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Colon Esophagus


Popular Science Press Pub. Date :2009-8-1

Colon


Esophagus and stomach that Colon painted disease - disease control experts teach you

WU TIE YONG ZHU (Paperback) Popular Science Press Pub. Date :2009-8-1 2009-01-01

Answers

The tube which connects the sigmoid colon to the anus is the? is rectum but not sure?

The tube which connects the sigmoid colon to the anus is the?
a.rectum
b. esophagus
c. jejunum
d. duodenum
e. ileum

im thinking rectum but i am not sure?


rectum is another word for anus

Histopathology Colon, esophagus --Candidiasis


Histopathology Colon, esophagus --Candidiasis

Someone help me with the digestive system?

I have apaper due, here is my word bank;Mouth, anus, ascending colon, cecum, descending colon, duodenum, esophagus, ileum,jejunum,pharynx,rectum,sigmoid colon, stomach, transverse colon. Now I have to put them in order, by the digestive process, starting with mouth. Can anyone help out? Thanks


Mouth, pharynx, esophagus, stomach, duodenum, jejunum, ileum, cecum, ascending colon, transverse colon, descending colon, sigmoid colon, rectum, anus

I have Barrett's esophagus and now my third cousin has esophageal cancer?

She is younger than I am (she is 30 and I'm 36). She is on my mother's side of my family. She had no risk factors, including no Barrett's esophagus and no being overweight. There are GI problems on both sides of my family (colon cancer, irritable bowel syndrome, and GERD). Does this mean my chances of my Barrett's turning into cancer are greatly increased?

(It should be of note that I have an endoscopy twice a year and a colonoscopy once every five years ... with my first endoscopy being in 2004 and my first colonscopy being in 2006)


It sounds as though you have some hereditary factors increasing your risk of such a thing happening. But I also sounds as though you are doing everything possible to catch any problem. Keep up the good work.

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With no stomach and no esophagus, can he...?

I know a guy who survived esophageal cancer and a botched operation, with the end result being no stomach and no esophagus, they had to make a new esophagus out of a piece of his colon. Well, if he doesn't have a stomach, does that mean he doesn't have a gag reflex? Does it mean he can't vomit? How about hunger? Would he feel hunger pains? I'm thoroughly curious about how the body reacts to having no stomach, and how different it might feel.


Well I have all my inside parts intact, so this isn't from experience (clearly), but this surgury actually happens alot when people try to kill them selves by drinking chemicals such as bleach or gasoline. It ruins their insides. You intestines are what do all the absorbtion of food, so he would just have to eat things in smaller pieces (or blend them first) to have them be disolves.
He may or may not have a gag reflex. It depends on where the replacement started. Some people normally are without a gag reflex anyways. He would be able to vomit, he just wouldn't be able to force himself to vomit (like stick his finger down his throat), though it wouldn't be very pleasant because he would be forcing it back out of his intenstines. Wait, but would the intestines contract? Maybe not, so maybe he can't vomit (can you tell i'm guessing here?).... That could be bad for you, because you generally throw up to get stuff out of your system, like food (when you get food poisoning), so he would have no way to get rid of that stuff.
He wouldn't feel hunger pains the same, like he wouldn't feel an empty stomach. He'd more feel the lack of energy. Well, he may still have that empty stomach feeling, but more of a memory of it. I have been told though that people have to eat much more often when they don't have a stomach, because the stomach kind of slowly feeds food to the intestines, with no stomach, there is no regulation, so everything would go in and through right away, and if there was too much it would pass through indigested.

Of the following the greatest amount of nutrient absorption takes place in the?

A. Small Intestine
B. Colon
C. Pancreas
D. Esophagus


a


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