Digestion Note
Digestion Note
When food has been eaten, it must be broken down in the body by the process of digestion.
Food goes through many changes both physical/mechanical and chemical as it travels along
the alimentary tract/canal
DIGESTION OF FOOD
Digestion is the process that changes large nutrient molecules into smaller molecules so that
they can enter the blood stream and be used by body cells. It breaks food down into
absorbable units which dissolve in your blood before travelling around your body. It is the
process by which food is changed in the alimentary tract.
2. Chemical – this is the means by which food is changed into simpler substances
Proteins to amino acids
Carbohydrates to simple sugars like glucose
Fats to fatty acids and glycerol
Mastication (chewing) is the process by which food is crushed and ground by the teeth. It is
the first step of digestion.
Absorption is the passage of the end products of digestion from the gastrointestinal tract
into the blood and lymphatic vessels and the cells of tissues (as it relates to digestion)
Bolus is a small rounded mass of a substance especially of chewed food at the moment of
swallowing
Peristalsis is the contraction and relaxation of the muscles of the intestines creating wavelike
movements that push the ingested food through the digestive tract towards its release at
the anus
Chyme is the semi fluid mass of partly digested food that passes from the stomach to the
small intestines, consisting of gastric juices and partly digested food
PROCESS OF DIGESTION
MOUTH
Physical breakdown
This is the process in which your food is chewed, mixed with saliva and broken down into
smaller pieces.
Teeth – tear, rip, and grind food into pieces small enough to swallow
Tongue – pushes the food around the mouth and down the throat
Saliva – moistens food making it easy to swallow
Chemical breakdown
Protein – None
Fat – None
Carbohydrate this starts once the saliva is released and the enzyme salivary amylase starts
to break down the starch and dextrin into simple sugars (maltose).
N.B. – cooked starch is acted on more quickly than raw starch.
OESOPHAGUS
STOMACH
Physical breakdown
The stomach walls churn (strong muscular waves or contraction and relaxation of the
muscles) [peristalsis]. This movement helps to further breakdown food and mix it with
mucus and gastric juices (produced by the stomach) that contain hydrochloric acid that kills
the bacteria. Food remains in the stomach for 2-5 hours. The broken down food is referred
to as chyme.
Chemical breakdown
Protein – Pepsin starts the breakdown of protein into smaller chain of amino acids called
peptides.
Rennin clots milk so the pepsin can act on it more efficiently.
Fat – None
Carbohydrate – Hydrochloric acid produced by the stomach, stops the action of salivary
amylase, and helps pepsin to work. It also kills bacteria.
SMALL INTESTINE:
Physical digestion
Food passes through the first part of the small intestines called the duodenum peristalsis
continues (the churning of the stomach walls/strong muscular waves or contraction and
relaxation of the muscles) to move the food along.
It is at this point that absorption takes place. The intestines contain small hair-like or finger-
like projections called villi. The nutrients are absorbed into the walls of the small intestines
through the villi into the blood stream. (While all other nutrients go directly into the blood,
fats first pass through the lymph system). The digested nutrients provide energy and make
new cells.
LARGE INTESTINE/COLON/BOWEL
Most of the nutrients have been absorbed by the time food reaches the large intestine, the
food is quite liquid. At this stage water is reabsorbed into the blood stream (this prevents
dehydration) leaving the solid waste food (faeces). This action produces/manufactures
vitamins B and K. The faeces are pushed through the intestine by peristalsis and eliminated
from the body through the rectum. If there is sufficient absorption, infections occur and the
result is diarrhea.
Summary