Thursday, October 18, 2012

How Digestion Starts?


Digestion begins in the mouth

Digestion begins as soon as you bite into food. For example, as you chew a sandwich, your teeth cut and grind the bread and the filling into smaller pieces. Your tongue helps mix the chewed food with saliva, the liquid in your mouth. Saliva makes the food wet and easy to swallow.
Saliva also contains an enzyme, or chemical, that helps break food down so saliva can change the food starches into sugars. That is why you may notice a sweet taste when you chew bread, crackers, and other starchy foods.
When you have finished chewing, your tongue moves the wet lump of food to the back of your mouth. You swallow, and the food enters a tube called the esophagus. Your bite of sandwich is now on its way to the next stop in the digestive system which is your stomach.




References:

Cooney, T. M. (2003). Scott Foresman science: grade 4. Glenview, Ill.: Scott, Foresman.

http://www.howany.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/12/How-Long-Does-it-Take-to-Digest-Food.jpg. (n.d.).Google. Retrieved October 18, 2012, from http://www.howany.com/how-long-does-it-take-to-digest-food


Question:

List the Steps that happen before food enters the stomach?

2 comments:

  1. someone has to bite the sandwich or whatever it is he/she is eating then shew the food properly to cut into small pieces. then the saliva inside your mouth has enzymes that help you swallow the food. then the food is ready to pas by the esophagus to reach the stomach

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  2. Before the food enters the stomach, it undergoes a process of chewing. Once the food is chewed properly in to small small peices, the enzymes (from the saliva) act as a push to help you swallow the food. The food is then pushed to the esophagus and thus into the stomach.

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