The peritoneum is the serous membrane that forms the lining of the abdominal cavity or the coelom-it covers most of the intra-abdominal (or coelomic)organs ...
The peritoneum wraps around nearly every organ in the abdomen, providing many folds and spaces for the fluid to gather.
The layer of peritoneum that is in contact with the stomach, intestine and the other organs is visceral peritoneum. The other layer is called as parietal peritoneum.
The abdominal cavity is lined with a protective membrane termed the peritoneum. The inside wall is covered by the parietal peritoneum.
Frenulum for those of you in Ms. Devlin's anatomy class :D
yes, the parietal pleura is a serous membrane. So is the visceral pleura for that matter, and the peritoneum as well.
Greater & lesser omentum, Falciform ligament, and MesenteryVisceral Peritoneum, Parietal Peritoneum, and MesenteryThe top, the middle, and the left side.mesentery and greater omentum
The leftover of your lunch ;D The stomach, as an organ, doesn't have a term to refer to the inside of it, as far as I know. In conversation, 'the inside of the stomach' will usually suffice in describing the inside of the stomach. Hardly detailed, but meh.
The abdominal cavity holds the bulk of the viscera. It is lined with a protective membrane termed the peritoneum. The front of the viscera is covered with a layer of peritoneum called the greater omentum.
The peritoneal cavity is the space between the visceral and parietal peritoneum in the abdominal cavity.
parietal peritoneum (lines cavity of abdomen)visceral peritoneum (next to organ)
parietal peritoneum
parietal peritoneum
parietal peritoneum
peritoneum an intestine layer it has ability to permeability
parietal peritoneum
The mesentery is a fused double layer of the parietal peritoneum that attaches parts of the intestine to the interior abdominal wall.
it is in the abdominopelvic cavity
Yes.
The peritoneum is a thin, translucent membrane that covers the internal abdominal body wall and the abdominal organs. The visceral peritoneum is the part of the peritoneum that is adhered to the visceral (abdominal) organs such as the liver, stomach, intestines, etc. The rest of the peritoneum that is adhered to the body wall is called the parietal peritoneum.