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06 Food Transit in Digestive System Article.docx

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ARTICLE
Food’s journey through the digestive
systemsystem
EXPLORE
Article url: https://www.sciencelearn.org.nz/resources/1849-food-s-journey-through-the-digestive-system
A look at the time it takes for food to pass through the gut from mouth to anus. In a healthy
adult, transit time is about 24–72 hours.
Read the article The human digestive system for further information.
Before eating: Sights, sounds and smells of food
Digestive activity begins with the sights, sounds and smells of food. Just looking at or
smelling appetising food can result in the brain sending signals to the salivary glands to
make the mouth water and to the stomach to secrete gastric juice.
Salad bar
The human eye has an important role in the perception of colour, and this influences our
idea of food flavour.
Chewing: Ingestion 1
Chewing mechanically mixes food with saliva from the salivary glands. Amylase in saliva
chemically digests starch in the food. The mixing process is lubricated by mucin, a
slippery protein in saliva. Each mouthful takes approximately 30–60 seconds.
Swallowing: Ingestion 2
The food is formed into a small ball called a bolus, which is pushed to the back of the mouth
by the tongue. Involuntary muscle contractions in the pharynx then push the bolus down
towards the oesophagus. This swallowing reflex takes about 1–3 seconds.
Peristalsis: Ingestion 3
In the oesophagus, the bolus is moved along by rhythmic contractions of the muscles
present in its walls. For a medium-sized bolus, it takes about 5–8 seconds to reach the
stomach.
Time to empty: Stomach
Food is mixed with gastric juice. Strong muscular contractions in the stomach wall reduce
the food to chyme – a thick milky material. The pyloric sphincter at the lower end of the
stomach slowly releases chyme into the duodenum. Emptying the stomach takes 2–6
hours.
Time to empty: Small intestine
It takes 3–5 hours from entry to the duodenum to exit from the ileum. The small intestine’s
structure of folds, villi and microvilli increases the absorptive surface area and allows
maximum exposure to enzymes and complete absorption of the end products of digestion.
Villi in the small intestine
Millions of tiny finger-like structures called villi project inwards from the lining of the
small intestine. The large surface area they present allows for rapid absorption of
digestion products.
Digestion: Duodenum
Small amounts of chyme are ejected approximately every 20 seconds from the stomach into
the duodenum. The chyme is mixed with secretions from the pancreas and gall bladder.
These fluids contain bicarbonate, enzymes and bile salts essential to the digestion process.
Absorption: Small Intestine
Peristaltic waves of muscular contraction mix and move the chyme down the duodenum
and into the small intestine. It has a huge surface area created by finger-like structures
called villi. These assist with the absorption of the end products of digestion into the
bloodstream.
Elapsed time: Start of Large Intestine
Undigested remains of food are passed through a one-way muscular valve into the first part
of the large intestine known as the caecum – a small pouch that acts as a temporary
storage site. By the time food remains have reached this point, about 5–12 hours have
elapsed.
Colon time: Large Intestine
The large intestine is 1.5–1.8m in length and is divided into the caecum, colon and rectum.
The colon is further divided into 4 parts – ascending colon, transverse colon, descending
colon and sigmoid colon. Watch this video to find out more about the function of the large
intestine.
The large intestine
The large intestine consists of the caecum, colon, rectum and anal canal. It is about 1.5
metres long and has an average diameter of about 6 cm.
The 4 major functions of the large intestine are recovery of water and electrolytes,
formation and storage of faeces and fermentation of some of the indigestible food
matter by bacteria.
Fermentation: Colon
Slower peristaltic movements push undigested food remains along the colon, which mix
freely with the resident bacterial population. The bacteria ferment some of the food remains,
producing short-chain fatty acids as well other important chemicals such as vitamin K.
Mass shift: Stools
The liquid from the small intestine changes into a semi-solid form known as a stool.
A mass movement in the large colon empties the stool into the rectum. Residence time in
the colon ranges from 4–72 hours, with a normal average of 36 hours.
Egestion: Rectum
The rectum’s external opening, the anus, is controlled by a set of muscles. When filled by
a mass movement from the large colon, the rectum is stretched and produces the desire to
defecate. If inhibited, the urge to defecate subsides but returns several hours later.
Watch this animated video: Digestion of food as a follow up to this article.
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