Home (Chyme)
Home  
 
 
Home » Biology » Chyme


 

Chyme

Biology ChromosomesCiliates

chyme
semiliquid, partially digested food in the stomach
Source: Noland, George B. 1983. General Biology, 11th Edition. St. Louis, MO. C. V. Mosby ...

 


Mesenchyme
[Gr. mesos - middle; Gr. enchyma - an infusion, something poured in]. Embryonic connective tissue derived from mesoderm and neural crest cells.

mesenchyme
(Science: pathology) embryonic tissue of mesodermal origin.
Please contribute to this project, if you have more information about this term feel free to edit this page ...

mesenchyme - mesodermal cells in a developing embryo with the ability to move freely and individually.
mesomere - blastomere exhibiting a size intermediate between a macromere and a micromere.

chyme Semifluid mass of food materials that pass from the stomach to the small intestine.
ciguatera A type of poisoning found in tropical fishes. It may result from a toxin produced by a dinoflagellate.

As chyme enters your large intestine, there is virtually no nutrients left. The job of the large intestine is to remove water from the remaining waste. Water is very important to your body, and it cannot afford to allow water to leave unnecessarily.

mesenchyme
The Biology Project Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biophysics The University of Arizona Thursday, October 30, 1997
Contact the Development Team ...

Acidic chyme from stomach, fat, amino acids in duodenum stimulate release of CHOLECYSTOKININ-PANCREOZYMIN CCK-PZ ...

columns of mesenchyme found in the neck of the developing vertebrate embryo derived from cranial neural crest.

This hormone responds to the acidity of the chyme.
Cholecystokinin (CCK) - is in the duodenum and stimulates the release of digestive enzymes in the pancreas and stimulates the emptying of bile in the gall bladder.

Food is mixed in the lower part of the stomach by peristaltic waves that also propel the acid-chyme mixture against the pyloric sphincter.

The mesoderm forms the somites, the notochord, and the mesenchyme, which give rise to the muscles, circulatory and excretory systems of the body.

duodeni, twelve each - from its length, about 12 fingers' breadth]
The first section of the small intestine, where acid chyme from the stomach mixes with digestive juices from the pancreas, liver, gallbladder, and gland cells of the intestinal wall.

See also: Cells, Tissue, Biology, Animal, Stoma

Biology ChromosomesCiliates

 
 rssRSS