Chyme.
Food begins entering the mouth and is mixed with saliva and this mass is called a bolus. The bolus goes down the esophogus to the stomach where it is mixed with stomach acids and becomes chyme. The chyme goes through gastric emptying into the small intestine where it is then mixed with bile to allow the transport of fat into the blood stream.
"Chyme" is the souplike food mass that leaves the stomach and passes into the duodenum (the first part of the small intestine).
The liquid food mass in the stomach is called chyme.
Bolus
It is called chyme, and it passes from your stomach to your small intestine.
the stomach
No, your body absorbs lots of the nutrients through the stomach, large intestine, and small intestine. And after all of that there is still some left over after you poop it out left in your intestines and stuff. So no, Your food intake is not equal to that of which leaves the body.
When swallowed, food is referred to as a bolus. This is a mass of chewed food mixed with saliva that travels down the esophagus to the stomach for further digestion.
The stomach
Chyme is the semifliud mass of partly digested food that is passed from the stomach to the duodenum.
The mixture of stomach fluids and food produced in the stomach by contracting stomach muscles is called chyme. Chyme is a semi-fluid mass that is created during the process of digestion and contains partially digested food along with gastric juices such as hydrochloric acid and enzymes. It moves from the stomach to the small intestine for further digestion and absorption of nutrients.
The mixture of food and digestive juices that leave the stomach is called chyme. Chyme is a semi-fluid mass consisting of partially digested food, gastric juices, and enzymes that is passed from the stomach to the small intestine for further digestion and absorption of nutrients.
chyme