I know it’s often unpleasant, but is intestinal fart gas dangerous to health in any meaningful sense? For example, has anyone been told by a doctor that they need to spend less time in enclosed spaces where a lot of people are farting because they are breathing too much of it and it is causing health problems?
E.g.
Patient: “I have a headache all the time.”
Doctor: <performs examination>
Patient: “What is it, doctor?”
Doctor: “It looks like you have hyperhenogeical displasia. This is often caused by inhaling excessive intestinal gas.”
Patient: “Intestinal gas? You mean farts? Oh, I work in a small office next to three guys who eat beans for lunch every day.”
Doctor: “That could be it. Can you open a window?”
I very much doubt it. Flatus, even when it’s stinky, is still mostly plain old air so I doubt the concentration of anything noxious is going to be high enough to do you any harm, barring some sort of Human Caterpillar-style delivery.
That’s not what the link says. “>99% of the volume of flatus is composed of non-odorant gases.[5] These include oxygen, nitrogen, carbon dioxide, hydrogen and methane… Hydrogen, carbon dioxide and methane are all produced in the gut and contribute 74% of the volume of flatus in normal subjects.”
So 99% is non-stinky, but that doesn’t make it plain air (despite what I asserted above). But hydrogen, CO2 and methane are not toxic. The only risk is if the concentration is high enough to displace oxygen and cause asphyxiation. 74% of a few farts isn’t going to displace the breathable air in the room.
Mythbusters did this, believe it or not. Jamie laid in a small plexiglas room with the maximum possible amount of farts per hour (they used an equivalent gas) being pumped in for a number of hours. I think the myth was about it being possible to fart yourself to death in your sleep. I really wish I was kidding. Anyways, oxygen levels never dipped to a dangerous level, so myth busted.