Flatulence Flashcards
What is flatus? What is flatulence?
Flatus = gas generated in GIT
Flatulence = expelling flatus through anus
Describe the physiology of flatulence?
- Normal but volume, frequency vary depencing on diet (especially fermentable fiber), presence of methane producing bacteria, and concurrent disease.
- Most from GIT, some from blood stream
Describe the role of aerophagia in flatulence?
- Aerophagia may contribute to flatus
- Aerophagia provokes more flatus in dogs with functional alimentary tract abnormalities – examples include defects in gastro-esophageal sphincter function, eructation, or alimentary gas transit
Describe the pathophysiology of flatulence
Excessive flatulence causes =
- Aerophagia: disorded gastroesophageal sphincter function, eructation, alimentary gas transit, GDV, respiratory disease (brachycephalic)
- Dietary: edogenous gases as either a byproduct of certain foods or incomplete digestion.
- Vegetables: polysaccharides and substrate for LI microbiotica containing fermentable fiber and resistant starch, dairy products, and other components (e.g. carrageenan and guar gum).
- Hypersensitivity to proteins or changes in protein content.
- Lactose intolerance is occasional cause of flatulence
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Alimentary tract disease: enteric infections (e.g. Giardia sp.), and antimicrobials use
- diseases affecting other organs
- Odour producing compounds include carboxyclic acids, phenol, ammonia, hydrogen sulphide, indole, skatole, mercaptans, volatile amines, ketones, alcohols, and short-chain fatty acids.
- Hydrogen sulphide most importand and vary probably due to presence of sulfer-reducing bacteria.
- Sources of sulfer = intestinal mucin, nuts and vegetabls, carrageenan (sulphated polysaccharide)., and high protein diet
- Propulsion of gas in GIT is active process and separate from solid and liquid contents.
- Influencing Diet factors – protein, fat, and fiber all slow transit; and simple sugars and dietary moisture have no effect.
- Physical activity increased speed of gas and decreases retention.
What are the differential diagnoses for a patient with flatulence?
- Aerophagia
- Dietary factors- excessive fibre and adverse food reactions
- Motility disorders – esophageal dysmotility, GDV, dysautonomia, ileus, obstruction, irritable coln syndrome
- Malabsorption – EPI and IBD, lymphoma
- Antimicrobial causes -
- Swallowing disorders (e.g. esophageal dysmotility and megaesophagus)
- Resp tract disorders – anything causing dyspnea
- Problems with feeding – e.g. rapid food ingestion, obsessive compulsive disorders
What are the clinical presentations of a patient with flatulence?
Clinical signs:
- Excessive volume
- unpleasant flatus odor
- noise
- abdominal pain or abdominal distension (‘bloating)
- eructation or borborygmi
- vomiting, diarrhea, and weight loss
How should flatulence be managed?
If underlying disease specific therapy should be implemented
- IBD – immunosuppressive medication
- EPI – pancreatic enzyme supplementation
- Antiparasitic medication for giardiasis
- Symptomatic – dietary management, altering feeding behaviour, and medical therapies
What dietary management can be used for patients with flatulence
- Dietary management is to reduce fat, fermentable fiber, and gelling agents, r eliminate proteins cause hypersensitivity.
- Offer a highly digestible diet which is reduced fat and fermentable fiber
- Dog – 30g/1000kcal fat and 15g/1000kcal crude fiber (<25g/1000kcal total dietary fiber)
- Formulated therapeutic diet or home-prepared diet can be used but will need to be nutritionally balanced for long term feeding
- Avoid vegetarian diets, and foods containing lactose.
- Dry foods and kibble require chewing which slows food intake.
- If adverse food reaction is suspected then using hydrolyzed or single source protein diet.
- Trial should last for 2 weeks since signs associated with adverse food reactions usually improve in 7-10 days.
How can aerophagia be managed to reduce flatulence?
- Change pattern, timing, andmethod of feeding
- Feed animals in separatly to avoid rapid eating.
- Interactive feeders
- Give food ration over a number of meals can help
- Increasing physical activity can be considered since it increases the rate of intestinal gas transit, and decrease gas retention; dogs that are exercised frequently are less likely to bloat than sedentary dogs
What treatments that are medications or surgery can be used to manage flatulance
- Surfactants, adsorbents, antibacterials and probiotics reduce the volume and odour
- Semiethicone- surfactant reduces surface tension causing gas bubbles to coalesces, to reduce trapping and promote passage. 25-200 mg q 6h PO
- Plant saponins from yucca schidigera have effets on antimicrobial fermentation and reduce fecal odour wen fed dogs and cats
- Adsorbents used for symptomatic flatulence include activated charcoal, bismuth subsalicylate, and zinc compounds.
- Bismuth and zinc are divalent cations that bind compounds with sulhydryl group (e.g. hydrogen sulphide) while activated charcoal has internal surface area binding molecules leading to flatulence.
- Activated charcoal reduces hydrogen sulphide and odor associated with flatus in dogs.
- Yucca schidigera extract, activated charcoal, and zinc acetate significantly decreased hydrogen sulphide content of flatus
Antibacterials
- Suitable drugs should be orally administered, effective against anaerobic bacteria, not systemically absorbed and free from side effects.
- Examples include rifaximin which is more effective than activated charcoal for treating humans
- Antibacterial therapy can be used but caution against antimicrobial resistances.
- Probiotics are possible alternative
Surgery options:
Prophylactic gastropexy