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Studying Gas-Passing

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Medical science has reached a new height. We now have the first wearable device that can actually measure human flatulence, farts, in real time. The research fartologists are actually University of Maryland cell and molecular biologists who now publish their gaseous findings in the journal Biosensors and Bioelectronics.


Their study tested “smart underwear” with a wearable sensor that measures the hydrogen gas produced by bacterial fermentation in the gut. Farts also contain an abundance of nitrogen and carbon dioxide, but these are provided by swallowed air and not generated in the gastrointestinal tract.


In the 19 healthy adult subjects who wore the smart underwear about 11 hours a day for one week, researchers found flatulence occurs on average about 32 times per day. Individual variation was wide from as few as 4 events to as many as 59 per day. Compare this finding with older medical estimates of about 14 farts per day plus or minus. The device demonstrated 94.7% sensitivity in detecting increased hydrogen production after participants ate inulin, a prebiotic fiber known to stimulate the production of gut bacteria.


This precise gas monitoring won’t cure cancer, but it is possible that a gastrointestinal cancer may have a very specific flatulence signature. This technology will help establish a normal baseline for flatulence, something that has never existed before. Because the hydrogen in flatus is produced by gut bacteria, these measurements will provide insight into the effects of diet and microbiome activity on many digestive disorders.


https://www.acsh.org/news/2026/02/21/university-maryland-toots-out-beauty-smart-underwear-measures-your-farts-49967

https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2590137025001268


#flatulence #farts #gastrointestinal


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