Muscle food primarily comes from animals, such as cattle, pigs, and poultry, which are raised for their meat. Additionally, seafood like fish and shellfish also provides muscle food. In a broader context, plant-based sources, like legumes and certain grains, can offer protein that supports muscle growth, though they do not contain muscle tissue like animal products. Overall, the term "muscle food" typically refers to the edible muscle tissue of animals.
Your muscles get the "power" they need from the energy stored in food. When you digest food it gives you energy.
Yes, the muscles squeeze the food through the digestive system :)
Involuntary or smooth muscles.
One example of involuntary muscles would be in the digestive system, where muscles in the stomach churn food.
these muscles can move in your stomach in not a referable question pleese comment
I believe that the food moves through the system by only gravity and not any muscles. This is do to the fact that our intestines are angled downward. Wow...gravity has nothing to do with this at all.
The muscles that help in the initial breakdown of food are primarily the muscles of the jaw, including the masseter and temporalis muscles. These muscles facilitate chewing (mastication), which mechanically breaks down food into smaller pieces, making it easier for enzymes to act on it in the digestive process. Additionally, the muscles of the tongue aid in mixing food with saliva, further enhancing the initial digestion.
Muscles cause contraction. Contraction aides in moving the food along.
My uranus
No. Blood.
smooth muscles
Blood