It's rough.
Smooth is to rough as calm is to turbulent.
The stomach has a lining of protective mucus.
Yes, mitosis occurs in the lining of the stomach to replenish and repair the cells that are constantly being shed due to the harsh acidic environment and mechanical abrasion during digestion. This process helps to maintain the integrity and functionality of the stomach lining.
Yes, your stomach is lined with mucus. The chemicals the stomach secretes (i.e., pepsin) are designed to digest protein. But your stomach walls are also made of protein! The mucus coats the lining of your stomach so the chemicals do not destroy the lining.
Smooth endoplasmic reticulum (ER) lacks ribosomes on its surface and is involved in lipid synthesis and detoxification of drugs. Rough ER, on the other hand, has ribosomes on its surface, involved in protein synthesis and processing.
smooth muscle
The stomach muscle is a smooth muscle, and its coated with a smooth membrane like film to protect it.
The stomach lining is quite smooth. The small intestine is lined with villi which increases surface area. Think of villi as little round popsicle sticks protruding from the lining.
Your stomach has a mucus lining that protects it from the acid. Cells located in your stomach produce this lining.
Lining of your intestine is not smooth. Nature has adapted various methods to increase the surface area of the intestine. The surface has become grossly uneven due to this factor. The surface area of the small intestine is about 2750 square feet. That is why the surface becomes rough, although the lining is made of very soft epithelium.
The lining of the stomach has less surface area than the lining of the small intestine. The stomach lining has a mucus coating that protects it from acid while the lining of the small intestine is less coated.
The damage section of stomach lining is actually the entire stomach. The stomach is very acidic, however, is covered with a very thick layer of mucus for protection. If the mucus disappears the stomach lining will be damaged by the acids.
it does actually effect the stomach lining, but DNA in your stomach lining cells learn to produce cells faster. The stomach lining keeps burning away cells, but cells keep being produced.
The chemical doesn't eat away the stomach lining because our stomach lining is surrounded by a thick layer of mucus that can resist the chemical in the stomach.
The wall of the stomach is structurally similar to other parts of the digestive tube, with the exception that the stomach has an extra oblique layer of smooth muscle inside the circular layer, which aids in performance of complex grinding motions.
Smooth is to rough as calm is to turbulent.
Rough with the Smooth was created in 1995.