Gas Composition and Sources
Aerophagia introduces atmospheric air during eating, drinking, chewing, and speaking. Rapid eating, carbonated beverages, and excessive gum chewing increase aerophagia. Swallowed air primarily contains nitrogen (78%), oxygen (21%), and small amounts of carbon dioxide and argon.
Bacterial fermentation produces metabolic gases. Colonic bacteria anaerobically metabolize undigested carbohydrates through various fermentation pathways, producing short-chain fatty acids (acetate, propionate, butyrate) and gases (hydrogen, methane, carbon dioxide). The volume and composition vary based on substrate type, bacterial species, and fermentation efficiency.