Gutsy effort
to produce comprehensive study of intestinal gases
University of New South Wales
A source of embarrassment to some,
or pure comedy to others, flatulence and the gases of the intestines are
increasingly seen as playing an important role in our digestive health.
A paper led by UNSW Sydney and
published in Nature Reviews Gastroenterology & Hepatology has
examined all available literature on gastrointestinal gases, their interactions
with the microbiome of the gut, their associated disorders and the way that
they can be measured and analysed.
Lead author Professor Kourosh
Kalantar-Zadeh, who is an ARC Laureate Fellow with UNSW's School of Chemical
Engineering, says the purpose of the study is to lift the lid on the various
gases of the gut and show how vital they are for human health.
"This is about providing
knowledge to people about the importance of gases in the gut," he says.
"Rather than laughing about it
or feeling embarrassed about this subject, actually there is good reason to
take this very seriously.
"Even Benjamin Franklin wrote
about this more than 200 years ago. He was one of the first to propose that
different types of foods have different effects on our gut health, which can be
measured by smelling the resulting farts -- although I'm not so sure about his
methods."
Indeed, Franklin wrote a letter to
the Royal Academy of Brussels where he proposed "To discover some Drug
wholesome & not disagreable, to be mix'd with our common Food, or Sauces,
that shall render the natural Discharges of Wind from our Bodies, not only
inoffensive, but agreable as Perfumes."
While Franklin's challenge continues
to elude modern pharmacology, a change of diet to avoid foods rich in sulphide
-- such as broccoli, cauliflower, eggs, beef, and garlic -- could reduce the
malodorous nature of our gaseous emissions.
In the paper published today, the
authors examine each of the main gases that are found in the gastrointestinal
system.
"Interestingly, the gases in
most abundance throughout the digestive system -- nitrogen, oxygen, carbon
dioxide, hydrogen and even methane -- are odourless," Professor
Kalantar-zadeh says.
By contrast, smelly sulphide
compound gases exist in trace amounts in the colon. Nitrogen and oxygen end up
in the gut by being swallowed and carbon dioxide can be chemically produced in
the stomach.
"The rest are mostly
by-products of the microbiome -- the colonies of bacteria living in our
intestines -- as they break down carbohydrates, fats and proteins."
With the exception of nitrogen, the
gases found in the intestines have also been linked with various gut diseases
including malabsorption of food, irritable bowel syndrome (IBS), inflammatory
bowel diseases (IBD) and even colon cancer, especially when the gas profiles
deviate from the norm.
"Adjustment of diet is
generally the first port of call to mitigate these disorders as we can modulate
the gases by eating different types of foods," Professor Kalantar-Zadeh
says.
Gas-sensing technology
The UNSW team, together with their
partners at Monash University and startup company Atmo Biosciences, is
commercialising a revolutionary tool to analyse the gastrointestinal gases in vivo
(within the body) in the form of an ingestible capsule loaded with gas-sensing
technology.
The capsule can detect gaseous biomarkers as it passes through the gut, all the while transmitting the captured data wirelessly to the cloud for aggregation and analysis.
The capsule can detect gaseous biomarkers as it passes through the gut, all the while transmitting the captured data wirelessly to the cloud for aggregation and analysis.
Traditionally, testing and measuring
of the various gases has ranged from the non-invasive in vitro (ie. in the
laboratory) gut simulators and indirect breath testing through to colonic or
small intestine tube-insertion, a much more invasive method used to capture
stool or gas samples.
But the capsule developed by
Professor Kalantar-Zadeh and the team gets around the problem of invasiveness
while also ensuring the gases can be analysed in their natural environment. The
ingestible capsule can simultaneously detect oxygen and hydrogen concentrations
as it moves through the gastrointestinal gut and wirelessly transmit the data
to an external receiver.
"There is no other tool that
can do what this capsule does," Professor Kalantar-Zadeh says.
"In our early trials, the
capsule has accurately shown the onset of food-related fermentation in the gut,
which would be immensely valuable for clinical studies of food digestion and
normal gut function."
Professor Kalantar-Zadeh says a
trial is currently underway by Atmo Biosciences to test the commercial version
of the capsule, the results of which will be detailed in a future research
paper.