View allAll Photos Tagged Digestive
.... as it makes its way through your digestive system.
Informational illustration to teach kids about our digestive system.
There was a woman lost 10lb by eating 10 of this everyday for 3 days
Fermena
Good internal health is the most important factor to a long and healthy life. Through its wondrous fermentation technology (over 6 months), Fermena helps to balance your system and gives you a sense of rejuvenation. From the nutrient rich soil and waters of the Brazilian rain forest, comes a 100% natural product with no refrigeration required. Fermena is a prebiotic that encourages the growth of beneficial bacteria in your digestive system and delivers over 50 fermented fruits, vegetables and grains with each potent serving.
Fermented Proprietary Blend:
From fruit of orange, pineapple, banana, apple, guava, melon, grains of brown rice, oats, corn, barley, pea, jalo bean, roxinho bean, black sesame (seed), millet (seed), plum (fruit), azuki bean, soy bean, carrot (root), rye (grain), black bean, lentil (seed), avocado (flesh), fruit of acerola, lemon, pear, tomato, red grape, mango, watermelon, pumpkin (flesh), sweet potato (root), chick pea (seed), carambolat, cashew nut, brazil nut, kiwi (fruit), cassava (root), green bell pepper (fruit), sugar beet (root), leaves of collard couve-manteiga, cabbage, passion fruit, chicory, West Indian lemon grass (stem), sacred lotus (root), turnip (root), seaweed, leaves of mate, cinnamon (bark), anis (flower), clove (flower bud), ginger (root), zedoary (root), acai berry. (Also contains: oligosaccharides, lactic acid, acetic acid, citric acid.)
Other ingredients:
Water, brown sugar, yeast, honey.
cross section: Zea may embryo
common name: corn grain
magnification: 100x
Triarch quadruple stain
Berkshire Community College Bioscience Image Library
Technical Questions:bioimagesoer@gmail.com
Le petit coup de barre d'après manger. Il fait chaud...et une petite balade s'impose pour éviter de sombrer.
Illustration of the horse's digestive system, highlighting the mouth, where digestion begins.
Photo source: University of Kentucky
Aisle selling digestive health products at the Target store in Laurel, Maryland. In other words, products to either slow down or speed up the movement of poop through your system.
Ben Schumin is a professional photographer who captures the intricacies of daily life. This image is all rights reserved. Contact me directly for licensing information.
A digestive biscuit is a semi-sweet biscuit originated in the United Kingdom and popular worldwide. The term "digestive" is derived from the belief that they had antacid properties due to the use of sodium bicarbonate when they were first developed.
In the UK alone, the annual sales of chocolate digestives total about £35 million. This means that each year, 71 million packets of these are sold - and each second 52 biscuits are consumed.
On 31 January 2008 the cargo ferry MV Riverdance ran aground at Blackpool, spilling her cargo of thousands and thousands of packets of chocolate digestive biscuits along a five-mile stretch of Lancashire coastline. Chocolate digestives with a hint of brine, seaweed and diesel - yummy!
ORIGINAL DIGESTIVE Per 15g biscuit: 73 calories, 3.2g fat, 2.6g sugar. Hydrogenated fat? Yes
They may not be loaded with artificial ingredients but they contain nearly 10 pc saturated fat four times the proportion in whole milk.They are also the saltiest biscuits: three with a cup of tea supply as much sodium (the unhealthy part of salt) as a packet of crisps.
CHOCOLATE DIGESTIVE Per 17g biscuit: 88 calories, 4.2g fat, 4.8g sugar. Hydrogenated fat? Yes
The chocolate topping adds ten calories and 1g fat compared with a standard digestive. Three of these provide almost 30pc of the desirable daily intake of both saturated fats and sugar for a woman.
Read more: www.dailymail.co.uk/health/article-3723/The-good-biscuit-...
The Best help for good digestion.
Benefits your digestive system through the supply of Enzymes, which help to absorb the nutrients your organism requires.
Benefits:
• Helps maintain excellent digestion
• Improves the assimilation of nutrients
• Efficient against the inflammation of the joints and the stomach’s system
• Revitalizes intestinal flora
• Avoids constipation
• Effective in cases of Gastritis and Colitis
In Ayurveda, a healthy digestive system is referred to as the mainstream of our well-being. The root cause of most of the diseases is inefficient digestion. The metabolic energy of digestion called ‘agni’ helps in eliminating the body wastes and toxins. It breaks down the dense physical matter into subtle energy, which the body needs to generate internal warmth as well as produce a clear mind.
Understanding the Digestive Process
To help you understand this process better, let’s think of our digestive system as a juicer, the body toxins as fruit waste, ‘agni’ as the juicer blades and energy as juice! If the juicer blades are weak, less juice is produced and there is more fruit waste left over.
Similarly, when this ‘agni’ (juicer blade) is weak, there is not enough digestive power to metabolize food into energy (juice), resulting in more toxins (fruit waste) getting accumulated in the cells. Thus, a stronger ‘agni’ (better juicer blades) is required for a good digestive system. An easy way to support this digestive ‘agni’ is through the power of Yoga!
How Does Yoga Improve Your Digestive System?
Yoga synchronizes exercises with the rhythmic breathing in the body. Breathing ushers life force into the body and cleanses it of toxic materials formed due to wrong diet, unhealthy lifestyle and accumulated stresses. It improves ‘agni’, creates body balance and longevity while rejuvenating the whole system.
Benefits of Yoga
• A light and supple body
• A body that is alert and active
• Strong bones and muscles
• Reduction of fat
• Increased physical strength
• Improved appetite
• Increased capability to cope with fatigue
Yoga poses to aide digestion
1. Trikonasana – Improves digestion stimulates appetite and alleviates constipation.
2. Paschimottanasana – Relieves digestive problems like constipation.
3. Pawanmuktasana – Improves gastrointestinal problems.
4. Ardha Matsyendrasana – Massages the abdominal organs, thus alleviating digestive problems.
5. Ustrasana – Stretches the stomach and intestines, alleviating constipation.
A good digestive system is the key to a healthy lifestyle. Physical ailments like constipation, stomach ache, ulcers, acnes, pimples and bloating can be kept at bay if one’s digestive system is in a good condition.
Here are some important tips and long-term remedies that will aid digestion:
• Avoid drinking water half an hour before and after the meal
• Avoid eating heavy meals at night and overeating as well
• Do not lie down immediately after having your meal
• Avoid eating junk food or oily food
• Consume fibrous food
• Avoid irregular food timings
• Be happy and stay away from a stressful lifestyle
• Practice yoga regularly
Skipping meals or popping antacid tablet are not advisable. While it is difficult to bring a radical change in our day-to-day lifestyle, certain measures can be adopted to rejuvenate the digestive system and strengthen it.
Yoga is a time-tested technique for effectively restoring the body to optimum condition – naturally, and without making any major alterations in lifestyle. Simply practicing these basic yoga postures which can relax your abdominal organs and following these simple habits can help improve the functioning of the digestive system and restore your system back to an optimum level! By Sri Sri Ravishankar ji . To know more visit www.yogagurusuneelsingh.com
Aisle selling digestive health products at the Target store in Laurel, Maryland. In other words, products to either slow down or speed up the movement of poop through your system.
Ben Schumin is a professional photographer who captures the intricacies of daily life. This image is all rights reserved. Contact me directly for licensing information.
amaretto cheesecake, extra creamy and smooth.
bakingexplosion.tumblr.com/post/10277369969/mini-amaretto...
This rotifer (Brachionus sp., I think) was vital stained using 20 ppm Neutral Red perfused from the margin of the coverslip into a well slide. Neutral Red stains lysosomes in living organisms, thus staining the stomach and here its contents. The photo on the left shows the intestinal contents before excretion and at the right after excretion. Specmen from a Northern Indiana lake.
Bright field image from a Nikon MS inverted microscope using a 20X DLL objective and a Leica MIKAS adapter to a Sony NEX 5N.