Sentences with word «chyme»

- Slows down gastric emptying which assists with the proper digestion of proteins - Combats diarrhea by regulating the progression of chyme in the small intestine and fecal matter in the colon.
When chyme reaches the stomach, it undergoes intensive digestion through the action of gastric fluids which are very acidic.
As the acidic chyme (pre-broken down protein and food in the stomach) are released into the small intestine, this signals a release of bile from the gallbladder and pancreatic enzymes from the pancreas.
It's not that because this is irritating to your dog's tummy, but because of the rather compromised state of the small intestines, the various pancreatic lipases that are supposed to dissolve fat may not work properly because of the relatively fast transit time of chyme.
In a matter of hours, acids, enzymes, and the stomach's muscular churning reduce all but the most resilient bits of food (and pill cams) to a gruel called chyme.
The nice low pH of all of that acidic chyme.
The resulting mixture is passed down the esophagus just behind the throat as chyme.
I really enjoyed reading it but just had to chyme my 2 cents in.
That inten — that food that chyme that goes into the small intestine which the acidity then triggers the pancreas to make bicarbonate, it also triggers CCK that then caused that the gallbladder to produce bile that also stimulates the pancreas to make light based trypsin and chymotrypsin and all the enzymes that come down.
Your stomach acid should be around a PH of 2, incredibly acidic, so that it can break down food into a liquid, called chyme, that travels to the small intestine and then the large intestine, where nutrients are absorbed and waste travels onward and outward to be excreted.
Without going too Bill Nye on your tushie — basically, the food in your stomach gets broken down into a substance called «chyme».
This chyme is then released in amounts of about 5 ml at a time (about 1 tsp.)
The pancreas: is signaled to release bicarbonate (i.e. baking soda — to neutralize the chyme) and pancreatic juice (to enhance digestion) into the small intestine.
The principal functions of the colon are absorption of water and electrolytes from the chyme and storage of fecal matter until it can be expelled.
If the chyme from the stomach is not acidic it will not trigger a release of bile when it enters the small intestine.
Then the chyme (mostly digested food blob) moves into the small intestine, where enzymes are released to liquify food for absorption into the bloodstream.
This will give the chyme entering the small intestine the proper pH level (acidity), which is what stimulates the pancreas to produce enzymes.
This is the main idea of people touting soluble fiber for digestion, as it increases the overall percent of nutrients consumed via time in the small intestine, and is one of the mechanism that you can see food parts in the toilet if you had an upset stomach; they were inside the chyme and not enzyme treated in the gut.
If the chyme goes through too fast, there is a chance that much of the inside nutrients will not be absorbed (in theory).
From the stomach, the chyme moves into the small intestine.
Slowing of digestion allows more time for intestinal cells (in the small intestine) to work away on the surface area of your chyme.
Via this softening, soluble fiber can mechanically prevent any hard objects in the chyme from rupturing cells lining the gut.
The acidity of the partially digested food (called chyme) entering the small intestine signals the intestine to secrete bicarbonate ions, which neutralize the acid, creating an alkaline environment in the small intestine.
The patient experiences the reflux of this poorly mobile, poorly digested sludge, or chyme, as a sign that they have high stomach acid.
Nutrients and other essential substances that are still present in the chyme are reabsorbed, too.
The amount of water reabsorbed is dependent on the speed of the chyme passing through it.
Once food has been «melted» it is now called chyme — a mulchy, gooey glob that is made of digested food and digestive juices.
In essence, if your pooch has an upset stomach, the movement of the chyme from the stomach through the small intestines and colon is relatively fast.
Conversely, the slower the movement of the chyme the more water is reabsorbed into the blood vessels lining the colon the harder and more formed the stool that comes out through the rectum and anus.
The chyme is then pushed further down the tube, through the jejunum and the ileum where it connects to the large intestines or the colon.
The colon is where water from the chyme is reabsorbed back into the system.
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