Claire Gillespie is an experienced health and wellness writer. Her work appears across several publications including SELF, Women’s Health, Health, Vice, Headspace, and The Washington Post. Farting ...
A study found that a smelly substance called hydrogen sulfide, which is also found in gas, improved brain function by 50% in mice with Alzheimer’s. Is this an excuse to smell your own farts? There’s ...
According to the researchers, hydrogen sulfide present in farts acts as a critical signaling molecule inside cells, influencing processes linked to aging and neurodegeneration. (AI-generated image) A ...
Go ahead and get a good whiff of your own farts — scientists say it could help guard against Alzheimer’s. Researchers at Johns Hopkins Medicine have found that hydrogen sulfide — the rotten ...