yes
Its a ring of muscles that move an animals food through its stomach and intestines.
It is a cow that eats rainbows... I kid you, the Pyloric cecum is a ring of musles that moves food along the stomach and helps it mix in with the stomach asid and disolve into a dijustible substance that is ready to be broken down. The pyloric cecum pushes down or slides across the stomach to move the food. This is not found in all fish but most fish, it is also found in sea urchais and a few other crustation. Is an involintary mucle.
Pyloric caeca or hepatic caeca helps in a starfish's digestion. It is located in the their arms. After swallowing their prey, they then place it in their Pyloric caeca where the digestion process starts.
The Pyloric Caeca is a finger-like out-pocketing of the intestine where it meets the end of the stomach (pylorus). Also spelled cecum (ceca). Serves to aid digestion. It is basically where digestion occurs, as it aids the stomach in digestion.
The ileum
The function of the pyloric caecum is to aid in digestion. It is also known as the hepatic caeca and digestive caeca.
The ileum is the final part of the small intestine that leads into the colon/ large interstine. It is around this transition of the ileum into the colon that the cecum (or caecum) arises. (At the end of the cecum is the appendix).
The ileum lays between the jejunum and cecum. The ileum is fairly similar in operation to the jejunum (ie; loaded with mucous membranes and villi to absorb nutrients from food).
Caecum or Cecum
the cecum is the first part of the large intestine where it meets the ileum of the small intestine. the appendix is a tube that has no particular use to the body that is attached to the cecum.
cecum is the beginning of the Large Intestine
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