It won't reach your intestines in time and it takes a while for the food to be broken down. your stomach holds about 30 ounces of food, at about 120 to 160 ounces the stomach has reached it's mass of capacity. And anything that go further. If all that food would happen to explode, all the bacteria that's in the food is gonna start multiplying is gonna develop something that's called peritonitis. you will have heart attack of kidney failure which will lead to sepsis, shock, and eventually death.
It is caused by inflammation of stomach and intestines.
That's an ulcer, and results from the acid in your stomach dissolving a hole in YOUR stomach wall. I suggest a hospital.
Osmosis
Coughing violently can cause a horse's stomach to flip. Another common cause is too much food getting blocked in the intestines.
They cause loss of sensation, loss of stomach contents and loss of balance, respectively.
Intestinal bleeding may happen if someone has bleeding in their intestines. It can also happen in the stomach, which then causes black stool at times.
It is secreted from the linings of the stomach and intestines.. cheers!! To make the poop easier to slide down the rectum.
Something called the gastrocolic reflex causes your intestines to move everything forward a bit when the stomach is stretched.
Intestines can get Chrohn's disease, which causes blockage in the intestines and can lead to cancer.
If its on the lower abdomen could be that you are ovulating, sometimes the muscles contract during this period. If its the stomach could be that either you have lots of acidity in your stomach that causes digestion to be alittle hard/rough for food to move about in your intestines causing the pull.
At both ends of your esophagus there is a ring of muscle. Usually, the muscles keep your stomach's contents where they belong. With laryngopharyngeal reflux, the muscles don't work right and stomach acids backs up into your throat.
Peristalsis is a wave-like muscle contraction that moves food through the digestive tract. It helps to push food along the esophagus, stomach, and intestines, allowing for the digestion and absorption of nutrients.