Why does my stomach rumble when I'm hungry?
Answers: Let's examine the question, normally we don't know that we're answering the question contained by the question already! You said your stomach rumbles when you're hungry. So immediately you know that this rumble comes when you're hungry. The state of hunger is the state when you don't have plenty food in the stomach for your organism to return with nutrients. Now, do you remember at school when the coach taught you digestion? (Actually, when he be speaking, I wasn't bothered to listen, but then I figure out it's really interesting how your body works) If you remember, there are abundant acids in your stomach that dismantle the food. These acids are an ascendancy, because they work 24/7 non-stop, which means that whenever you devour, they'll always be nearby for you. However, the disadvantage is that, when there's no food in the stomach, these acids are still working, and they want to find even the smallest piece of food to dismantle. If they don't find any food, they're going to 'eat' the tissue that's between these powerful acids and your liver. It's painful, and your internal muscles discern it more than you do, hence theyse muscles contract to tell you "Hey within, we need your assistance, EAT SOMETHING!". These muscles move in dull pain up and down, in and out, and adjectives those movements, including the acids, make that rumbling nouns. That's why when you hear that rumble you know you're hungry, because these stimuli are automatic. Thankfully, these rumbles don't usually last for long: they end up to 2 seconds, not more than that, beside some minutes of 'pause' in between. As you start ingestion something, those muscles relax (a bit) and those acids finally find what they're looking for, and instead of eatin your liver up, they'll eat what you're putting within. Hence, the muscles have to detract, they increase like back (if you've noticed, when you're hungry your stomach looks slimmer than when you've in recent times finished eating, that's because muscles hold to make the 'sharp room' smaller, if not these acids will chomp through up everything they find, but if they have a small room, later they will not make great harm), and that can be bumpy if your muscles were really tight in the past (which means, if you be really hungry). Remember to eat something though when you touch you're hungry, at regular intervals: if these acids, infact, eat up too much of what they're not supposed to touch, man acid, they can be corrosive to your liver, cause inflammation, or as it's commonly known, swelling.
That "rumble" is actually your stomach contracting from removal of food, It means your stomach is totally abandoned, so eat something and it should turn away.
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