It is actually said through all text books and book i have read that it is 2 to 5 hours that food stays in the stomach.
According to the Mayo Clinic, it is 6-8 hours for both the stomach and small intestine. The problem is that there exist other factors that never seem to be mentioned.
The single biggest factor is whether the digestive fluids are at full strength, or have they have been cooled or diluted by liquids taken with meal, which is the sure way to stop or slow a chemical reaction? If liquids are consumed with meal (common error), the length of the digestion process is lengthened, which exposes the stomach tissue and the esophagus to acid erosion, elevating risk of ulcers and esophageal cancer.
The second "time" factor is the complexity of the food eaten. Digesting a huge Thanksgiving feast requires a far greater release of digestive juices and time than a meal consisting of a large salad and piece of fish. Up to 80% of the energy available in a large complex meal can be used just in the digestion process.
A large complex meal of proteins, vegetables, starches, and carbohydrates can stay in just the stomach for up to 8 hours.
Unknowingly, people who snack consistently are also lengthening digestion time, as each new dose of undigested food will delay the movement of the digested food from the stomach into the small intestine.
Food usually stays in the stomach for 2-6 hours
~Done bye KAY__TAY
It depends on the food contents of the stomach and what your gastrointerial tract is like in terms of size, etc
For some people that have problems it might take 1-2 days but for a normal person it will take about 1-2 hours
Six hours
3 hours
The order is as follows: Stomach, small intestine, large intestine.
No. Food goes to the stomach and then to the small intestine.
The small intestine
The small intestine is where your food goes after the stomach. The small intestine digests your food, then sends it to the large intestine.
It goes through the stomach first and then the small intestine.
your large intestine and small intestine
The stomach is a generic term for the system that digests food. The small intestine is a part of that system
The stomach churns food and then passes it to the small intestine.
No
small intestine
The contractions of the stomach propels the food into the small intestine
The hole that allows food from the stomach into the small intestine is called the pylorus. It is a muscular valve located at the lower end of the stomach. When it relaxes, it allows the partially digested food (chyme) to pass from the stomach into the small intestine.