
Farting is a physiologic excretory process.
Normally, the gut contains 100 to 200 mL of gas. An average person on a normal diet emits
about 1 L per day. We pass 50 to 500 mL a mean of 13.6 times per day, although there is
great variation from person to person and from time to time. Those prone to produce
greater amounts of gas or who are unduly sensitive may suffer socially. Most emitted gas
originates in the colon. Some carbohydrates such as cellulose, glycoproteins and other
ingested materials, not assimilated in the small intestine, arrive intact in the colon
where resident bacteria digest them to produce hydrogen, carbon dioxide, methane and trace
gases.
Intestinal floras differ from person to person.
Some bacteria produce hydrogen, while others consume it. In one person out of three, an organism
called Methanobrevibacter smithii converts hydrogen to methane. The presence of this organism and the
methane-producing trait are a result of early environment. Spouses do not share the trait
with one another. Another product of fermentation, carbon dioxide, is also released when
hydrochloric acid reacts with bicarbonate in the intestines. However, this gas is quickly
absorbed. Hydrogen, carbon dioxide, methane and swallowed nitrogen comprise 99% of colon
gas. The remaining 1% consists of trace gases that compensate for their small quantities
by their strong odors. Smelly gases include hydrogen sulfide ammonia, skatole, indole and
volatile fatty acids.
Borborygmi is the name given to the noises
generated as air and fluid gurgle through the gut. Farting and borborygmi do not account
for bloating.
9.3.1 MECHANISM
During inspiration, the
normally negative intraesophageal pressure draws in ambient air. Forced inspiration
against a closed glottis (intentionally closed windpipe) draws in even more air. The air
may be forced out again as intra-esophageal pressure increases with expiration.
Adolescents love to shock their elders with voluntary belching. As a practical
application, those who have lost their larynx because of cancer put this learnable skill
to use in generating esophageal speech. More commonly, aerophagia is an unwanted habit in
those who repeatedly belch in response to other gut symptoms.
Some air is ingested with each swallow,
perhaps more with food. Nervous patients undergoing abdominal x-rays accumulate more
intestinal gas than those who are relaxed. Other mechanisms of aerophagia include thumb
sucking, gum chewing, drinking carbonated drinks, rapid eating and wearing poor dentures.
Stomach gas has the same composition as the atmosphere.
In achalasia, where the lower esophageal
sphincter cannot relax, the stomach is gasless. In bowel obstruction or a gastrocolic
fistula colon gases reach the stomach. Sometimes gastric stasis permits bacteria to grow
and produce hydrogen in the stomach. Normally, gastric gas is swallowed air.
| 9.3.2 CLINICAL MANIFESTATIONS OF
AEROPHAGIA |
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Belching is to bring forth wind noisily
from the stomach. The word burp means to "cause to belch," as one would burp a
baby, but colloquially, the terms are used interchangeably. A belch after a large meal is
a physiologic venting of air from the stomach. A meal stretching the muscle of the
stomach, which can stretch to accommodate food, causes distress with little increase in
intragastric pressure. A satisfying belch eases the discomfort. Some individuals seem
unduly sensitive to intragastric pressure. People with gastroenteritis, heartburn or
ulcers swallow more frequently. If release of gas transiently relieves the distended
feeling, a cycle of air swallowing and belching may be established. The swallow-belch
cycle may continue long after the original discomfort is forgotten.
Of course, venting gas is important, as
those unable to do so will attest. When the lower esophageal sphincter is reinforced by
antireflux surgery, belching may be impossible. Bedridden patients such as those
recovering from surgery may trap air in the stomach. In the supine position gastric
contents seal the gastroesophageal junction so that air cannot escape until the subject
assumes the prone position.
While a patient may insist that his or her
stomach is producing prodigious amounts of gas, in reality air is drawn into the esophagus
and released. A little may even reach the stomach. Some can belch on command, and the
inspiration against a closed glottis is demonstrable. Most sufferers are relieved to have
their habit pointed out, but some are incredulous. Quitting the habit is often
difficult. Repeated and intractable belching is termed eructio nervosa.
| 9.4 Functional Abdominal Bloating |
page 17 |
9.4.1 MECHANISM
Those complaining of bloating and
distention are often convinced that it is due to exess intestinal gas. Although the
sensation may induce aerophagia, it seldom results from it. Farting may temporarily
relieve bloating, but intestinal gas production does not cause it. Research has
demonstrated that gas volume in bloaters is not abnormal. Despite visible distention,
x-rays and computerized tomography (CT) show no large collections of intestinal gas. The
distention disappears with sleep and general anesthesia.
Gut hypersensitivity may explain the
sensation of abdominal bloating. The hypersensitive gut feels full at lower than normal
filling, and abdominal muscles relax to accommodate the perceived distention. The stomach
is and feels distended with normal amounts of air.
Abdominal girth of female irritable bowel
syndrome (IBS) patients complaining of distention may increase 3 to 4 cm over an
eight-hour day. CT has demonstrated the change in profile despite unchanged gas content or
distribution. There were no corresponding changes in control subjects. Lumbar lordosis
(arching of the spine) is sometimes increased. When women deliberately protrude their
abdomens, the configuration is different from when they are bloated, so a conscious
mechanism poorly explains increased abdominal girth. Perhaps abdominal muscles are
weakened. The reality of the phenomenon is indisputable; the mechanism remains a
mystery.
Bloating occurs in 30% of adults and is
frequent in 10%. Amongst those with the irritable bowel syndrome and dyspepsia the figures
are much higher. It is often the most troublesome feature of these conditions. Typically,
the abdomen is flat upon awakening, but distends progressively during the day, only for
the distention to disappear with sleep. Women complain of the need to let out their
clothing and sometimes volunteer "Its as if Im six months pregnant."
Many report that bloating occurs quickly, in some cases within a minute. It is often
aggravated by eating and relieved by lying down. Menstrual periods and stress affect a few
cases. Usually, it is most obvious in the lower abdomen, but many report it near the
umbilicus or all over the belly.
| 9.4.3 DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS |
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Observable bloating has been called
hysterical nongaseous bloating, pseudotumor or pseudocyesis (false pregnancy). If
distention is present at the time of the examination (more likely late in the day), the
phenomenon is likely functional. There is no abdominal tympany to suggest gaseous
intestines, and sometimes the distended abdomen can be mistaken for ascites or a
tumor.
Bloating is often associated with dyspepsia
or IBS. On its own, it is not a symptom of organic disease and should prompt no
investigation. In intestinal obstruction or postoperative ileus (paralyzed intestines),
gas accumulates and distends the gut to cause discomfort and pain. In such a case, there
are other symptoms and signs with which to make a diagnosis. |