Stomach Report By a Camera In The Stomach

Inside the Stomach
The pill cam broadcasts pictures from inside the prof’s stomach Photo: ITV Anglia

We have ‘gut feeling

Have a ‘knot of Fear in Stomach”

These phrases  seem to be true and are scientifically  explained now.

Michael Mosley swallowed a tiny camera which streamed the Stomach.

Report:

Not many of us get the chance to watch our own stomach’s digestion in action.

But along with an audience at London’s Science Museum, I recently watched live pictures from my own stomach as the porridge I had eaten for breakfast was churned, broken up, exposed to acid and then pushed out into my small intestine as a creamy mush called chyme.

I had swallowed a miniature camera in the form of a pill that would spend the day travelling through my digestive system, projecting images onto a giant screen.

Its first stop was my stomach, whose complex work is under the control of what’s sometimes called “the little brain“, a network of neurons that line your stomach and your gut.

Surprisingly, there are over 100 million of these cells in your gut, as many as there are in the head of a cat.

The little brain does not do a lot of complex thinking but it does get on with the essential daily grind involved in digesting food – lots of mixing, contracting and absorbing, to help break down our food and begin extracting the nutrients and vitamins we need.

And all those neurons lining our digestive system allow it to keep in close contact with the brain in your skull, via the vagus nerves, which often influence our emotional state.

For instance when we experience “butterflies in the stomach”, this really is the brain in the stomach talking to the brain in your head. As we get nervous or fearful, blood gets diverted from our gut to our muscles and this is the stomach’s way of protesting.

Hunger hormones

To accommodate a big meal your stomach has to expand from the size of a fist to around 2 litres. That’s a 40-fold increase.

We used to think that stretch receptors in the stomach told the brain when the stomach was full, time to stop eating. But it turns out that the hunger signals produced by your stomach are far more sophisticated than that.

Understanding that has helped doctors treat father of 4, Bob Lakhanpal, who had hardly ever felt full, no matter how much he ate. As a result he had grown to 20 stone….

Related:

A Norwich scientist has swallowed a tiny camera to make a film about the journey of food.

Professor Simon Carding, head of gut health and food safety at the Institute of Food Research swallowed the “pillcam” yesterday morning before tucking into an unusual breakfast of brightly coloured peppers.

The tiny camera, which costs £500, is a wireless capsule endoscope. It has taken 60,000 images of Professor Carding’s small bowel and the results are astonishingly clear – although there isn’t a pepper to be seen!

Despite having a surface area equivalent to two tennis courts, the small bowel, cannot be explored by a normal endoscope.

Professor Carding’s film will be shown at the IFR’s open day on Saturday September 29th. It’s to give members of the public the chance to see what goes on inside the leading research centre.

http://www.itv.com/news/anglia/2012-09-13/live-from-norwich-the-broadcast-with-a-difference/

Source:

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-18779997

 

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