2023 Impact Factor
1GI Motility Program, Division of Gastroenterology, Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, Los Angeles, CA, USA.
2Hepatogastroenterology Unit, Second Department of Internal Medicine and Research Institute, Attikon University General Hospital, Medical School, Athens University, Athens, Greece.
The composition of gases generated in the intestine shows both inter-individual variability and variability among the different anatomical sites of the gastrointestinal tract. Hydrogen (H2) and methane (CH4) are mostly produced in the large intestine of normal subjects, during the partial or full fermentation of the undigested polysaccharide fraction of certain carbohydrates by the anaerobic flora.1 However, in cases of small bowel bacterial overgrowth (SIBO), these gases are produced in the small intestine and can be detected using breath testing - an indirect and easy method to detect SIBO.2
The quantitative equilibrium of gas concentrations in the intestine is delicate and one gas affects the other. CH4 is produced using H2 and CO2 during methanogenesis performed mainly by a group of anaerobes called methanogens in the intestine. Methanogenesis and methanogens are well known from livestock studies. Digestion of "roughage" in ruminant animals produces huge amounts of methane and measures have been undertaken to reduce cattle methane emissions either with diet modification or by introducing anti-menthanogen vaccination and antibiotics in order to control global warming and loss of energy.3
Methane has previously been considered an inactive gas that it is mainly excreted in flatus, while a certain amount is excreted in breath.4 However, recently, methane has been associated with gastrointestinal disorders, mainly chronic constipation and constipation predominant irritable bowel syndrome (IBS),4,5 as well as metabolic diseases like obesity.6
The purpose of this review is to provide comprehensive insights on methanogenesis and on the association of methane with gastrointestinal motility.
Among the numerous microorganisms that outnumber eukaryotic cells in human gut, methanogens are primitive "bugs" belonging to the Kingdom Archaea, one of the three distinct branches of the phylogenetic evolutionary descent; bacteria and eukaryota being the other two. These organisms are no longer considered prokaryotic organisms and share some similarities with the eukaryotic cells.7 They have some unique properties: live in strictly anaerobic conditions,8 difficult cultivation, requiring specific conditions and media,9 and cell wall lacking peptidoglycan making them therefore susceptible to certain antibiotics (i.e., chloramphenicol and bacitracin) and resistant to many common others like penicillins and aminoglycosides.10 The genetic diversity of methanogens in humans is limited11; only 3 phylotypes have been detected: Methaninobrevibacter smithii is the dominant methanogen in the intestine followed by Methanospaera stadmagnae12 whereas Methannobrevibacter oralis which is implicated in periodontal disease is the main archaeon in the oral cavity.13 Using molecular techniques, other archaea inhabitants of the human intestine have been identified, however, their role in health and disease and their co-operation with methanogens remains still obscure.14
Using either molecular12 or culture techniques,15,16 methanogens account for approximately 10% of the human colon anaerobes, whereas using modern polymerase chain reaction (PCR) techniques, 80% to almost 100% colonization of the human colon by M. smithii has been detected.17,18
There is evidence using quantitative PCR techniques that methanogens colonize in the human intestine early after birth. Methanogens were found in fecal samples of a 1 year old infant,19 while archaeal 16S rRNA was detected even in the meconium.20 These finding support the hypothesis that contact with the mother's vaginal and intestinal flora during vaginal delivery might be an important source for the colonization of the infant gut.21 Moreover, studies in families22 and in twins23 support the hypothesis that environmental factors are associated with methanogenic flora transmission, independently of genetically predisposition. The distribution of methanogens in human colon is associated with the consistency of the feces; in the left colon where stool is solid, methanogens predominate.24 Recently, M. smithii was found in the human duodenum accounting for almost 20% of all microbes in this location.25Table 1 presents the prevalence of methanogenic flora using different diagnostic tests.
Methanogenesis is a unique metabolic process whereby CO2 is reduced to CH4 using H2 produced by anaerobic bacterial fermentation as an electron donor. The procedure is undertaken by methanogens, although certain Clostiridium and Bacteroides species can also produce CH4.26 Through this procedure methanogens obtain energy to survive and they reduce the gas molar volume in the intestine since for the production of 1 mole of CH4, 4 H2 moles are consumed.27 However, methanogens compete with sulfate reducing bacteria and acetogenic bacteria for H2, and the outcome of the competition is governed by factors such as the availability of substrates, thermodynamics and pH. As previously illustrated by Sahakian et al,4 acetogenesis which is not common in the human colon (restricted to the right colon, if present) leads to acetate production through the least thermodynamically favorable process for the consumption of H2. Therefore, it is favored by the absence of methanogens and acidic pH. In contrast, sulfide production is a more favorable thermodynamic process for H2 elimination but requires alkaline pH and a rare substrate (sulfate) in the human intestine. Due to low sulfate in human diet, an abundance of methanogenic flora and its substrate (CO2), stool neutral pH and thermodynamics make CH4 production the dominant process for H2 consumption by intestinal microorganisms.4 However in certain occasions, such as ingestion of sulfate through alcoholic beverages (bear, wine and cider) or bread28 and hypochlorhydria that can change stool pH to alkaline may change the equilibrium in favor for sulphate-reducing bacteria.
Once produced, intestinal methane can be excreted either in the flatus or exhaled after traversing the gut mucosa and entering the systemic circulation without any further metabolism.22 Twenty23 to fifty percent29 of the methane produced is excreted in the exhaled breath giving the opportunity for breath testing to become an indirect measurement of its production in the intestine.
Lactulose breath testing measures methane and hydrogen in breath samples obtained at baseline and every 15 to 20 minutes after 10 grams lactulose ingestion until 180 minutes or even later, using gas chromatography. Methane breath testing shows 2 discrete patterns of the gas production after lactulose ingestion: (1) high baseline level and early rise in the breath methane, associated probably with SIBO production; and (2) late rise, corresponding to the arrival of lactulose at the left colon, where methanogens digest it in normal humans.30
While lactulose is usually the substrate for breath testing, other substrates like glucose and sucrose have also been used. Methane breath testing positivity is variably defined in the literature depending on the substrate and the cut-off used: it ranges from > 1 part per million (ppm) above the atmospheric concentration (1.8 ppm)22,31 to ≥ 3 ppm32,33 and > 10 ppm34 any time during the test.
Based on early study,22 individuals are categorized as methane producers and non-producers, accounting approximately for the 35% and 65% of a healthy Western population, respectively. Surprisingly, the proportion of methane producers remained stable over 35 years between 1970 and 2005, despite increase in antibiotics consumption and diet modifications that occurred during the same period.31
An absence of methane in the breath does not mean absence of methanogenic flora. On the contrary, methanogens are present in the vast majority of the health adults' flora, almost universally.6 However, it seems that there is a threshold of approximately 108 methanogens per gram dry weight of stool in order to detect the generated methane in breath sample35; and methane producers harbor 107 to 1010 methanogens per gram dry weight of stool.27
In contrast to Bond et al,22 recent studies indicate that the prevalence of healthy adults methane producers ranges between 36% and 63%.30,31,36 Several factors have been associated with this wide range. One of them is the definition of methane positivity. While recently, methane positivity is defined based on early (180 minutes) breath test positivity, other studies estimate methanogens prevalence using late breath testing positivity or baseline positivity (Table 1).
Table 2 presents the predisposing factors for methane breath testing positivity in healthy humans. Geographic differences appear important with the highest prevalence in Nigeria and in South Africa (77% and 87%, respectively)37,38 and the lowest in Norway and in Minneapolis-area (34% and 35%, respectively).31,39 Female sex has been also associated with CH4 positive producer status in many studies,22,39-41 but not universally.31 Age is linked to breath methane detection; while methane is not detected in breath of children aged < 3 years,20,31,37 its detection reaches the prevalence of adults by adolescence.22,36
It has been shown that there is a family clustering of CH4 production, being similar between siblings and in parents and children but not in spouses22 indicating that environmental factors are also important for methane production, similar to the findings of the molecular studies discussed previously.23 More precisely, low (9%) but existence of discordance between identical twins,22 and not so high concordance rate between monozygotic twins, which was similar in dizygotic twins23 indicate a role for environmental factors. However, one twin study challenged this hypothesis, indicating the presence of genetically predisposition as well.42
Recently, methane production status has been related with low socioeconomically conditions. High methane production was detected in children living in slum area irrespective of the presence of SIBO, suggesting that methane measurement might be an indicator of environment contamination.43
Certain gastrointestinal diseases have been associated with positive methane producer status, including colon cancer. As early as in 1977, Heins and his colleagues44 showed that the number of methane producers among patients with colorectal cancer occluding the left colon was double than that of the general population, indicating a possible relation between methane production and colon cancer. However, following this observation there were only two more small studies in favor of this association while 10 studies failed to confirm it, as illustrated by Roccarina et al.5 Diverticulosis is associated with methane production35,45 and while diarrheal conditions like inflammatory bowel disease are negatively associated with methane production,29,33 there is strong evidence that methane is positively associated with intestinal motility disorders like constipation32,46 and constipation predominant IBS.4,33,47
Recent data48 has challenged the perception that methane and slowed intestinal motility just coexist or that the abundance of methane is secondary to impaired intestinal motility and proposed that there is a causative relation of methane production and intestine motility disturbance. Investigators showed in a three-part translational and human study that: (1) intestinal methane infusion through surgically created fistulae in an in vivo canine model significantly slowed small intestinal transit time by 59%, as assessed by scintigraphy; (2) exposure to methane augmented ileal circular muscle contractile activity in an ex vivo guinea pig ileum experiment; and (3) IBS methane producers had significantly higher fasting and post-prandial motility indices, as well as, isolated fasting contractions during antro-duodenal manometry compared to IBS H2 producers. The consistency of the motility findings in response to methane in the animal models and in human subjects provided for the first time experimental evidence that methane may not be an inert intestinal gas, but it can intervene to the neuromuscular function of the intestinal track. Moreover, the results in the isolated ileum segment of the guinea pig experiment support a topical than a brain-gut axis methane action.
The evidence for rather causative association of methane with delayed intestinal motility was further augmented by an elegant experiment that aimed to further explore possible effects of gases produced in the intestine in the ileum and colon motility. Investigators showed in an ex vivo experiment using guinea pig ileal, right and left colon segments in a peristaltic tissue bath that: (1) ileal contractile activity significantly decreased and the amplitude of peristaltic contractions increased when methane was pumped in the bath, while the opposite phenomenon was detected after H2 infusion; (2) colonic transit was shortened by hydrogen infusion, but this effect was diminished when methane was additionally pumped; these effects being more prominent in the right colon.49
Although there are limitations in animal and gas perfusion studies to mimic the physiological status of the intestinal environment, these two translational studies provide experimental evidence to support a direct action of methane to delay intestinal transit time.
Intestinal transit time is a physiological marker of intestinal motility. It can be measured by different ways, e.g., stool frequency, whole gut, orocecal and colonic transit time etc., with the implementation of simple or very sophisticated investigations.50 Due to these differences, it is very difficult to combine the results of these studies. Table 3 summarizes seven adult30,31,51-55 studies that included 171 and 287 methane producers and non-producers, respectively. There is a clear association of methane production and slow intestinal transit, irrespective of health status (healthy, IBS or constipated individuals) and of the method used to assess transit in all of them. Even in the two studies31,52 in which statistical significance was not reached, a numerical difference was detected.
There are two more studies that due to different estimation of intestinal motility-using the motility index48,56-are not included in the Table 3. Both studies showed that methane breath test positivity was related to higher fasting motility index, while the study of Pimentel et al48 showed a higher postprandial motility index in methane producing subjects, as well. Finally, there are 2 studies57,58 revealing that the prevalence of methane producers was higher in the slow transit (75% and 58.8%) compared to the normal transit (44% and 12.2%) chronic constipated patients and to the healthy controls (28% and 13.3%), respectively. Therefore, data universally support that production of methane as determined by breath testing, is associated with delayed intestinal transit. However, the mechanisms of transit delay induced by methane are still unclear. A small study that evaluated 18 Rome I IBS patients (4 methane producers) showed that the postprandial serotonin level in methane producing patients was lower than in hydrogen producers, implicating methane to serotonin production for the regulation of intestinal motility.59
IBS is the most common functional disorder characterized by the presence of abdominal pain and altered bowel habits. Based on the predominant symptom, IBS is broadly divided to constipation predominant (C-IBS) and diarrhea predominant (D-IBS) syndrome, and evidence is accumulating for a strong association between intestinal methane production and C-IBS.4,5
Overall, the prevalence of methane producers among IBS sufferers varies. It ranges from low (14.5% to 15%)60,61 to higher (23.8% to 34.4%).62,63 Reasons to explain these differences may include among others, varied definitions of IBS status, different mix of the 2 main subtypes of the syndrome, controls "contamination" with quiescent IBS or IBS-like symptoms as well as variability in the detection of methane and in the definition of the methane producer and ethnic differences. Table 4 summarizes studies supporting an association of methane and constipation related disorders: C-IBS and chronic constipation. As early as in 2003, it was shown that a breath test with detectable methane could discriminate constipation and diarrheal diseases: a positive methane lactulose breath test showed 100% association with C-IBS patients while the gas was almost nonexistent in the predominantly diarrheal conditions of inflammatory bowel diseases.32 Moreover, subjectively assessed constipation and diarrhea severity scores were higher in methane and hydrogen producers, respectively.32 The relationship between constipation and methane production was also proved in a more detailed nested study that assessed constipation severity using both subjective (patients perception) and objective (number of bowel movements and Bristol stool score) measures in 87 Rome I IBS patients.51 In this study, constipation severity was significantly related to methane producer status and to the quantity of methane production during the lactulose breath testing, whereas methane production was correlated to a lower number of bowel movements and Bristol stool score. Furthermore, a study that assessed among many other parameters, stool frequency and consistency, showed that Rome II IBS methane predominant producers on sucrose breath testing reported more often less than three defecation per week and hard or lumpy stools compared to hydrogen producers.56 In a study evaluating SIBO in 204 Rome II IBS patients, there were more methane producers in C-IBS than in D-IBS group (58% vs. 28%) while D-IBS had more hydrogen producers (71% vs. 42%) during the glucose breath testing.63 Finally, among Rome II IBS subjects with bloating and flatulence as predominant symptoms, logistic regression analysis revealed that methane was the main intestinal gas detected in C-IBS patients (OR, 8; 95% CI, 1.3-44.0), using glucose breath testing.64 The results of these studies were recently challenged by a study that failed to detect any association between IBS symptoms and methane positivity on lactulose breath testing in 68 IBS patients fulfilling the Rome III criteria (34% C-IBS).65 Mean symptom severity scores using a visual analogue scale for constipation and diarrhea were not related to methane producer status. However, investigators revealed a weak association between methane positivity and bloating, flatulence and abdominal pain. To the best of our knowledge so far, this is the only study that has not revealed an association between methane breath test positivity and constipation in IBS. However, the authors acknowledge that the study design incorporated a broad subjective definition of constipation without measuring stool frequency and consistency which might be responsible for the discrepant results.65
Since there is no a specific examination, not even a surrogate marker, for the diagnosis of IBS, this diagnosis of the syndrome is symptom based, as proposed by the Rome Foundation.66 However, methane detected in a breath testing is a candidate biomarker for constipation associated disorders. Indeed, a prospective, double blind, head to head comparison of methane positivity in lactulose breath test and Rome I IBS classification showed that methane positivity had a sensitivity of 91.7% and a specificity of 81.3% to correctly assign subjects to the C-IBS group.33 Furthermore, a meta-analysis of nine studies that examined 1,277 individuals found a significant association between methane positivity in breath testing and constipation associated disorders (OR, 3.51; 95% CI, 2.0-6.16). More importantly, the association remained significant (OR, 3.60; 95% CI, 1.84-6.54) when only IBS studies were examined.46 These 2 aforementioned studies indicate that methane could potentially become a biomarker for constipation associated bowel diseases. However before adopting a diagnostic strategy like that, we must have in mind that methane is present in a certain proportion in healthy individuals, methane does not account for all constipation, there are constipated and C-IBS patients without production of methane in the breath test and therefore, methane cannot be considered the exclusive cause of the symptoms.46
Beyond constipation or diarrhea, IBS is a "constellation" of symptoms rather than a single predominant symptom.67 A sophisticated factor analysis was conducted in order to explore the relationship between various gastrointestinal symptoms and the presence of methane in Rome I IBS subjects. Patients answered a 31 item questionnaire on the severity of their gastrointestinal symptoms and underwent a lactulose breath test. The study showed that IBS methane producers have a different set of symptoms (constipation, small bowel movements, straining, lack of milk intolerance and lack of weight loss) as compared to non-producers (diarrhea, pain during and after defecation, large and foul smelling stool, urgency and weakness after the defecation) proposing again a biomarker role for IBS in order to provide patients treatment beyond laxatives for constipation.67
A further step toward the clarification of methane's role in IBS was made by identifying the incidence and type of methanogens in C-IBS patients. In a study that included nine Rome II C-IBS methane producers and 10 IBS non-methane subjects, quantitative PCR revealed that M. smithii was the predominant methanogen in all IBS patients. However, absolute counts and relative to other stool bacteria proportion of the archaeon were significantly higher in methane positive patients. Furthermore, the quantity of M. smithii was proportional to the amount of methane excreted in breath, raising the question of whether M. smithii PCR stool testing would be more sensitive than breath methane for the diagnosis of C-IBS and for the identification of a subgroup of C-IBS who would benefit from antibiotic treatment.47
Antibiotic treatment of IBS with poorly absorbable antibiotics has gained scientific attention during the last decade. After the original trial with neomycin,68 three fully-published and one in abstract form, double blind, placebo controlled trials of rifaximin69-72 suggest an improvement in IBS symptoms related to SIBO eradication.
In a sub-analysis of the neomycin trial,73 there were 12 methane positive patients among the 111 original study participants and all of them belonged to C-IBS group. Neomycin treatment in methane producers (n = 5) resulted in significant improvement of constipation compared to placebo, concluding that the antibiotic use benefit in C-IBS patients is dependent on methane on breath testing.
In further work, the same group performed a retrospective analysis of treatment data among C-IBS patients.74 In all methane positive patients, the treatment of choice was neomycin, rifaximin and the combination of the 2 medications before 2004, between 2004 to 2007 and after 2007, respectively. Data showed that the combination of the 2 drugs was most effective in inducing clinical improvement and in eliminating methane for methane producers (85% and 87%, respectively).
These 2 treatment studies, although they have certain limitation regarding design, clinical outcome definition and small number of included patients, provide further evidence for the use of breath test methane positivity as a biomarker to identify C-IBS patients that may benefit from antibiotic treatment. Moreover, this biomarker can provide objective monitoring of the treatment effect, since the clinical response correlates with methane elimination.73,74
Chronic constipation is another bowel functional disorder which is broadly divided into normal and slow transit constipation and in evacuation disorders.66 According to Rome III, functional constipation and C-IBS are different entities, however the results of a recent provocative study indicate that they are not distinct disorders, but rather lie in the spectrum of visceral sensitivity which is modulated by serotonin.75
The relation of methane production and functional constipation has also been examined, albeit less than in IBS. In a study of 96 Rome III chronic constipation patients and 106 controls, symptoms were evaluated using questionnaire, methane positivity was examined using glucose breath testing and colon transit time was measured using radiopaque markers. Methane positivity was detected in 75%, 44% and 28% of the slow transit (ST) patients, normal transit (NT) patients and controls, respectively. Methane production was highest in the ST followed by the NT patients and it correlated with colon transit time.57 Surprisingly, methane production was not related to stool frequency or consistency in contrast to findings in C-IBS.51
In another retrospective study, 62 Rome III constipated patients and 49 controls had lactulose breath testing for methane production and an accurate colon transit time measurement with markers. Investigators showed that breath methane was positive in 58.8%, 13.3% and 12.2% in the ST, NT patients and controls, respectively.58 Colon transit, and more prominently left colon transit time, appeared related to the total production of CH4. However, methane positivity was not related with stool consistency. Furthermore, investigators did not reveal any relationship between methane production and anorectal manometry findings.58
Using a different approach, the association of CH4 production and various functional gastrointestinal symptoms was studied prospectively in a set of 629 patients and 40 controls, using questionnaire symptom assessment and glucose breath test.76 Methane positivity was similar among patients and controls (32.3% and 30%, respectively), however there was significantly more methane production in patients (21.1 ppm vs. 6.1 ppm; P = 0.045, respectively) than in control. Regression analysis revealed that methane excretion was related only to constipation. When constipated patients were divided in those with chronic constipation and C-IBS, methane production was higher in the chronic constipation patients (30.3 ppm vs. 21.5 ppm; P = 0.046, respectively) than in C-IBS patients.76
In contrast to C-IBS methane eradication treatment data, there is absence of trials evaluating the effects of antibiotic treatment in methane production and symptom resolution in functional constipation. There is only one case report77 of a patient with slow transit constipation and methane positivity (while fasting and after glucose ingestion) whose stool frequency and consistency improved, and colon transit accelerated after 14 days treatment with refaximin 400 mg t.i.d. Moreover, glucose breath methane excretion 10 days after end of treatment was < 5 ppm compared to 36 ppm before treatment, indicating that constipation improvement was related to methane eradication.
Gastroparesis symptoms include postprandial fullness, early satiety, abdominal pain, nausea, vomiting and bloating without obstruction. It may be idiopathic or secondary to diabetes mellitus, gastric-surgical procedures and opioid consumption etc.78 Interestingly, while gastric emptying is delayed, gastroparesis symptoms do not correlate well with the degree of the delay assessed by scintigraphy, suggesting that other factors may contribute to the development of symptoms.79
Although the evidence is still poor to reach firm conclusions, we report herein the only two available studies that have evaluated methane production in gastroparesis patients. SIBO has been detected by positive glucose methane breath testing in 27% of 50 gastroparesis patients complaining mainly about abdominal pain and bloating.80 In a larger study evaluating 201 patients with symptom severity questionnaire, scintigraphic gastric emptying measurement and lactulose breath testing, only 6 (3%) patients had positive methane breath test (breath methane increase of > 20 ppm above baseline by 90 minutes) and there was no relation of methane positivity to gastric emptying time and severity of symptoms.81
Methane is a unique gas produced in strict anaerobic conditions by intestinal methanogens that metabolize H2, one of the end products of bacterial fermentation. Although thought of as an inert gas, there is evidence from translational medicine that methane acts like a neuromuscular transmitter resulting in reduced propagation of the peristaltic movement in the intestine. This evidence is further supported by the universal finding in physiological studies that CH4 production (measured by breath testing) delays transit time and by clinical studies showing a relationship between methane status on breath testing with delayed transit associated conditions like constipation predominant IBS and chronic constipation. There is also preliminary evidence that antibiotic treatment results in improvement of symptoms in a certain proportion of patients suffering from these disorders in a fashion related to its ability to eradicate methane. However, methane is also detected in healthy individuals and all constipation patients and symptoms are not associated with high methane production, meaning that there is plenty of room for research to identify the mechanism of action of methane on intestinal motility before recommending methane as a biomarker for the diagnosis of constipation related disorders or as a biomarker for selecting patients who may benefit from antibiotic eradication of methane.