Login / Signup

Effect of stomach motility on food hydrolysis and gastric emptying: Insight from computational models.

Sharun KuharJae Ho LeeJung-Hee SeoPankaj J PasrichaRajat Mittal
Published in: Physics of fluids (Woodbury, N.Y. : 1994) (2022)
The peristaltic motion of stomach walls combines with the secretion of digestive enzymes to initiate the process that breaks down food. In this study, the mixing, breakdown, and emptying of a liquid meal containing protein is simulated in a model of a human stomach. In this model, pepsin, the gastric enzyme responsible for protein hydrolysis, is secreted from the proximal region of the stomach walls and allowed to react with the contents of the stomach. The velocities of the retropulsive jet induced by the peristaltic motion, the emptying rate, and the extent of hydrolysis are quantified for a control case as well as for three other cases with reduced motility of the stomach, which may result from conditions such as diabetes mellitus. This study quantifies the effect of stomach motility on the rate of food breakdown and its emptying into the duodenum and we correlate these observations with the mixing in the stomach induced by the wall motion.
Keyphrases
  • biofilm formation
  • endothelial cells
  • anaerobic digestion
  • high speed
  • mass spectrometry
  • high frequency
  • adipose tissue
  • small molecule
  • amino acid
  • protein protein
  • staphylococcus aureus
  • binding protein