parisites
No, the stomach and intestines get LESS blood during exercise. The blood is needed in the muscles being used and is shunted there instead of digestive organs
The superior mesenteric artery
your stomach and small intestines break food down and anything that gets to your large intestines exits your body through the anus
Nutrients are absorbed by the blood vessel in the small intestines. Special cells in the small intestines are facilitate this movement.
The intestines absorb all of the molecules that are from the broken down/part digested food. The intestines have a massive blood flow through them, so all of these molecules are diffused through the villi (the inside wall of the intestines) and into the bloodstream. In short, the intestines are what actually gets the nutrients into our blood.
Hemolytic jaundice - excessive breakdown of red blood cells leads to a corresponding increase in conjugated bilirubin excreted by the liver, converted to urobilinogen in the intestines, and more urobilinogen being reabsorbed in the intestines which gets excreted in the urine.
your intestines
Similar to humans, frogs have tiny blood vessels attached to the intestines to aid the absorption of nutrients into the blood after digestion.
superior mesenteric artery
they get passed through small vessals into your blood.
death
Intestines