Oesophagus - The muscular membranous tube for the passage of food from the pharynx to the stomach; the gullet.
The esopahagus is the pipe that moves food from your throat to your stomach. No digestion occurs in the esopagus, only transport.
It is called the esophagus. A tube like organ
It is called the esophagus.
Oesophagus or gullet :)
the esophagus
Oesphagus is the answer not pipe or tube or intestine
Long intestine
The esophagus is a tube that runs between the throat and stomach. It is designed to help stomach acid stay in the stomach and to get food and drink to the stomach.
The esophagus is a tube-like organ that runs from the throat down to the stomach. The esophagus allows food to travel from the throat to the stomach via a muscle movement called, 'Peristalsis.'
That would be the alimentary canal. Food enters the mouth, then travels down the esophagus to the stomach. From there it enters the intestines and exits through the anus as feces.
Small intestine Esophagus - APEX The parts of the alimentary canal are: The Mouth The Pharynx The Stomach The small intestine The large intestine
The esophagus is the tube that brings food and liquids from your mouth to your stomach. βBenignβ means itβs not cancerous. Benign esophageal stricture typically occurs when stomach acid and other irritants damage the lining of the esophagus over time. This leads to inflammation ( esophagitis) and scar tissue, which causes the esophagus to narrow.
you have to put it to sleepAnswer:Consult a veterinarian. You can't get a truly worthwhile answer to such a question here.
The digestive system is basically a tube that runs through you from mouth to "south." It consists of your mouth, pharynx, esophagus, stomach, small intestine, large intestine, rectum, and anus. It also has some accessory organs such as the liver, gallbladder and pancreas that feed into it. It's whole purpose is to break down the food we ingest (eat) into particles small enough that can be absorbed through the walls of the small intestine.
The start of the process - the mouth: The digestive process begins in the mouth. Food is partly broken down by the process of chewing and by the chemical action of salivary enzymes (these enzymes are produced by the salivary glands and break down starches into smaller molecules).On the way to the stomach: the esophagus - After being chewed and swallowed, the food enters the esophagus. The esophagus is a long tube that runs from the mouth to the stomach. It uses rhythmic, wave-like muscle movements (called peristalsis) to force food from the throat into the stomach. This muscle movement gives us the ability to eat or drink even when we're upside-down.In the stomach - The stomach is a large, sack-like organ that churns the food and bathes it in a very strong acid (gastric acid). Food in the stomach that is partly digested and mixed with stomach acids is called chyme.In the small intestine - After being in the stomach, food enters the duodenum, the first part of the small intestine. It then enters the jejunum and then the ileum (the final part of the small intestine). In the small intestine, bile (produced in the liver and stored in the gall bladder), pancreatic enzymes, and other digestive enzymes produced by the inner wall of the small intestine help in the breakdown of food.In the large intestine - After passing through the small intestine, food passes into the large intestine. In the large intestine, some of the water and electrolytes (chemicals like sodium) are removed from the food. Many microbes (bacteria like Bacteroides, Lactobacillus acidophilus, Escherichia coli, and Klebsiella) in the large intestine help in the digestion process. The first part of the large intestine is called the cecum (the appendix is connected to the cecum). Food then travels upward in the ascending colon. The food travels across the abdomen in the transverse colon, goes back down the other side of the body in the descending colon, and then through the sigmoid colon.The end of the process - Solid waste is then stored in the rectum until it is excreted via the anus.
It is the metal pipe that runs down both sides of the intake manifold.It is the metal pipe that runs down both sides of the intake manifold.
Your body still functions the same if your stomach is surgically removed. The surgeon connects the tube that runs down the throat and stomach to the small intestine. It does not affect the ability to digest food but you may have to eat smaller meals as opposed to larger ones.
Not sure what a "t" pipe is. Please explain and give more info.
Sounds like a pressure imbalance. Regarding the broken pipe. Any pipe that breaks should be fixed asap. It was there in the first, get it fixed.