The normal name for that is, "Intestinal Juice".There is a scientific name,but it has not been posted on this question.
small intestine
The small intestine
The three fluids that mix with food in the small intestine are bile from the gallbladder, pancreatic juice from the pancreas, and intestinal juice from the small intestine itself. These fluids aid in the digestion and absorption of nutrients from the food.
The terminal ileum. Just had a doctor tell me that.
Length of the large intestine is only 50 inches. The length of the small intestine is about 20 feet. Still the former is called as large intestine. It is because the diameter of the intestine is very large as compared to small intestine.
Intestinal juice is made here
In the first part of the small intestine called the duodenum.
gastric juice
Nucleic acids are first broken down in the duodenum of the small intestine. A hormone called cholecystokinin stimulates the release of pancreatic juice from the pancreas, and a component of this pancreatic juice is a group of enzymes called nucleases. Nucleic acids are then digested by these nucleases into single units called nucleotides.
pancreatic juice contains an enzyme called Tripsin present in our small intestine for the digestion of proteins into amino acids.
Bile and pancreatic juice are secreted into the small intestine through ducts. These chemicals assist in digestive processes in the small intestine.
Intestinal juice is secreted by the glands in the lining of the small intestine, primarily the duodenum. It is a mixture of enzymes, mucus, and other substances that aid in digestion. This juice is produced in response to the presence of chyme, which is the partially digested food that enters the small intestine from the stomach. Additionally, bile from the liver and pancreatic juices from the pancreas also contribute to the digestive process in the small intestine.
small intestine
pancreatic juice chyme bile
Large intestine
There is a site on the duodenum called Ampulla of vater where the common bile duct joins with the pancreatic duct and enters into the small intestine at the duodenum.
Pancreatic juice in a frog travels from the pancreas through a duct that empties into the duodenum of the small intestine. When the frog eats, the presence of food in the duodenum triggers the release of pancreatic juice to aid in digestion.