The Role of Intestinal Gas in Functional Abdominal Pain
- 11 September 1975
- journal article
- Published by Massachusetts Medical Society in New England Journal of Medicine
- Vol. 293 (11) , 524-526
- https://doi.org/10.1056/nejm197509112931103
Abstract
A washout technic with intestinal infusion of an inert gas mixture was used to study the relation of gas to functional abdominal symptoms. The volume of gas in the intestinal tract (176 ± 28 ml S.E.M.) of 12 fasting patients with chronic complaints of excess gas did not differ significantly (P > 0.10) from that of 10 controls (199 ± 31 ml). Similarly, there was no difference in the composition or accumulation rate of intestinal gas. However, more gas tended to reflux back into the stomach in patients who complained of abdominal pain during infusion of volumes of gas well tolerated by controls. Six patients with severe pain during the study had intestinal transit times of gas (40 ±6 minutes S.E.M.) that were significantly (P <0.05) longer than those of the control group (22 ± 3 minutes). Thus, complaints of bloating, pain and gas may result from disordered intestinal motility in combination with an abnormal pain response to gut distention rather than from increased volumes of gas. (N Engl J Med 293:524–526, 1975)Keywords
This publication has 3 references indexed in Scilit:
- Pain from distension of the pelvic colon by inflating a balloon in the irritable colon syndromeGut, 1973
- Volume and Composition of Human Intestinal Gas Determined by Means of an Intestinal Washout TechnicNew England Journal of Medicine, 1971
- THE CLINICAL GAS SYNDROMES: A PATHOPHYSIOLOGIC APPROACHAnnals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 1968