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#intestine
canisovis · 5 months
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Project I worked on in February! Can’t post the name of it yet.
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evolutionsvoid · 3 months
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The great seas bear many gifts, yet are home to many dangers. The tales carved upon ivory speak of the treachery of the waters and of the beasts that lurk within it. It is no wonder that the ships of wood and bone set sail with so many blades and harpoons, as they either expect to encounter these monsters or instead are seeking them. Some of the greatest blessings that can be found in these waters are pulled from the bodies and guts of these immense beasts, making for fine materials or fetching high prices back on land. Life upon the sea is dangerous, but many do find a living out there. For them, it is crucial to know the great leviathans that dwell in the depths, and know how to deter them or best them when they rise to the surface. This determines if their ship will return to port intact, or will join the horrid beasts below in the dark depths. 
Of the creatures of the ocean, there is no doubt that the Bowel Serpent is the most foul of them. A great worm that writhes through the depths, swallowing prey in a gaping toothless maw. Belching from their mouths are clouds of filth and rot, filling the waters with the taste and smell of death. Scavengers and hungry predators arrive to feed on this chum, only to be sucked into the waiting maw. Though their length is impressive and their reek terrible, Bowel Serpents are not apexes of these waters. Other leviathans see their boneless flesh as a fine meal, and seek to sink their teeth in. To ward off attackers, these serpents discharge large clouds of waste and putrid slime, blinding foes and choking their gills. This smokescreen gives time for the worm to slink away, or perhaps fight back with powerful crushing coils. At times, they flee to the surface, where their presence is known far and wide by the horrid odor they release. Spouts of noxious gas belch from their blowholes, driving away some animals while drawing in others who mistake it for a rotten carcass. For whaling ships, this wretched reek is the sign of a hunt, and they aim their ships straight for the source. Ivory harpoons and bony hooks are launched towards its soft flesh, hooking in and preventing escape. A long fight will go down, with the hopes that the many wounds will bring this leviathan down eventually. Yellowflame is kept away from these battles, in fear that it will ignite internal gases and cause the whole worm to explode, taking the entire crew with it. 
From these battles, a valuable haul of ambergris, oil, blubber and hide is won. Many parts of this rotting worm make for excellent fuel, a fine replacement of Yellow Bile when on long journeys at sea. Their skin is good for clothing and equipment, either repelling liquid or keeping it in where they want it. The meat, while plentiful, is one that will make any sailor or fisher groan. Its horrible smell and pungent taste is made only worse by the fact that it is very much edible. While most would prefer to use it as chum, it is an undesired product that few on land would purchase, thus ship captains use it as cheap food to feed the crew. Why waste the good meat that could be sold, when there are stores of useless flesh that could fill the crew's bellies? Needless to say, "worm stew" or "gut steaks" are despised by sea folk as a whole, but when the other option is starving, these meals are choked down with grumbles and swigs of potent ales. 
While Bowel Serpents are infamous for their terrible stench, land folk like to joke that these beasts are used for perfume aboard whaling ships. As they say, Bowel Serpent odor is noxious and overpowering, but it sure beats the smell that comes off the crew when they are at sea for months on end.           
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"Bowel Serpent"
Hey, it's not my fault that there are old drawings of sea serpents that look like intestines! What was I supposed to do? Ignore them? Impossible!
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drafthearse · 3 months
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cow intestines being dyed for use in sculpture by Kathrine Barbro Bendixen
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bpod-bpod · 8 months
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Colon Calling
Different types of neurons found in the mouse colon which respond at different thresholds of colon distension – potential for targeted treatments if confirmed in humans
Read the published research paper here
Image from work by Rachel L. Wolfson and colleagues
Department of Neurobiology, Harvard Medical School, 220 Longwood Avenue, Boston, MA, USA
Video originally published with a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0)
Published in Cell, August 2023
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wtfearth123 · 9 months
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This 3D visualization depicts the animal's intestinal environment and explains how the gut functions.
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walls-to-the-ball · 10 months
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Pipe-intestine passage way.
God (1917), by Baroness Elsa von Freytag-Loringhoven and Morton Livingston Schamberg, gelatin silver print.
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evusaki · 1 year
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canisovis · 5 months
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Chaos Reigns
Illustration commission for a client based on a scene in Antichrist (2009). A red fox tears its own intestines out and says “Chaos reigns”. Accented with barbed wire and roses.
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drafthearse · 1 year
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Drawing of intestinal villi by Douwe van der Zweep, University Museum Utrecht.
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koboldmytten · 1 year
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New character!
Her name is Paluulula and she's a water dragon with a see-through torso! Also has gold bones as per a suggestion of a friend. I included one of my favourite typical Japanese fabric patterns in my own variant, the seigaiha (blue ocean waves) is such a pretty pattern. She was inspired by many different aquatic animals, including frogs, electric eels, sea dragons, and general fish.
She's very friendly and a bit playful! But be careful, she may be a bit shocking! (electric)
Please enjoy. Feel free to ask questions about her if you wish! It'd help me build her character better.
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bluegradeartist · 2 years
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The Intestine Man! An old drawing I should probably color.
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bpod-bpod · 1 year
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Wait for Force
We all need a little nudge sometimes, and a cautionary hand on the shoulder at others. Our cells are the same, and physical forces can dictate when they take action. Cells of the intestine renew rapidly, as new cells replace old when the physical burden of food processing wears them out. But how the reserve supply knows when to divide and develop from starter cells into mature absorptive cells isn’t well understood. Researchers examined the intestines of flies lacking vinculin – a protein important in determining cell fate and sensing mechanical forces. These flies developed enlarged guts (pictured, bottom) with excessive cell turnover (green) compared to normal flies (top), showing vinculin’s role in keeping precursor cells back until physical forces between cells are sufficient to trigger the need for a refresh. Understanding this mechanical management could help explain how changes in the process are linked to ageing, inflammation, and disease.
Written by Anthony Lewis
Image by Jerome Bohere, work by Jerome Bohere, Buffy L Eldridge-Thomas and Golnar Kolahgar
Department of Physiology, Development and Neuroscience, Downing St, University of Cambridge, UK
Image originally published with a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0)
Published in eLife, October 2022
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scrumpyfan43 · 24 days
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Got an ad for weight loss earrings
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ricisidro · 2 months
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LIVE: Philippine College of Physicians' PHILIPPINE DIGESTIVE HEALTH WEEK 2024 Forum
Topic: EMPOWERING FILIPINOS TO CARE FOR DIGESTIVE HEALTH
#gastroenterology #digestion #digestivesystem #gastriccancer #colorectalcancer #stomach #diarrhea #intestine #largeintestine #liver
https://www.facebook.com/share/v/5LZGgHAb2MeNdkhV/?mibextid=w8EBqM
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