Through the body's journey, I wanted to know that your body miraculously changes your food strangely to the nutrients and energy your body can use. This is a step-by-step process on how our body digests or converts food into useful nutrients that our body can use. Step 1: Oral digestion immediately after the first food. Chewing breaks food to help the digestive process. Then the food is mixed with saliva to help the lower esophagus and break up the food. Step 2: The esophagus is a tube connecting the throat and the stomach.
You can cross the esophagus, stomach, small intestine, large intestine, pancreas, gall bladder, liver when biting or swallowing food. In the process, your body absorbs important vitamins, carbohydrates, minerals, fats and proteins. Food may take hours to several days to complete the journey. Anyone can call an organ with a length of 3 to 5 cm and a length of 6.7 m. The small intestine is wrapped under your stomach and uses the liver, pancreas and gallbladder to further refine the food. The small intestine draws out most of vitamins, minerals, proteins, carbohydrates and fats from your food. It will take your food for more than 4 hours to complete. At the end of the journey, some nutrients go into the liver and the remaining substances move to the colon.
From the small intestine, undigested food (and some water) enters the large intestine through muscle rings or valves and prevents food from returning to the small intestine. When food reaches the colon, work to absorb nutrients is nearly complete. The main function of the large intestine is to remove moisture from undigested material and form solid waste that can be discharged. The cecum is a small sachet in the first part of the large intestine connecting the small intestine and the large intestine. This transition zone has an enlarged diameter enabling food from the small intestine to the large intestine. The appendix is a small, hollow, finger-shaped pouch hanging over the edge of the cecum. The doctor believes that the appendix is the legacy of human evolution. It seems no more useful for the digestive process
Food enters the large intestine after passing through the small intestine. The large intestine is named after the diameter of the body cavity rather than its length. It is actually much shorter than the small intestine. The function of the colon is to remove excess moisture from the digest before digestion is finally discharged. So you have it - a basic overview of what happens when we eat it when we eat it as we eject it. Although we have not described all the steps in detail, we recommend that you follow as many steps as possible. For a detailed explanation of the entire process, please check the link below.