1 00:00:00,520 --> 00:00:03,840 Speaker 1: Welcome to brain Stuff from how stuffworks dot com. Where 2 00:00:03,840 --> 00:00:16,680 Speaker 1: smart happens him Marshall Brain, What is happening when we fart? 3 00:00:17,160 --> 00:00:20,400 Speaker 1: We all suffer from this problem to varying degrees. Where 4 00:00:20,400 --> 00:00:24,040 Speaker 1: does the gas come from? Just think about your digestive 5 00:00:24,079 --> 00:00:27,240 Speaker 1: system for a moment. One thing that's obvious is that 6 00:00:27,360 --> 00:00:32,120 Speaker 1: digestion involves breaking things down. Everything in food has to 7 00:00:32,159 --> 00:00:34,879 Speaker 1: be broken down into small units in order to enter 8 00:00:34,920 --> 00:00:38,720 Speaker 1: the bloodstream. Protein must be broken down into its individual 9 00:00:38,720 --> 00:00:42,599 Speaker 1: amino acids, Fats must be broken down into fatty acids, 10 00:00:42,600 --> 00:00:46,720 Speaker 1: and carbohydrates both simple and complex must be broken into 11 00:00:46,800 --> 00:00:51,600 Speaker 1: individual glucose molecules. Flatulence occurs when a food does not 12 00:00:51,880 --> 00:00:55,000 Speaker 1: break down completely in the stomach and the small intestine. 13 00:00:55,600 --> 00:00:58,160 Speaker 1: As a result, the food makes it to the large 14 00:00:58,160 --> 00:01:02,680 Speaker 1: intestine in an undigestested state. For example, if you are 15 00:01:02,840 --> 00:01:07,199 Speaker 1: lactose intolerant, it means that you lack an enzyme lac 16 00:01:07,319 --> 00:01:12,520 Speaker 1: taste in your intestine. This enzyme breaks lactose apart into 17 00:01:12,560 --> 00:01:17,600 Speaker 1: two sugar molecules so they can enter the bloodstream without lactaste. 18 00:01:17,840 --> 00:01:22,760 Speaker 1: Lactose passes undigested through the stomach and small intestine, and 19 00:01:22,880 --> 00:01:27,240 Speaker 1: it arrives in the large intestine. They're the lactose meets 20 00:01:27,319 --> 00:01:32,360 Speaker 1: up with billions of hungry bacteria, the natural intestinal fauna 21 00:01:32,440 --> 00:01:36,240 Speaker 1: we all have in our large intestine. These bacteria are 22 00:01:36,480 --> 00:01:40,840 Speaker 1: happy to digest lactose. They produce a variety of gases 23 00:01:41,080 --> 00:01:44,280 Speaker 1: in much the same way that yeast produces carbon dioxide 24 00:01:44,319 --> 00:01:49,120 Speaker 1: to leaven bread. Gases such as methane, hydrogen, and hydrogen 25 00:01:49,160 --> 00:01:54,760 Speaker 1: sulfide are common gases that these bacteria produce. Hydrogen sulfide 26 00:01:54,800 --> 00:01:58,160 Speaker 1: is the source of the odor we associate with flatulence. 27 00:01:58,840 --> 00:02:03,000 Speaker 1: Certain foods per do more flatulence than others because they 28 00:02:03,000 --> 00:02:08,760 Speaker 1: contain more undigestible carbohydrates than others. Beans, as you might expect, 29 00:02:08,800 --> 00:02:14,280 Speaker 1: are particularly well endowed in this regard. Be sure to 30 00:02:14,360 --> 00:02:17,160 Speaker 1: check out our new video podcast, Stuff from the Future. 31 00:02:17,480 --> 00:02:19,799 Speaker 1: Join How Staff Work Staff as we explore the most 32 00:02:19,800 --> 00:02:24,880 Speaker 1: promising and perplexing possibilities of tomorrow. The How Stuff Works 33 00:02:24,919 --> 00:02:28,200 Speaker 1: iPhone app has arrived. Download it today on iTunes.