A series of muscular contractions, which squeeze the alimentary canal, called peristalsis, are what moves food all the way through the alimentary canal, from beginning to end.
The function of the esophagus is to move food from the mouth to te stomach. It is muscles that move the swallowed food slowly down and into your stomach
The food moves in the food pipe because muscles push it down into the stomach.
Food moves through the esophagus on its way to the stomach. It is a muscular tube that connects the mouth to the stomach and uses peristalsis to push food down.
Peristalsis is the term for the rhythmic contractions of the esophagus. These wavelike contractions move food toward the stomach.
The stomach is a sac shaped like a "j" and is about eight inches long. In the stomach, food is mixed with acids. The muscles in the stomach move, which helps break down the food. The stomach is protected from the acid by a lining. From the stomach, the food pulp is sent to the small intestine. Food leaves the stomach a little bit at a time.
The muscles in the esophagus move the food down into the stomach.
If food is in the esophagus, the next step is for the muscles in the esophageal walls to contract in a coordinated manner, a process known as peristalsis. This action pushes the food down toward the stomach. If peristalsis is impaired or if there is an obstruction, the food may not move properly, potentially leading to discomfort or choking. In healthy conditions, the food will eventually reach the stomach, where digestion begins.
No, peristalsis is the wavelike muscular contractions that help move food through the esophagus and into the stomach. The trachea is the airway that leads to the lungs, and peristalsis does not occur in the trachea to push food to the stomach.
It allows the stomach to move food along the tract, but also to churn, mix, and pummel food, physically breaking down food into smaller fragments
these muscles can move in your stomach in not a referable question pleese comment
by allowing the stomach to stretch in order to accommodate large meals and help to grip and move food during digestion.
muscles lining the esophagus move in a wavelike motion, oushing the food through the esophagus and into the stomach