Well, honey, the stomach is shaped like a "J" because it's designed to hold and break down your food. The curved shape helps with digestion by allowing food to slosh around and mix with stomach acid and enzymes. So, next time you're chowing down, just remember your stomach is working hard in its quirky "J" shape to help you out.
Strong emotions can cause anything from butterflies in the stomach to a nervous stomach or stomachache. It is also hard on the digestion because your gall bladder produces more acid in the stomach. The stomach is also a muscle and if you are up-tight or stressed to the max it can become hard and your food isn't digested as well. Taking walks after dinner or Yoga to reduce stress (even swimming or working out at the gym or bike riding) can help. Stay away from acidic fruits, sauces, spicy foods and drink 8 - 8 ounce glasses of water every day and more if you are perspiring more.
William Beaumont
Cows have one stomach with four chambers. Each of those chambers are called the reticulum, the rumen, the omasum and the abomasum. All four of these chambers, by working together, are responsible for the break-down and digestion of feedstuffs that the cow eats so that nutrients and minerals can be absorbed to be used by that cow's bodily systems.
No is the answer. Sodium hydroxide is is such a strong alkali that it will 'burn' the cells just like acid does. So it is not found in body. Instead you have sodium bi carbonate. But you have very strong acid in stomach. Hydrochloric acid. Imagine acidity go on increasing ten times as you go from 6 to 5 and 5 to 4. And pH in stomach is 1 to 2. (Why does not stomach is 'not' charred at this pH ?) Pepsin works in high acidic pH only and almost stop working at 5.5 pH. So no question of digestion in sodium hydroxide, which is strong alkali with very high pH. If you lower the pH pepsin starts working again.
If that happens, the body will starve to death.
Alright, buckle up, sweetheart. The pyloric stomach is the lower part of a bird's stomach that grinds up food, while the cardiac stomach is the upper part that secretes enzymes to start digestion. So basically, one does the heavy lifting and the other just kinda starts the party. Just remember, one's at the bottom and one's at the top - easy peasy lemon squeezy.
Dr. William Beaumont discovered gastric acids in the 1820's and is known as the "Father of Gastric Physiology". He published his book "Experiments and Observations on the Gastric Juice, and the Physiology of Digestion" in 1838.
starve causing death
running is a very good way of working your stomach
Ok you should get that looked at or get a new one.
Cats' stomachs rumble due to hunger, digestion, or the movement of gas and fluids within their digestive system. It's a normal bodily function, similar to a human's stomach growling, and is typically nothing to worry about unless accompanied by other symptoms like vomiting or diarrhea.