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FOOD DIGESTION
Take a trip through the intestinal tract to appreciate how your food is digested along the way -
and learn how you can help your food be digested better at each stop along the way.
Hop on the intestinal train for a food-informative ride. From mouth to anus, your intestinal tract
is a 25-foot long disassembly line. Whole food is taken in at one end and waste expelled from
the other. Enroute nutrients are taken out of the food and absorbed into the bloodstream
according to the body's needs. The whole process is called digestion. (When things go wrong,
it's called indigestion.)
Digestion is basically a process of breaking down big food particles into individual molecules,
tiny enough to squeeze through the intestinal lining into the bloodstream. Your body uses
mechanical and chemical means to do this. By understanding the way the digestive process
works - and how you can make it work better, you can improve your own "gut feeling." Let's
follow a representative food - say a peanut butter and jelly sandwich - from top to bottom and
study the stops along the way.
Digestion begins in the brain. Before your meal you imagine how good the food is going to
taste. You get an eyeful when you walk past the buffet table at the beginning of the party. Or,
the aroma of freshly-baked bread draws you into the bakery. Your eyes and your nose get your
body and mind in the mood for food, and just the thought of food gets the digestive juices
flowing. Your mouth waters, and your stomach churns at the very thought of what is soon to
grace your pallet. Even before the first bite you think, sniff, and drool your digestion machine
into action. Just anticipating eating gets the intestinal tract ready for the job coming its way.
Chew-chew! Mom's admonition to "chew your food" is good advice.
When the sandwich enters the mouth, the first step in food breakdown begins. Your teeth break
the bread down into smaller particles, increasing the surface area through which the chemical
food processors - enzymes - can penetrate the food. Chewing breaks up the fiber that holds the
food together and unwraps the food package so that the digestive enzymes have easier access to
the contents inside. The saliva already flowing in anticipation of eating bathes the broken-down
bread and peanut butter with the first digestive enzyme, salivary amylase. Amylase breaks the chemical bonds between the carbohydrate molecules, changing them into
smaller sugar molecules. Uncoupled from their friends, these are now free to be broken down
even farther, if necessary. Even the fat in the food gets a head start on digestion while it's in the
mouth by receiving a tiny squirt of a fat-digesting enzyme called lingual lipase. (As we travel
down the tube, you will notice that names of enzymes are a combination of the
suffix -ase and the nutrient they work on, such as lipase digesting lipids, proteinase digesting
proteins, and lactase dissolving lactose.) Saliva also lubricates the food, making that gooey
peanut butter slip-and-slide down the ten-inch long esophagus, the tube that connects the mouth
and the stomach. Saliva is the body's own health juice. Besides helping with digestion, saliva
contains a recently-discovered substance called epidermal growth factor (EGF), which facilitates the growth and repair of injured or inflamed intestinal tissue.
Perhaps this is why animals lick their wounds.
Taking smaller bites, chewing the food well, and swallowing slowly are things you can do to
better prepare the food package for the next part of its journey. Also, chewing foods slowly
slows down your eating. You'll swallow less air (so less burping), and you can be more aware of
signals that tell your stomach it's getting full. When each step along the disassembly line is done
well, the next job is easier. By taking small bites, chewing your food well, and swallowing it
slowly, you help the food particles go down the tube without discomfort. Mom not only chewed
you out for "swallowing your food whole", but you also probably got many eating sermons on
how to "eat slowly." Again, mother-nutritionist was right.
Churn-churn! When it enters the stomach, the mush from the mouth gets mixed. The stomach
is your body's mechanical and chemical food processor. It's a pouch composed of sheets of
muscle that encircle the stomach in different directions. When they contract, the stomach can
mix the mush this way and that. The stomach muscles twist and churn the food like you would
knead bread dough. The lining of the stomach secretes gastric juices, including hydrochloric
acid, which dissolves the food, a protein-splitting enzyme called pepsin, and a fat-digesting
enzyme called lipase. Like fruits or vegetables pureed in a blender, the food is
churned and mixed with the digestive juices until it resembles thick soup. This glob is called
chyme.
The circular muscles of the stomach also have the job of keeping the food in the stomach long
enough to be broken down from a solid to liquid. Sometimes these muscles can malfunction.
The muscle at the lower end of the stomach (called the pylorus) can become too thick and tight in
the first few weeks or months of infancy, keeping the stomach contents from emptying. Instead,
the food comes back up forcefully. This condition is known as pyloric stenosis and is manifested by vomiting of increasing frequency and severity. The muscle at
the top end of the stomach, called the gastroesophageal sphincter, can become too loose, so the
stomach contents don't stay in during churning. This leads to a condition called
gastroesophageal reflux.
Hydrochloric acid is strong enough to eat through meat and potent enough to kill most of the
harmful bacteria that may be in food. So the stomach not only digests, it disinfects. It is the
body's food processor and the body's food purifier. Yet it does not destroy all the bacteria we
ingest. Some of the bacteria that are able to survive the harsh conditions in the stomach
eventually take up residence in the intestine where, in return for all they can eat, fulfill an
important role in the health and digestive process.
For comfortable digestion to occur, the stomach lining should secrete just the right amount of
acid at the right time - no more, no less. If the lining pours out acid when the stomach is empty
(which can happen when you are under stress), the acid irritates the stomach lining, causing
uncomfortable sensations, or indigestion. Also, if there is no food to absorb the acid, the excess
acid enters the first part of the intestine, the duodenum, which is more sensitive. Since there is
no food to digest, the acid digests the lining of the duodenum, causing what are called duodenal
ulcers. Substances such as alcohol or coffee on an empty stomach
(accompanied by stress) can literally eat you up inside. Or, the excess acid can squirt up into the
esophagus, which also has a more sensitive lining, causing "heartburn" or reflux.
NUTRITIP:
Fast Absorbing Food
The mouth and stomach are mainly food processors. The small intestine is in
charge of absorption. Yet, some substances, such as alcohol, caffeine, and some drugs (such as aspirin) can be
absorbed through the lining of the stomach, accounting for the blurred speech
or the buzz that occurs even before someone can finish their drink or their cup
of coffee. Consuming these mind-altering substances on an empty stomach
increases the speed of their absorption.
Belches, rumblings, and vomiting. When your stomach is empty and you are hungry or
anticipating eating, the stomach contractions just squeeze air, making the noise experienced as
"rumblings." Burps, belches, rumblings, vomiting, and retches are occupational hazards for the
hard-working gut. Most belches and burps follow the swallowing of air, which occurs not only
when you swallow food but also when you swallow saliva, or when you get hungry or tense.
Since you swallow several thousand times a day, it's no wonder that the upper end of the
intestines needs to kick back some air. Add to that the internal gases produced from fermentation
in the lower intestines, and it's no wonder that the average human is a bit of a "windbag."
The vomiting reflex is designed to protect the intestines from unwanted material. It simply sends
it back out the way it came. The brain triggers the muscles of the diaphragm, abdomen, and
stomach to contract suddenly, forcing the stomach contents up and out. While vomiting is not
always desirable, often (e.g., after experiencing food poisoning) vomiting brings gut feelings of
relief.
Grazing for good digestion. The size of a meal shouldn't be more than the
size of your stomach. To help your eyes get a general picture of the size of your stomach, open
your fist so that the tips of the thumb and forefinger touch. Your stomach is about the width of
this open fist and twice as long. Next time you are about to binge, place your fist next to your
heaping plate and notice the mismatch. (Compare the tiny fist of a tiny toddler next to a full
plate. You can now see why tiny tummies can get upset easily.)
All parts of the intestinal tract - from top to bottom - were designed for grazing, that is small
frequent mini meals rather than three big squares a day. The term "square meal" doesn't imply a
complete balanced meal must be eaten at every sitting. In some ways children are smarter eaters
than adults. Left to their own foraging, they tend to nibble and graze throughout the day. Most
adults would experience less indigestion if they ate five mini meals a day rather than three maxi
meals.
Seep-seep! By the time the peanut butter sandwich is chewed and churned, it's ready to be
pushed from the stomach into the small intestines where the real digestive action is. Most of the
sandwich's proteins and carbs empty from the stomach into the small intestine within a couple
hours, yet the fats, since oil and water (digestive juices) don't easily mix, remain in the stomach a
few hours longer. (This is why you feel fuller longer after a high fat meal than you do after a
high carbohydrate or high protein meal).
As the chyme, the food mush, enters the small intestine the most important part of digestion -
absorption - begins. The first part of the small intestine is called the duodenum (Latin for
"twelve" - the adult duodenum is around 12 finger breadths long). More digestive processes
occur in the duodenum than in any other part of the intestinal tract.
In order for food to become part of you, it has to get through the intestinal lining, so here's where
exciting changes occur. First, because the more delicate lining of the small intestine doesn't like
the irritating stomach acids, it secretes the body's own antacids - bicarbonates - to neutralize the
food. As the food moves down the intestinal disassembly line, it passes by stations where it gets
squirts of digestive juices that further break down the proteins, carbohydrates, and fats into
molecules small enough to seep into the bloodstream.
Each nutrient requires specific intestinal juices that work on its molecules in particular ways.
Trypsin and peptidases are enzymes that disassemble the protein necklaces into individual amino
acids, which enter the bloodstream through "doors" in the intestinal lining specially marked for
"amino acid entry only". Carbohydrates are disassembled into individual sugar molecules by the
enzymes lactase, sucrase, maltase, and pancreatic amylase, and the individual sugar molecules
enter the bloodstream through doors marked "sugar only." (If the intestinal lining is injured,
these doors are not so selective, allowing allergens to pass through that are potentially harmful to
the body - a condition known as the leaky gut syndrome.)
Behind each door runs a blood vessel that quickly ferries the nutrients throughout the body where
they can be burned for energy or reassembled into tissues.
Meanwhile back in the stomach, the fats are finally getting ready to leave. As they enter the
small intestine, the fats get a squirt of bile from the gallbladder and some lipase from the
pancreas. The bile emulsifies the fat, the way soap breaks up grease. Like soap, bile does not
really dissolve the fat, but rather breaks it down into tiny particles, which are then more easily
broken down by the intestinal enzyme lipase for absorption into the bloodstream. The individual
fatty acid molecules exit the intestine through doors marked "fats only." However, unlike
proteins and carbs which go through their own doors and into the bloodstream quickly, fats go
into microscopic holding rooms within special cells in the intestinal lining. Here they are stuffed
into microscopic bags, which are then taken out the back door and loaded onto ferry boats in the
bloodstream called lipoproteins. These molecular ferries then circulate
throughout the bloodstream loading and unloading fat molecules at cell loading docks. Picture
each cell of the body as having millions of loading docks on the membrane. If the cell doesn't
need any more fat, it shuts down the docks, so that the lipoprotein ferry boats can't dock and are
forced to circulate around the bloodstream until they find some other place to deposit the fat.
The two places always receiving more fats are the liver and the fat cells. So the ferry boats either
deposit the excess fat around the waist, the hips, or wherever, or transport the extra fat into the
liver where it is dissolved by bile and excreted out into the intestines as waste.
A supply-and-demand process. The enzymes involved in digestion work on a supply and
demand basis. If the glands in the intestinal lining and the pancreas secrete enough enzymes to
break down and absorb all the food that comes by, the intestines feel fine. But if there is more
food than there are enzyme workers to process it, the doors close, and the excess travels down
into the lower intestines where it is not very welcome. The result is indigestion. How do you
keep this supply and demand digestive process in balance? You guessed it. Give the enzymes a
fighting chance by grazing or eating smaller meals. Overwhelming the intestines with too much
food sets you up for indigestion.
The luxurious intestinal lining. The lining of the intestines is more like a plush carpet than a
smooth sheet. Here's why. Trillions of microscopic projections, called villi, grow out from the
cells of the intestinal lining. This increases the cell's surface area, thus increasing the contact
between the food and the cells. The more contact these cells (and their rich blood supply) have
with the food, the more nutrients can be absorbed.
The intestinal lining is only one cell thick, which is a good news / bad news phenomenon. The
good news is that because the lining is thin, nutrients are easily absorbed. They come in the front
door of the cell and go out the back door into the bloodstream. The bad news is that this delicate
lining is easily injured by irritants and infection. When this happens, food cannot be absorbed
efficiently, leading to diarrhea, abdominal pain, gas, and bloating. When the cells are damaged,
there may not be enough enzymes available to digest certain foods, for example, lactose.
Temporary lactase deficiency is common following intestinal
irritation or infection. This is the reason why doctors advise smaller, more frequent feedings of
more easily-digestible foods during recovery from an intestinal infection. It may also be
necessary to avoid milk and other lactose-containing foods. The cells of the intestinal lining do
regenerate and heal, though complete healing may take several weeks. Diarrhea or looser stools
may occur for 4 to 6 weeks following an intestinal infection.
Water and waste. By the time the peanut butter and jelly sandwich has completed its 20-foot-
long, ten-hour journey through the small intestines, most of the nutrients have been absorbed.
The leftovers enter the final five feet of the journey, called the large intestine, or colon. Little digestion occurs in the colon, since it has few villi and low levels of
intestinal enzymes. Food processing in the colon is often described as the calm after the storm.
Yet the colon is not just a passive waste collector and eliminator. It plays an active and
important role in the health and well-being of the whole body, accounting for the phrase, "Your
body is only as healthy as your colon."
The first vital function of the colon is to regulate the body's water balance. As the waste from
the food passes through the lower part of the intestines (called the jejunum) and enters the colon,
the colon absorbs excess water from the food and furnishes it to the water-thirsty body. If,
however, the waste matter lacks water, the colon fills the stool with water to prevent
constipation. Healthy water balance in the colon leads to healthy stool
patterns. In fact, one of the most important changes a
person will notice after following the eating program in this book, is having several smaller, soft
(but not diarrhea) stools a day rather than the usual American pattern of one huge bowel
movement once a day or every other day. Passage of 4 to 6 soft bowel movements a day
suggests that your colon is in biochemical balance.
Bugs in the bowels. Billions of bacteria reside in the intestines, primarily in the large intestine.
Called intestinal flora, because they are like the plant life of the intestines, they
contribute to the healthy life of the colon - and the whole body. These intestinal bacteria are
also known as probiotics because they add health to life. (The term
"probiotics" is also used for bacteria supplements in a bottle, either in powder or capsule form.)
The two main healthful bacteria in the colon are lactobacilli and bifidus
bacteria. They live symbiotically in the colon, meaning in a mutual give-and-
take relationship. These bugs give good stuff to the body in return for a warm place to live. The
healthy bacteria keep the harmful bacteria in check. They also ferment the soluble fiber in food,
forming short-chain fatty acids (SCFA's), which nourish the
cells of the large intestine, stimulating healing and reducing the development of intestinal cancer.
SCFA's are also absorbed from the intestines and travel to the liver where they decrease the
liver's production of cholesterol. In addition, SCFA's inhibit the growth of yeast and disease-
causing bacteria. Probiotic supplements with lactobacilli and bifidus bacteria are available in most drug and vitamin stores. One supplement that I recommend, with the lactobacillus strain Lactobacillus GG, is Culturelle®.
NUTRITIP:
Gut Feelings
Take your cues from your intestines. The intestinal lining and most of the
walls are richly supplied with nerves, anatomically referred to as the gut brain
. They react to emotions as well as foods, which is why
stress or "nerves" can give you indigestion or abdominal pains.
More gut sounds. Air-swallowing produces belches and burps. Gas at the other
end is another worry. When the normal bacteria that live in the large intestines "eat" certain
foods (such as the polysaccharides in beans), the byproduct of the bacteria's own digestive
process is gas. While the colon absorbs some of this gas, some goes up and accounts for bad
breath, and the rest of the gas is expelled as flatus. The odorous gas is a
combination of methane and hydrogen sulfite.
Most of the gas you hear, feel, or smell is a result of the intestinal bacteria digesting the sugars
and fiber that manage to reach the large intestine. Since these bacteria love starch, the prime gas
producers are polysaccharides in starchy foods, such as beans, brussel sprouts, prune juice, and
just about every type of grain, except rice, which seems to be the most socially-acceptable starch.
Galactose from milk and the soluble fiber pectin are also favorite foods of the resident bacteria.
How much gas is produced by what foods is very individual. To put your large intestine on
emission control, keep your own food-gas diary and adjust your diet accordingly. Most of the
time the volume of food you eat is more at fault than the type of food. Overwhelming the
intestines with more starch than they can absorb sets you up for unwanted blasts.
The end. The rhythmic contractions of the colon move waste material (called feces) into the last
five inches of the large intestine, called the rectum, where the final waste products are
eliminated. Normal passage of feces or stools (called defecation) occurs when the nerves lining
the rectum sense the presence of feces that need to be evacuated. The presence of feces in the
rectum stimulates a reflex (called the defecation reflex) which causes
the muscles of the abdomen and upper rectum to contract and the muscle encircling the anus to
relax, allowing easy passage of stools. This reflex is very efficient as long as people don't do
something to mess it up. Eating too little fiber, not drinking enough fluids, eating too much fat
(fat slows intestinal transit) and simply not paying attention to the evacuation warnings of the
rectum will cause the reflex to stop working. (Kids between five and ten, especially boys, are
prone to ignore this reflex.) Feed your intestines properly and listen to their signals, and they will
work well for you.
Do you suffer from indigestion? You don't have to. While "heartburn" and
"indigestion" used to be discomforts that many adults just learned to live with, new insights and
treatments have uncovered the medical reasons and effective treatment for these upsets.
While the terms "heartburn" and "indigestion" have no medical definition, if your "heart" burns
or you "indigest," there is usually a medical reason. The most common medical reason for these
symptoms is a condition known as gastroesophageal reflux (GER), sometimes called gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD). Reflux happens when the muscle
between the stomach and the esophagus fails to contract enough to keep food and digestive juices
in the stomach. If you experience pain in the middle of your abdomen or just below your breast
bone shortly after eating, wake up with this pain during the night, or have periodic episodes of
unexplained "asthma," suspect that you may have GER and discuss the diagnosis and treatment
with your doctor. Besides medications that lessen the amount of stomach acid you produce and
help the stomach empty faster, here are some self-help measures you can try to lessen the
regurgitation of acid and foods back up into your esophagus after eating:
Graze. Eat small, frequent meals, or mini meals, rather than three large meals a day.
Take small bites and chew your food well. Smaller food particles empty faster from
the stomach.
Eat foods that pass through your stomach quickly, primarily proteins and
carbohydrates, rather than foods that linger in the stomach a while, such as high fat
foods.
Remain upright and quiet for 30 minutes after eating. Moving around jostles the
acid in your stomach, aggravating the condition.
Don't go to bed with a full stomach. Eat dinner earlier in the evening and keep it
lowfat. Remember, "don't dine after nine."
Relax. Stress produces stomach acid.
Get friendly with your blender. Fruit and yogurt smoothies and blended vegetables
are liquid enough to pass through the stomach quickly, minimizing the chance of
reflux.
Despite what the advertisements tell you, it's best not to self-diagnose and self-medicate if you
suspect you suffer from GER. Consult your doctor or gastroenterologist for proper diagnosis and
the most up-to-date treatment for this most uncomfortable condition.
Once upon a time there was a popular nutritional principle called "the wisdom of the
body," which meant that our bodies would tell us which foods we need - as long as we
learn to listen. According to the wisdom of the body principle, if your body is deficient in
a particular nutrient, your desire to eat food containing that nutrient increases.
In the 1920s pediatrician Clara Davis did a famous study to validate the concept of the
wisdom of the body. In this study, infants who had been exclusively breastfed, but were
newly weaned, were offered a dozen different foods at each meal. It's noteworthy that all
these foods were in their natural state -- unprocessed, unseasoned, and unsweetened.
Over time and without coercion, these babies, making their own food choices, established
eating patterns that provided them with the balanced nutrition they needed.
For most people, the body has become less wise because of unwise things done to it. The
body can make wise choices only when programmed with the language of good nutrition.
Otherwise, it's garbage in, garbage out. If all your body knows is high-fat junk food,
that's all it will ask for.
The problem for many of us is that we have confused our bodies with years of poor
eating, so much so that the body no longer knows what is good and what is bad. Even
food cravings - the revered biological signal, the inner voice of a wise
body saying what it needs - can't be trusted in a body that's biochemically out of tune.
As you improve your nutrition, the wisdom of your body will return, though this may take
several months. Eventually, you will crave foods that help you and shun those that harm
you. When you go against your body's signals (and everyone does this occasionally),
your body will remind you of why you normally choose to skip a particular food.
The signals of the body is related to the "gut feeling" that you have
after eating. Certain foods, certain volumes, and certain combinations leave you feeling
pleasantly satisfied; others leave you uncomfortably full and bloated. Excessive gas,
bloating, burping, headaches, lethargy, and sweats are all signals that you are not eating
wisely.
Taste-buds are located primarily on the tongue, though they are also found throughout the lining
of the mouth. Thus, the term "gourmet palate" is anatomically correct. Four types of taste
receptors are located around the tongue. Sweet and salty tastes are best perceived at the tip and
front-sides of the tongue. Sour receptors are located on the sides of the tongue, and bitter ones
toward the back. You can use this knowledge to your advantage when introducing solid foods to
infants. Since babies prefer sweet and/or salty foods, place these foods on the front of your
infant's tongue so she can fully enjoy them. If your baby tends to reject the new tastes, place
new foods toward the middle of the tongue where there are fewer taste receptors, and your
baby's perceptions will be less intense. After experimenting with various foods on various areas
of the tongue, you will discover which combinations work. The fact that the bitter taste buds are
located at the back of the tongue may be an adaptive phenomenon for primarily plant-eating
humans, since nutritious plants tend to be sweet and poisonous plants tend to be bitter. When
intensely bitter plants touch the back of the tongue, they may trigger the gag reflex as a
protective mechanism and be spit out.
Cold temperatures numb taste buds, which is why frozen yogurt tastes much sweeter when
melted. To get your child to accept an unpleasant-tasting medicine, trick the taste buds by letting
your child suck on a popsicle, ice, or anything cold just before giving the medicine. Salt dilutes
sour tastes, which is why it is added to vinegar-containing dressings.
Taste buds change their preferences with age. While infants and young children prefer sweet
foods in most cases, this young sweet tooth diminishes as a person ages.
AskDrSears.com is intended to help parents become better informed consumers
of health care. The information presented in this site gives general advice
on parenting and health care. Always consult your doctor for your individual
needs.