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MASTICATION, 
DEGLUTITION, 
DIGESTION & 
ASSIMILATION 
Dr. Neelam Bhandari 
P.G STUDENT 1st year 
Dept. of prosthodontics
Mastication & Deglutition 
Mastication: 
 Processes involved 
in food preparation, 
including moving 
unchewed food 
onto the grinding 
surface of the 
teeth, chewing, it, 
and mixing it with 
saliva in 
preparation for 
swallowing 
Deglutition: 
 swallowing
CHEWING CYCLE 
 Duration: 0.6 to 1sec depending on 
food type 
 Murphy summarised 6 phases in 
chewing cycle:
Centric 
Occlusion 
Preparatory 
Phase 
Food 
Contact 
Phase 
Crushing 
Phase 
Grinding movement 
at occlusal tables 
Grinding 
Phase 
Tooth 
contact 
Phase 
Tongue positions food in 
oral cavity. Mandible deviates 
towards chewing side 
Sensory receptors triggered 
due to food contact 
Starts with high velocity, slows as food gets crushed 
All reflex muscular 
adjustments for 
tooth contact made 
Mandible return to single terminal point
 The coordination of occlusal contacts, 
jaw motion and tongue movement 
during mastication require a very 
intricate control system. 
 Involves guiding influences from: 
◦ Teeth and supporting structures 
◦ TMJ 
◦ Masticatory muscles 
◦ Higher centres in brain
MASTICATORY 
APPARATUS 
 Teeth 
 Specialized occlusal form 
 Opposing contacts 
 Contours 
 Sluiceways 
 Tongue 
 Level w.r.t occlusal plane 
 Muscles of mastication 
◦ Temporalis, Masseter, Lat. Pterygoid 
◦ Medial Pterygoid,
DEGLUTITION 
 Swallowing is a reflex response. 
 It involves coordination of nearly 20 
different muscles with motor neurons 
distributed from mesencephalic to 
posterior medullary levels. 
 Neurons responsible for coordination 
form the swallowing center – neuronal 
groups fire automatically in a particular 
sequence to achieve a necessary pattern 
of muscle activity to produce swallowing.
 Swallowing is initiated by the voluntary 
action of collecting the oral contents 
on the tongue and propelling them 
backwards into the pharynx. 
 This starts a wave of involuntary 
contraction in pharyngeal muscles that 
pushes the material into oesophagus. 
 Inhibition of respiration and glottic 
closure are part of reflex response.
PERISTALSIS 
 Reflex response that is initiated when 
the gut wall is stretched by the 
contents of the lumen – from 
oesophagus to rectum. 
 Stretch initiates circular contraction 
behind the stimulus and area of 
relaxation in front of it. 
 Rate: 2-25 cm/sec
Stages of Duglutition
Lower Esophageal Sphincter
DIGESTION 
 Digestion is the breakdown of food into 
smaller components that can be more 
easily absorbed and assimilated by the 
body. 
 These smaller substances are absorbed 
through the small intestine into the blood 
stream.
 Digestion is a form of catabolism that is often 
divided into two processes based on how food 
is broken down: mechanical and chemical 
digestion. 
 The term mechanical digestion refers to the 
physical breakdown of large pieces of food into 
smaller pieces which can subsequently be 
accessed by digestive enzymes. In chemical 
digestion, enzymes break down food into the 
small molecules the body can use.
 In the human digestive system, food enters the 
mouth and mechanical digestion of the food 
starts by the action of mastication and the 
wetting contact of saliva. 
 Saliva, a liquid secreted by the salivary glands, 
contains salivary amylase, an enzyme which 
starts the digestion of starch in the food. 
 After undergoing mastication and starch 
digestion, the food will be in the form of a 
small, round slurry mass called a bolus. It will 
then travel down the esophagus and into 
the stomach by the action of peristalsis.
 Gastric juice in the stomach starts protein 
digestion. Gastric juice mainly 
contains hydrochloric acid and pepsin. 
 At the same time protein digestion is occurring, 
mechanical mixing occurs by peristalsis. This 
allows the mass of food to further mix with the 
digestive enzymes.
 After some time (typically 1–2 hours in 
humans, 4–6 hours in dogs, 3–4 hours in 
house cats), the resulting thick liquid is called 
chyme. 
 When the pyloric sphincter valve opens, chyme 
enters the duodenum where it mixes with 
digestive enzymes from the pancreas, and 
then passes through the small intestine, in 
which digestion continues. 
 When the chyme is fully digested, it is 
absorbed into the blood. 95% of absorption of 
nutrients occurs in the small intestine.
 Water and minerals are reabsorbed back into 
the blood in the colon (large intestine) where 
the pH is slightly acidic about 5.6 - 6.9. 
 Some vitamins, such as biotin and vitamin 
K produced by bacteria in the colon are also 
absorbed into the blood in the colon. 
 Waste material is eliminated from 
the rectum during defecation.
Phases of gastric secretion 
 Cephalic phase - This phase occurs before 
food enters the stomach and involves 
preparation of the body for eating and 
digestion. 
Sight and thought stimulate the cerebral 
cortex. Taste and smell stimulus is sent to 
the hypothalamus and medulla oblongata. 
After this it is routed through the vagus 
nerve and release of acetylcholine occurs. 
Gastric secretion at this phase rises to 40% of 
maximum rate.
 Gastric phase - This phase takes 3 to 4 hours. 
It is stimulated by distension of the stomach, 
presence of food in stomach and decrease 
in pH. 
 As protein enters the stomach, it binds 
to hydrogen ions, which raises the pH of the 
stomach. 
 This triggers G cells to release gastrin, which 
in turn stimulates parietal cells to secrete hcl, 
which lowers the pH to the desired pH of 1-3. 
 Acid release is also triggered 
by acetylcholine and histamine.
 Intestinal phase - This phase has 2 parts, the 
excitatory and the inhibitory. 
Partially digested food fills the duodenum. 
This triggers intestinal gastrin to be released. 
Enterogastric reflex inhibits vagal nuclei, 
activating sympathetic fibers causing the 
pyloric sphincter to tighten to prevent more 
food from entering, and inhibits local reflexes.
 PARTS OF GIT 
 Oral cavity 
 In humans, digestion begins in the Mouth, where 
food is chewed. Saliva is secreted in large amounts 
in the oral cavity, and is mixed with the chewed food 
by the tongue. Saliva cleans the oral cavity, moistens 
the food, and contains digestive enzymes such as 
salivary amylase. 
 An additional enzyme, lingual lipase, hydrolyzes long-chain 
triglycerides into partial glycerides and free fatty 
acids. 
 Swallowing transports the chewed food into 
the esophagus. The mechanism for swallowing is 
coordinated by the swallowing center.
 Pharynx 
 The pharynx is the part of the neck and throat 
situated behind the mouth and nasal cavity, 
and cranial, or superior, to the esophagus. 
 It is part of the digestive 
system and respiratory system. 
 A flap of connective tissue, 
the epiglottis closes over the trachea when 
food is swallowed to prevent choking or 
asphyxiation.
 Esophagus 
 The esophagus is a narrow muscular tube 
about 20-30 centimeters long, which starts 
at the pharynx , passes through 
the thoracic diaphragm, and ends at 
the cardiac orifice of the stomach. The wall 
of the esophagus is made up of two layers 
of smooth muscles. 
 The chewed food is pushed down the 
esophagus to the stomach 
through peristaltic contraction of these 
muscles.
Stomach 
 The stomach is a small, 'J'-shaped pouch with 
walls made of thick, distensible muscles, 
which stores and helps break down food. 
 Food enters the stomach through the cardiac 
orifice where it is further broken apart and 
thoroughly mixed with gastric acid, pepsin and 
other digestive enzymes to break down 
proteins. 
 Food in the stomach is in semi-liquid form, 
which upon completion is known as chyme.
 When the chyme reaches the opening to 
the duodenum known as the pylorus, 
contractions "squirt" the food back into the 
stomach through a process called retropulsion, 
which exerts additional force and further grinds 
down food into smaller particles. 
 Gastric emptying is the release of food from 
the stomach into the duodenum; the process is 
tightly controlled with liquids being emptied 
much more quickly than solids.
 Small intestine 
 It has three parts: the Duodenum, Jejunum and Ileum. 
After being processed in the stomach, food is passed 
to the small intestine via the pyloric sphincter. Here it 
is further mixed with three different liquids: 
 Bile, which emulsifies fats to allow 
absorption, neutralizes the chyme and is used to 
excrete waste products such as bilin and bile acids. 
 Pancreatic juice made by the pancreas, which 
secretes enzymes such as pancreatic 
amylase, pancreatic lipase, and trypsinogen . 
 Intestinal juice contains enzymes such 
as enteropeptidase, erepsin, trypsin, chymotrypsin, m 
altase, lactase and sucrase .
 The pH level increases in the small intestine 
as all three fluids are alkaline. 
 A more basic environment causes more 
helpful enzymes to activate and begin to help 
in the breakdown of molecules such as fat 
globules. 
 The small intestine and remainder of the 
digestive tract undergoes peristalsis to 
transport food from the stomach to 
the rectum and allow food to be mixed with 
the digestive juices.
 Large intestine 
 After the food has been passed through the 
small intestine, the food enters the large 
intestine. 
 Within it, digestion is retained long enough to 
allow fermentation due to the action of gut 
bacteria, which breaks down some of the 
substances that remain after processing in the 
small intestine. 
 some of the breakdown products are 
absorbed.
 In general, the large intestine is less vigorous 
in absorptive activity. 
 In humans, the large intestine is roughly 1.5 
meters long, with three parts: the cecum , 
the colon and the rectum. 
 The large intestine absorbs water from 
the chyme and stores feces until it can 
be egested.
Protein digestion 
 Protein digestion occurs in the stomach 
and duodenum in which 3 main 
enzymes, pepsin secreted by the stomach 
and trypsin and chymotrypsin secreted by the 
pancreas, break down food proteins 
into polypeptides that are then broken down by 
various exopeptidases 
and dipeptidases into amino acids.
Fat digestion 
 Digestion of some fats can begin in the 
mouth where lingual lipase breaks down 
some short chain lipids into diglycerides. 
 However fats are mainly digested in the 
small intestine. 
 Pancreatic lipase from the pancreas 
and bile from the liver which helps in the 
emulsification of fats for absorption fatty 
acids. 
 Complete digestion of one molecule of fat 
(a triglyceride) results in 3 fatty acid 
molecules and one glycerol molecule.
Carbohydrate digestion 
 In humans, dietary starches are composed 
of glucose units arranged in long chains called 
amylose, a polysaccharide. During digestion, bonds 
between glucose molecules are broken by salivary 
and pancreatic amylase. This results in simple 
sugars glucose and maltose that can be absorbed 
by the small intestine. 
 Lactase is an enzyme that breaks down 
the disaccharide lactose to its component parts, 
glucose and galactose. Glucose and galactose can 
be absorbed by the small intestine. 
 Sucrase is an enzyme that breaks down the 
disaccharide sucrose. Sucrose digestion yields the 
sugars fructose and glucose which are readily 
absorbed by the small intestine.
 Digestive hormones 
 There are at least five hormones that aid and 
regulate the digestive system in mammals. 
 Gastrin 
 Secretin 
 Cholecystokinin (CCK) 
 Gastric inhibitory peptide (GIP) 
 Motilin
ASSIMILATION 
Carbohydrate Absorption: 
 Hexoses are rapidly absorbed by the 
wall of small intestine (before the meal 
reaches terminal ileum). 
 Its transport is dependent on Na+ in 
intestinal lumen 
 This is because Na+ and Glucose share 
same cotransporter, or symport: 
Sodium Dependent Glucose 
Transporter (SGLT)
 SGLT1 uptake of dietary glucose from gut 
SGLT2 transport glucose out of the renal 
tubules 
 Glucose is transported by Glucose 
Transporter (GLUT 2) into interstitium and 
to capillaries. 
 Transport via GLUT is secendory active 
transport as the energy for this is provided 
indirectly by active transport of Na+ out of 
the cell.
Protein Absorption 
 At least 7 transport systems transport 
amino acids into enterocytes: 
◦ 5 require Na+ and transport AA with Na+ 
◦ 2 of these 5 also require Chloride ion. 
◦ 2 systems transport independent of Na+ 
 Di- and Tripeptides are transported 
into enterocytes by a system called 
PepT1 
◦ Peptide Transporter 1 
◦ This requires H+ instead of Na+
 AA released from peptides plus AA 
absorbed from brush border are 
transported out of enterocytes. 
 They enter hepatic portal blood from 
there. 
 Absorption is rapid in duodenum and 
jejunum but slow in ileum 
 Only 2-5% protein in small intestine 
escape digestion and absorption. 
 This too is digested by bacteria in 
colon.
Fat Absorption 
 Traditionally fats were thought to enter 
enterocytes by passive diffusion but 
now role of carriers is known. 
 There are also carriers that export lipids 
back into lumen. 
 Fate of Fatty Acids depend on their size: 
Less than 10-12 carbon atoms Pass through enterocyte unmodified 
Actively transported to portal Blood
More than 10-12 Carbon atoms Re esterified to triglycerides 
in enterocytes 
Cholesterol Esters 
Coated with a layer of protein 
Cholesterol and phospholipid 
CHYLOMICRONS
Mastication, degluttition, digestion, assimilation

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Mastication, degluttition, digestion, assimilation

  • 1. MASTICATION, DEGLUTITION, DIGESTION & ASSIMILATION Dr. Neelam Bhandari P.G STUDENT 1st year Dept. of prosthodontics
  • 2. Mastication & Deglutition Mastication:  Processes involved in food preparation, including moving unchewed food onto the grinding surface of the teeth, chewing, it, and mixing it with saliva in preparation for swallowing Deglutition:  swallowing
  • 3. CHEWING CYCLE  Duration: 0.6 to 1sec depending on food type  Murphy summarised 6 phases in chewing cycle:
  • 4. Centric Occlusion Preparatory Phase Food Contact Phase Crushing Phase Grinding movement at occlusal tables Grinding Phase Tooth contact Phase Tongue positions food in oral cavity. Mandible deviates towards chewing side Sensory receptors triggered due to food contact Starts with high velocity, slows as food gets crushed All reflex muscular adjustments for tooth contact made Mandible return to single terminal point
  • 5.  The coordination of occlusal contacts, jaw motion and tongue movement during mastication require a very intricate control system.  Involves guiding influences from: ◦ Teeth and supporting structures ◦ TMJ ◦ Masticatory muscles ◦ Higher centres in brain
  • 6. MASTICATORY APPARATUS  Teeth  Specialized occlusal form  Opposing contacts  Contours  Sluiceways  Tongue  Level w.r.t occlusal plane  Muscles of mastication ◦ Temporalis, Masseter, Lat. Pterygoid ◦ Medial Pterygoid,
  • 7. DEGLUTITION  Swallowing is a reflex response.  It involves coordination of nearly 20 different muscles with motor neurons distributed from mesencephalic to posterior medullary levels.  Neurons responsible for coordination form the swallowing center – neuronal groups fire automatically in a particular sequence to achieve a necessary pattern of muscle activity to produce swallowing.
  • 8.  Swallowing is initiated by the voluntary action of collecting the oral contents on the tongue and propelling them backwards into the pharynx.  This starts a wave of involuntary contraction in pharyngeal muscles that pushes the material into oesophagus.  Inhibition of respiration and glottic closure are part of reflex response.
  • 9. PERISTALSIS  Reflex response that is initiated when the gut wall is stretched by the contents of the lumen – from oesophagus to rectum.  Stretch initiates circular contraction behind the stimulus and area of relaxation in front of it.  Rate: 2-25 cm/sec
  • 10.
  • 13. DIGESTION  Digestion is the breakdown of food into smaller components that can be more easily absorbed and assimilated by the body.  These smaller substances are absorbed through the small intestine into the blood stream.
  • 14.  Digestion is a form of catabolism that is often divided into two processes based on how food is broken down: mechanical and chemical digestion.  The term mechanical digestion refers to the physical breakdown of large pieces of food into smaller pieces which can subsequently be accessed by digestive enzymes. In chemical digestion, enzymes break down food into the small molecules the body can use.
  • 15.  In the human digestive system, food enters the mouth and mechanical digestion of the food starts by the action of mastication and the wetting contact of saliva.  Saliva, a liquid secreted by the salivary glands, contains salivary amylase, an enzyme which starts the digestion of starch in the food.  After undergoing mastication and starch digestion, the food will be in the form of a small, round slurry mass called a bolus. It will then travel down the esophagus and into the stomach by the action of peristalsis.
  • 16.  Gastric juice in the stomach starts protein digestion. Gastric juice mainly contains hydrochloric acid and pepsin.  At the same time protein digestion is occurring, mechanical mixing occurs by peristalsis. This allows the mass of food to further mix with the digestive enzymes.
  • 17.  After some time (typically 1–2 hours in humans, 4–6 hours in dogs, 3–4 hours in house cats), the resulting thick liquid is called chyme.  When the pyloric sphincter valve opens, chyme enters the duodenum where it mixes with digestive enzymes from the pancreas, and then passes through the small intestine, in which digestion continues.  When the chyme is fully digested, it is absorbed into the blood. 95% of absorption of nutrients occurs in the small intestine.
  • 18.  Water and minerals are reabsorbed back into the blood in the colon (large intestine) where the pH is slightly acidic about 5.6 - 6.9.  Some vitamins, such as biotin and vitamin K produced by bacteria in the colon are also absorbed into the blood in the colon.  Waste material is eliminated from the rectum during defecation.
  • 19. Phases of gastric secretion  Cephalic phase - This phase occurs before food enters the stomach and involves preparation of the body for eating and digestion. Sight and thought stimulate the cerebral cortex. Taste and smell stimulus is sent to the hypothalamus and medulla oblongata. After this it is routed through the vagus nerve and release of acetylcholine occurs. Gastric secretion at this phase rises to 40% of maximum rate.
  • 20.  Gastric phase - This phase takes 3 to 4 hours. It is stimulated by distension of the stomach, presence of food in stomach and decrease in pH.  As protein enters the stomach, it binds to hydrogen ions, which raises the pH of the stomach.  This triggers G cells to release gastrin, which in turn stimulates parietal cells to secrete hcl, which lowers the pH to the desired pH of 1-3.  Acid release is also triggered by acetylcholine and histamine.
  • 21.  Intestinal phase - This phase has 2 parts, the excitatory and the inhibitory. Partially digested food fills the duodenum. This triggers intestinal gastrin to be released. Enterogastric reflex inhibits vagal nuclei, activating sympathetic fibers causing the pyloric sphincter to tighten to prevent more food from entering, and inhibits local reflexes.
  • 22.  PARTS OF GIT  Oral cavity  In humans, digestion begins in the Mouth, where food is chewed. Saliva is secreted in large amounts in the oral cavity, and is mixed with the chewed food by the tongue. Saliva cleans the oral cavity, moistens the food, and contains digestive enzymes such as salivary amylase.  An additional enzyme, lingual lipase, hydrolyzes long-chain triglycerides into partial glycerides and free fatty acids.  Swallowing transports the chewed food into the esophagus. The mechanism for swallowing is coordinated by the swallowing center.
  • 23.  Pharynx  The pharynx is the part of the neck and throat situated behind the mouth and nasal cavity, and cranial, or superior, to the esophagus.  It is part of the digestive system and respiratory system.  A flap of connective tissue, the epiglottis closes over the trachea when food is swallowed to prevent choking or asphyxiation.
  • 24.  Esophagus  The esophagus is a narrow muscular tube about 20-30 centimeters long, which starts at the pharynx , passes through the thoracic diaphragm, and ends at the cardiac orifice of the stomach. The wall of the esophagus is made up of two layers of smooth muscles.  The chewed food is pushed down the esophagus to the stomach through peristaltic contraction of these muscles.
  • 25. Stomach  The stomach is a small, 'J'-shaped pouch with walls made of thick, distensible muscles, which stores and helps break down food.  Food enters the stomach through the cardiac orifice where it is further broken apart and thoroughly mixed with gastric acid, pepsin and other digestive enzymes to break down proteins.  Food in the stomach is in semi-liquid form, which upon completion is known as chyme.
  • 26.  When the chyme reaches the opening to the duodenum known as the pylorus, contractions "squirt" the food back into the stomach through a process called retropulsion, which exerts additional force and further grinds down food into smaller particles.  Gastric emptying is the release of food from the stomach into the duodenum; the process is tightly controlled with liquids being emptied much more quickly than solids.
  • 27.  Small intestine  It has three parts: the Duodenum, Jejunum and Ileum. After being processed in the stomach, food is passed to the small intestine via the pyloric sphincter. Here it is further mixed with three different liquids:  Bile, which emulsifies fats to allow absorption, neutralizes the chyme and is used to excrete waste products such as bilin and bile acids.  Pancreatic juice made by the pancreas, which secretes enzymes such as pancreatic amylase, pancreatic lipase, and trypsinogen .  Intestinal juice contains enzymes such as enteropeptidase, erepsin, trypsin, chymotrypsin, m altase, lactase and sucrase .
  • 28.  The pH level increases in the small intestine as all three fluids are alkaline.  A more basic environment causes more helpful enzymes to activate and begin to help in the breakdown of molecules such as fat globules.  The small intestine and remainder of the digestive tract undergoes peristalsis to transport food from the stomach to the rectum and allow food to be mixed with the digestive juices.
  • 29.  Large intestine  After the food has been passed through the small intestine, the food enters the large intestine.  Within it, digestion is retained long enough to allow fermentation due to the action of gut bacteria, which breaks down some of the substances that remain after processing in the small intestine.  some of the breakdown products are absorbed.
  • 30.  In general, the large intestine is less vigorous in absorptive activity.  In humans, the large intestine is roughly 1.5 meters long, with three parts: the cecum , the colon and the rectum.  The large intestine absorbs water from the chyme and stores feces until it can be egested.
  • 31. Protein digestion  Protein digestion occurs in the stomach and duodenum in which 3 main enzymes, pepsin secreted by the stomach and trypsin and chymotrypsin secreted by the pancreas, break down food proteins into polypeptides that are then broken down by various exopeptidases and dipeptidases into amino acids.
  • 32. Fat digestion  Digestion of some fats can begin in the mouth where lingual lipase breaks down some short chain lipids into diglycerides.  However fats are mainly digested in the small intestine.  Pancreatic lipase from the pancreas and bile from the liver which helps in the emulsification of fats for absorption fatty acids.  Complete digestion of one molecule of fat (a triglyceride) results in 3 fatty acid molecules and one glycerol molecule.
  • 33. Carbohydrate digestion  In humans, dietary starches are composed of glucose units arranged in long chains called amylose, a polysaccharide. During digestion, bonds between glucose molecules are broken by salivary and pancreatic amylase. This results in simple sugars glucose and maltose that can be absorbed by the small intestine.  Lactase is an enzyme that breaks down the disaccharide lactose to its component parts, glucose and galactose. Glucose and galactose can be absorbed by the small intestine.  Sucrase is an enzyme that breaks down the disaccharide sucrose. Sucrose digestion yields the sugars fructose and glucose which are readily absorbed by the small intestine.
  • 34.  Digestive hormones  There are at least five hormones that aid and regulate the digestive system in mammals.  Gastrin  Secretin  Cholecystokinin (CCK)  Gastric inhibitory peptide (GIP)  Motilin
  • 35. ASSIMILATION Carbohydrate Absorption:  Hexoses are rapidly absorbed by the wall of small intestine (before the meal reaches terminal ileum).  Its transport is dependent on Na+ in intestinal lumen  This is because Na+ and Glucose share same cotransporter, or symport: Sodium Dependent Glucose Transporter (SGLT)
  • 36.  SGLT1 uptake of dietary glucose from gut SGLT2 transport glucose out of the renal tubules  Glucose is transported by Glucose Transporter (GLUT 2) into interstitium and to capillaries.  Transport via GLUT is secendory active transport as the energy for this is provided indirectly by active transport of Na+ out of the cell.
  • 37. Protein Absorption  At least 7 transport systems transport amino acids into enterocytes: ◦ 5 require Na+ and transport AA with Na+ ◦ 2 of these 5 also require Chloride ion. ◦ 2 systems transport independent of Na+  Di- and Tripeptides are transported into enterocytes by a system called PepT1 ◦ Peptide Transporter 1 ◦ This requires H+ instead of Na+
  • 38.  AA released from peptides plus AA absorbed from brush border are transported out of enterocytes.  They enter hepatic portal blood from there.  Absorption is rapid in duodenum and jejunum but slow in ileum  Only 2-5% protein in small intestine escape digestion and absorption.  This too is digested by bacteria in colon.
  • 39. Fat Absorption  Traditionally fats were thought to enter enterocytes by passive diffusion but now role of carriers is known.  There are also carriers that export lipids back into lumen.  Fate of Fatty Acids depend on their size: Less than 10-12 carbon atoms Pass through enterocyte unmodified Actively transported to portal Blood
  • 40. More than 10-12 Carbon atoms Re esterified to triglycerides in enterocytes Cholesterol Esters Coated with a layer of protein Cholesterol and phospholipid CHYLOMICRONS