The epigastric (above stomach) region contains the majority of the stomach, part of the liver, part of the pancreas, part of the duodenum, part of the spleen, and the adrenal glands
They are located within your stomach. ---More Specific--- There are 3 types of gastric glands. The "Cardiac" gastric glands are located near the opening to the esophagus at the top of the stomach. The "Intermediate" are in the central stomach in the walls of the mid-stomach. The "Pyloric" gastric glands are located at the base of the stomach where it joins the upper intestines.
The stomach sits just below the thorax (your chest, which is where your lungs are), below the diaphragm. Or left center, upper side of your abdomen.
The stomach is inferior to (below) the diaphragm.
The stomach is inferior (below) to the diaphragm.The diaphragm is superior (above) to the stomach.
Backwards... The diaphragm is superior to the stomach
The stomach is located in the abdominal cavity. Located at the distal end of the esophagus, just inferior to the diaphragm.
Hiatal hernia is a condition associated with the base of the esophagus, fundus of the stomach, and the diaphragm. It is a protrusion of the upper part of the stomach through the diaphragm into the chest cavity. It can lead to symptoms like heartburn, chest pain, and difficulty swallowing.
Diaphragm is a sheet of internal skeletal muscle that extends across the bottom of the rib cage. The diaphragm separates the thoracic cavity (heart, lungs & ribs) from the abdominal cavity and performs an important function in respiration: as the diaphragm contracts, the volume of the thoracic cavity increases and air is drawn into the lungs.
The lungs are located anterior to the diaphragm. The diaphragm is the means by which the lungs inflate and deflate.
Neither. It is cephalic (toward the head) to the stomach.
because of your mom :D
It will push out, if you are breathing from the diaphragm.
stomach
hernia,trauma,paralysis of the diaphragm,congenital thoracic stomach
The diaphragm is shaped like a dome and curves to the bottom of the chest cavity and right above the stomach.