muscularis
between the circular and longitudinal muscle layers
The stomach is different from other organs of the digestive system because it has three layers of muscle in the muscular is externa. These are the inner oblique layer, the middle circular layer and the outer longitudinal layer.
Outer = longitudinal smooth muscle Middle= circular smooth muscle Innermost= longitudinal smooth muscle
outer layer ============= longitudinal middle layer================ circular inner layer============ longitudinal
The vas deference is lined by pseudostratified columnar epithelium, supported by a basal lamina, a folded lamina propria, and a thick smooth muscle coat that is composed of a inner longitudinal, middle circular, and outer longitudinal smooth muscle layers.
There is a bilayer of muscles in the intestines called the muscularis externa. There is an inner circular layer and outer longitudinal layer. These two layers are responsible for the slow regular propulsion of food called peristalsis.
There are four basic layers: starting at the innermost (closes to the food) there's the mucosa, then submucosa, then muscularis, then serosa. The muscularis layer is made up of two distinct, concentric muscular layers, the inner circular and the outer longitudinal (named for the general direction of their muscle fibers).The four basic tissue layers of the alimentary canal are: Mucosa, Submucosa, Muscularis externa, and the Serosa.From outer to inner: serosa, external muscle layer consisting of outer circular and inner longitudinal, submucosa and mucous membrane
Whereas the rest of the alimentary canal only has two muscular layers, longitudinal and circular, for peristalsis, the stomach has an additional oblique layer that permits it to churn and pummel the food.
Four layers of tissue form the walls of the digestive tract. These layers are called mucosa, submucosa, muscularis externa and adventitia.
they are a band of longitudinal layers has been reduced to the muscular bands of the taeniae coli. It helps for mixing and propulsive contractions
The muscles in the intestines are not named, specifically. There are circumferential muscle layers and longitudinal muscle layers in the intestines. These muscle layers create the peristalsis that moves food and digestive products through the intestinal tract. If you are asking the names of the muscles of the abdominal wall, they are the rectus abdominis, internal and external obliques, and the transverse abdominal muscles.
it how big it is