it first passes through the duodenum
This food is called chyme, and is still acidic when it leaves the stomach through the pylorus.
Pepsin helps in digestion of proteins, hydrochloric acid and mucus. HCl helps in killing bacteria present in food. When food leaves stomach it is partially digested soupy liquid called as chyme.
Chyme.
The stomach digests the proteins in a meal. When it is finished digesting those proteins, the food leaves the stomach to be digested more and absorbed in the small intestine.
No, it still has to go through the small intestine, and the large intestine.
The semi-digested food, technically referred to as chyme (sounds like "lime" with a k) leaves the stomach and heads to the small intestine through a small tube on the right.
Blood that leaves the pulmonary alveoli are fully oxygenated whereas the blood entering them are partially deoxygenated.
Your body uses what it needs, and the rest is expelled from your system, if you get my drift. The food is broken up into particles, moves through your intestines and whatnot, and then exits. As usual, there are always better ways to get the answer, but that is the general bottom line.
Once chewed and swallowed as it goes through the esophagus into the stomach, it is called bolus. Once out of the stomach into the small intestin it is called chyme.
The valve that controls the movement of food between the stomach and small intestine is called the pyloric sphincter. It regulates the passage of partially digested food from the stomach into the small intestine for further digestion and absorption.
The bile is stored in the gallbladder and after it leaves the gallbladder it travels to the duodenum. Bile is a very powerful antioxidant which helps in removingÊ toxins from the liver.
food enters, waste leaves