WHY PEOPLE ARE GASSY

Dr. Maxwell Nartey

Professor of Symptometric Science, American School of Symptometry, NFP

International Center for Cellular Health & Scientific Enlightenment

Is it normal for a person to be gassy and flatulent? No, it is not. It is not normal because they have a gallbladder problem. I will explain.

If there is enough bile in the duodenum (first part of the small intestine), the gases that are released during catabolism (protein breakdown) will be quickly broken up, allowing nitrogen to combine with water to produce nitric acid, while hydrogen and oxygen form enzymes to assist the cells in many other ways.

Gassiness indicates that enough bile and bile salts have not been flowing from the gallbladder to thoroughly digest food. Millions of individuals cannot digest food and do not know why. This article explains why people have digestive problems.

If bile and bile salts cannot overcome most of the obstructions in the cystic duct and common bile duct, enough bile will not be available to digest food. Fundamentally, the reason people suffer from indigestion is there are obstructions in their hepatic ducts or common bile ducts. These obstructions are debris, sludge, or concretions.

Concretions include cholelithiasis or hardened bile turned into stones called gallstones, calculi, gout, calcium deposits, or oxalates.

Early fermentation

Inadequate bile in the duodenum causes the early fermentation of the food a person eats. Such fermentation causes the release of the following gases:

  1. Hydrogen sulfide
  2. Methane
  3. Carbon dioxide
  4. Ammonia
  5. Nitrogen
  6. Hydrogen

Hydrogen sulfide is the smelliest intestinal gas ever, causing body odor, underarm odor, repulsive and maddening flatulence, and gross and embarrassing halitosis (bad breath). What is worse is that hydrogen sulfide makes stool smell so awful that it gets into the person’s clothes and lingers in the toilet for more than 30 minutes. A person’s health is determined by the quality of their stool.

Human stool must have a characteristic light smell, which is skatole. Skatole is broken down tryptophan, an amino acid. Hydrogen sulfide is the smelly gas that decomposing organic matter releases. Sewage also releases it. This is why its smell is more pungent and disagreeable than skatole.

Also, hydrogen sulfide is a poison. It depresses the central nervous system to cause the following:

  1. Senseless, stupid or foolish talking
  2. Foolish laughter
  3. Loquacity, an anomaly that makes a person talk continuously even when people are not listening.
  4. Sleep talking
  5. Somnambulism (sleepwalking)
  6. Sudden dizziness leading to chronic Meniere’s disease
  7. Sleep apnea
  8. Convulsions
  9. Coma. Many individuals come out of a coma after their level of hydrogen sulfide has been significantly reduced.
  10. Bizarre headaches.

Is hydrogen sulfide the only poison that we humans produce naturally? No, there is another one. It is called ammonia. Our colon bacteria produce ammonia to kill the invaders that stray into the colons looking for growth factors.

However, the difference between hydrogen sulfide and ammonia is that the body does not have a mechanism to detoxify hydrogen sulfide but it allows ammonia to circulate to the liver where it is turned into a less toxic product called urea. Unfortunately, it is only individuals who suffer liver injury or have a damaged liver who cannot detoxify ammonia.

Regarding carbon dioxide, if its oxygen atoms are not separated from carbon, it will remain intact, causing cold hands, cold feet, cold vagina, or Raynaud’s disease. In Raynaud’s disease, the person would feel colder than the average person regardless of the season.

The other gases such as nitrogen, methane, and hydrogen are not toxic and do not smell either. However, if they fill the gastrointestinal tract they may cause excessive belching, hiccupping, bloating, and frequent non-smelly flatulence.

What should the ductal cells of the gallbladder do to stop gassiness? They can do nothing because they lack the power and force to remove the blockages. What about herbs, can they help?

Herbs

Carminatives such as anise, ginger, peppermint, caraway, fennel, cumin, dill, and calamus have been used but they only break up the gas without removing the underlying cause of gassiness, which is the blockage of the common bile duct. What about pharmaceutical drugs, can they help?

Pharmaceutical drugs

Pharmaceutical salts can make flatulence less frequent but at a hefty price. Gas medication causes:

  1. Irregular heartbeat
  2. Fainting
  3. Dizzy spells

These are the additional symptoms they cause without removing the source of the problem, which is the blockage of the common bile duct.

Symptometry to the rescue

Hydrolysis and electrolytic dissociation are the two natural and scientific solutions to the gas and bloating problem that plague billions of humans and dogs all over the world. These two scientific processes liquefy gallstones, calculi, oxalates, etc. on contact.

In other words, the removal of the blockages with enzymes called bond breakers, especially hydrolases, do not focus on the gallbladder. The enzymes rather liquefy blockages on a larger scale so that the common bile duct, the cystic duct, hepatic duct and other ducts also benefit from the process.

This is the most comprehensive, scientific, and natural method ever to reverse or prevent gassiness and bloating without any side effects.

© Copyright 2024, The American School of Symptometry, NFP. No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system without the written permission of The American School of Symptometry, NFP. Library of Congress copyright number Txu 1-621-370, Washington D.C.

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