What a gas!: Michael Jordan does it. So does Britney Spears. Everyone passes gas--on average 14 times a day! While the phenomenon (called flatulence) is often the butt of jokes, "farting" is as natural as taking a breath. (Teen health issue: digestive system * microbes)."In fact, a lot of the air people pass from their behinds is from the air they swallow," says gastroenterologist (stomach and intestine doctor) Judy Sondheimer of the Denver Children's Hospital. You gulp in air when you eat too fast, swallow fizzy drinks, chew gum, or even talk a lot. And while most swallowed air is belched out the mouth, a small amount passes through your body to "pop" out the rear end. The other cause of gas? Freeloading microbes (tiny organisms, like bacteria) that thrive and feed inside your colon (large intestine large intestine End section of the intestine. It is about 5 ft (1.5 m) long, is wider than the small intestine, and has a smooth inner wall. In the first half, enzymes from the small intestine complete digestion, and bacteria produce many B vitamins and vitamin K. ). TOOT toot noun Cocaine, see there verb To inhale cocaine TOUR A noisy toot starts at the top of your digestive system --the system that breaks down food into simple nutrients so you can absorb them for energy (see diagram, far right). Just the thought of a burger whets your mouth with saliva. It enters the mouth as huge molecules of proteins, fats, and carbohydrates--substances your body needs for healthy growth and energy. Biting and chewing breaks food down into smaller pieces. At the same time, salivary sal·i·var·y adj. 1. Of, relating to, or producing saliva. 2. Of or relating to a salivary gland. salivary pertaining to the saliva. digestive enzymes Digestive enzymes Molecules that catalyze the breakdown of large molecules (usually food) into smaller molecules. Mentioned in: Heartburn digestive enzymes , chemicals that turn larger molecules into smaller ones, go to work. Carbohydrates (like a burger bun) begin breaking into simple sugars. Every swallow sends partially digested food into your stomach. There, the glob gets mixed and churned with juices containing more enzymes and hydrochloric acid hydrochloric acid: see hydrogen chloride. hydrochloric acid or muriatic acid Solution in water of hydrogen chloride (HCl), a gaseous inorganic compound. (acid that digests protein and kills bacteria). Proteins, made of long chains of amino acids, start to break into individual acids. Up to four hours later, chyme--the now mushy soup of food--passes into the small intestine. Even more digestive enzymes continue to break down carbohydrates and proteins. And fat turns into tiny droplets. At this point, all digested nutrients are absorbed, or transported, to the bloodstream to fuel cells. But your body doesn't contain the enzymes to digest everything you eat, including oligosaccharides--a group of sugars found in some plant fibers, like beans for example. And some people can't digest a complex sugar called lactose, found in dairy products. Undigested food travels to the colon. MICROBES RULE More than 5,000 species of microbes hang out in the colon. It's an ideal environment for microbial microbial pertaining to or emanating from a microbe. microbial digestion the breakdown of organic material, especially feedstuffs, by microbial organisms. growth: the colon is warm, moist, and free of bacteria-killing acids found in the stomach and small intestines. Plus, there's your leftovers! These microbes possess the enzymes to break down the foods your body's enzymes can't digest. The bacteria metabolize me·tab·o·lize v. 1. To subject to metabolism. 2. To produce by metabolism. 3. To undergo change by metabolism. metabolize to subject to or be transformed by metabolism. food (convert nutrients into energy) and use it to build new cell structures. But in the process of metabolizing, the microbes give off gaseous waste that produces your toots toots n. Slang Babe; sweetie. [Perhaps short for tootsie.] . (You also produce gas when body cells metabolize nutrients, but this gas escapes the body via the lungs at exhale exhale /ex·hale/ (eks´hal) to breathe out. ex·hale v. 1. To breathe out. 2. To emit a gas, vapor, or odor. .) Some of the bacteria's gases--nitrogen, oxygen, carbon dioxide, hydrogen, and methane--are the same gases that make up the air you breathe. They also compose 99 percent of the atmosphere in the large intestine. So what gases cause the stinker? Researchers aren't sure which of the 200 trace gases in the remaining 1 percent is the culprit. The prime suspect: "It's probably hydrogen sulfide," Sondheimer says. The gas usually smells like rotten eggs. Any way to avoid flatulence flatulence /flat·u·lence/ (flat´u-lens) excessive formation of gases in the stomach or intestine. flat·u·lence or flat·u·len·cy n. The presence of excessive gas in the digestive tract. ? Forget it. Most foods contain some indigestible in·di·gest·i·ble adj. Difficult or impossible to digest: an indigestible meal. in fiber, and fiber is an essential part of a healthy diet, helping to prevent heart disease and certain cancers. But, for the exceptionally gassy gas·sy adj. gas·si·er, gas·si·est 1. Containing or full of gas. 2. Resembling gas. 3. Slang Bombastic; boastful. there are enzyme supplements (like Beano Beano™ Gastroentrology A deflatulent with simethicone added to beans deemed hyperflatulogenic; Beano's enzymes digests raffinose and stachyose, carbohydrates for which humans have no enzymes. See Beans, Flatulence. , or Lactaid for the lactose-intolerant) that help digest food before it reaches the colon. And if your flatulence is unusually severe, it may be an indicator of other health factors. Time to visit a doctor. FOOD TRIP Follow food on a 24-hour, 9.5-meter (31-foot) journey through your digestive system. 1. Mouth Salivary glands pump out 1.2 liters (5 cups) of saliva every day. While chewing breaks food into pieces, enzymes in saliva break down food chemically. 2. Esophagus Powerful muscle contractions called peristalsis peristalsis: see digestive system. peristalsis Progressive wavelike muscle contractions in the esophagus, stomach, and intestines, and sometimes in the ureters and other hollow tubes. move food down this tube toward the stomach, then through the stomach and intestines. 3. Stomach Digestive glands pour out gastric (stomach) juices of enzymes and hydrochloric acid to begin protein digestion. Food churns for up to four hours, turning into mush (MultiUser Shared Hallucination) See MUD. 1. (games) MUSH - Multi-User Shared Hallucination. 2. (messaging) MUSH - Mail Users' Shell. . Then the stomach forces food bit by bit into the small intestine. 4. Small Intestine Digestive enzymes and fluids further digest food particles. Here, the simple molecules of nutrients--amino acids from proteins, glucose from carbohydrates, and fatty acids from fat--pass through the walls into the bloodstream to fuel cells. 5. Large Intestine Indigestible food passes here. The leftovers feed 5,000 species of bacteria that metabolize food--a byproduct is flatulence. Here, water is also absorbed into the blood, solidifying waste material. 6. The End Solid waste (feces) sits in the rectum waiting to be expelled. It's half bacteria by weight, contains hard indigestible food and remains of digestive juices, mucus, water, air, and dead cells from the gut wall. [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] Lesson Plans [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] Did You Know? * The medical term for flatulence is "flatus flatus /fla·tus/ (fla´tus) [L.] 1. gas or air in the gastrointestinal tract. 2. gas or air expelled through the anus. fla·tus n. ," which in Latin means blowing. * Peristalsis moves gas toward the anus. As gas expels, the vibrations of the anal opening--based on velocity of gas expulsion and tightness of the sphincter muscles--determine the sound quality of flatulence. * The temperature of flatulence is approximately 37 [degrees] C (98.6 [degrees] F)--your body's temperature. Cross-Curricular Connection Social Studies: Create and design an advertisement for an original gas-relieving product. National Science Education Standards The National Science Education Standards (NSES) are a set of guidelines for the science education in primary and secondary schools in the United States, as established by the National Research Council in 1996. Grades 5-8: personal health * regulation and behavior * structure and function in living systems * populations and ecosystems Grades 9-12: the sell * the interdependence of Organisms * matter, energy, and organization in living Systems * personal and community health Resources For more on flatulence: www.intelihealth.com/IH/ihtIH/WSIHW000/ 9339/9999.html For a review of how the digestive system works: www.niddk.nih.gov/health/digest/pubs/digesyst/new diges.htm Directions: Answer the following in complete sentences. 1. Explain two flatulence-producing processes. -- 2. Describe two methods to lower the amount of flatulence. ANSWERS What a Gas! 1. Process a: Swallowing air may cause flatulence--while most is belched out of the mouth, a small amount passes through the body and "pops" out the other end. Process b: Colon-dwelling microbes possess the enzymes to break down food you can't digest. The byproduct is gaseous waste. 2. Eat slowly and cut down on fizzy drinks mad chewing gum. You can't eliminate flatulence because most foods contain some indigestible fiber. And fiber is an essential part of a healthy diet, helping to prevent heart disease and certain cancers. But for the uncomfortably gassy, there are enzyme supplements that can help digest food before it reaches the colon. |
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