How Much Do You Really Know About Your Stomach?

4 months ago 55

In brief: How Does The Stomach Work?

The stomach is a muscular hollow organ. It takes in food from the food pipe, mixes it and starts breaking it down. The pre-digested food is then passed on to the small intestine in small portions.

When it comes to the tummy, myths abound. From those burning, churning feelings that erupt whenever we eat our favourite foods, to the bloating that keeps us from zipping up our jeans, to the gas that can make us the most unpopular person in the elevator, our stomach can be the cause of some major inconveniences, if not some outright health concerns.

According to Gastroenterologists,  most people know painfully little about how their stomach and their digestive tract operates one reason that solving tummy troubles can seem much harder than it has to be.

These experts say sometimes what seems like a complex, difficult or even frightening problem really is a simple one, with a simple solution, if a person can separate the myths from the facts. To help set the record straight, gastroenterologists explains some of the myths and facts surrounding stomach health.

They explained that simple carbohydrates (like crackers, bread, or cookies) elicit a quick rise in blood sugar and insulin levels, which subsequently drop just as quickly, causing dramatic shifts in both mood and appetite.

* Myth or Fact: Digestion takes place primarily in the stomach.

Answer: Myth. The major part of the digestive process takes place in the small intestine. The stomach takes in the food, then churns it and breaks it into tiny particles called “chyme.” The chyme are then released in small batches into the small intestine, where most digestion occurs. Contrary to popular belief, experts say, foods do not digest in the order they are eaten. Everything lands in the stomach where it’s all churned together, and when it’s ready it’s released into the small intestines together.

*Myth or Fact: If you cut down on your food intake, you will eventually shrink your stomach so you won’t be as hungry.

Answer: Myth. Once you are an adult, your stomach pretty much remains the same size – unless you have surgery to intentionally make it smaller. Eating less won’t shrink your stomach but it can help to reset your “appetite thermostat” so you won’t feel as hungry, and it may be easier to stick with your eating plan.

*Myth or Fact: Thin people have naturally smaller stomachs than people who are heavy.

Answer: Myth. While it may seem hard to believe, the size of the stomach does not correlate with weight or weight control. People who are naturally thin can have the same size or even larger stomachs than people who battle their weight throughout a lifetime. “Weight has nothing to do with the size of the stomach. In fact, even people who have had stomach-reducing surgeries, making their tummy no larger than a walnut, can override the small size and still gain weight.

* Myth or Fact: Exercises like sit_ups or abdominal crunches can reduce the size of your stomach.

Answer: Myth.“No exercise can change the size of an organ, but it can help burn the layers of fat that can accumulate on the outside of your body. Plus it can help tighten the muscles in the abdomen, the area of the body lying just south of the diaphragm, that houses the stomach and many other internal organs.

Interestingly, the part of your “belly fat” that can do you the most harm may actually be the fat you don’t see. It resides in the “omentum,” a kind of internal sheet that lies over and around your internal organs. People who are very overweight often have a lot of fat between their organs internally. In fact, in some instances, the liver can become so packed with fat you can develop a form of hepatitis, and in extreme cases, it can stop functioning altogether. But the good news is that a healthy eating plan can not only help you shed the weight you can see but also the internal fat layers you don’t see.

* Myth or Fact: Foods that contain insoluble fiber cause less gas and bloating than foods with soluble fiber

Answer: Fact. According to experts, most people are astounded to discover that what they perceived as a “gentler” form of fiber – the soluble kind found in foods like oat bran, beans, peas, and citrus fruits- can actually cause more gas and bloating than insoluble fiber, found in foods like whole- wheat bread, wheat cereals, cabbage, beets, and carrots. It is true, and the reason is that gas and bloating result from intestinal flora that is needed to digest soluble fiber. Since insoluble fiber is not digested at all, it goes right through you – there is no interaction with intestinal flora; consequently, no gas is formed. While insoluble fiber won’t give you gas, it can increase the frequency and size of bowel movements.

* Myth or Fact: One way to reduce acid reflux is to lose as little as 2 to 3 pounds.

Answer: Fact. The less acid that flows back up into your esophagus, the fewer problems you will have clearing it. And believe it or not, losing just 2 pounds of weight from the abdominal area can make a difference and pregnancy is about the best example of this. As the baby grows and pushes against the internal organs, heartburn increases; but once the baby is born and the pressure is relieved, the heartburn is, too. In much the same way, losing even a little bit of belly fat can provide similar relief.

* Myth or Fact: Eating before bed can make you gain weight faster than if you eat the same foods during the day.

Answer: Myth. Most experts agree that we gain weight when we take in more calories than we burn up. And while it seems logical that foods we eat during an active day will burn more quickly and more efficiently than foods we eat right before going to sleep, experts say weight gain is not based on a 24 – hour clock. It is the total amount you take in over a period of time compared to how much you burn that determines if you will gain weight. Recent animal studies suggest that avoiding after-dinner snacks may help prevent weight gain. Eating at night may disrupt the body’s circadian clock and alter hormones that control appetite and ultimately result in weight gain.

However, when we are fatigued or stressed, eating right before bedtime can make digestion more difficult and may cause more gas, bloating, and heartburn. There is a ‘brain’ in the gut that helps to make sure that food is moved through the digestive system at the right pace, in the right amount. When we are fatigued like most of us are at the end of a busy day that ‘gut brain’ is fatigued as well.

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