Digestion: The intestines
Where does the last part of digestion take place?
Where were we? Yes, that's right! The food had been digested in the stomach... On we go to step four - the duodenum! Small portions of the food pass from the stomach to the duodenum.
Since it's so acidic, the food has to be neutralized before it can go on. This happens here, with the help of juice from the pancreas. Pancreatic juice has a pH of about eight and a half and it also contains several different enzymes that continue the digestion of carbohydrates and proteins. A substance called bile also enters the duodenum from the gallbladder. Bile works like washing-up liquid - it breaks down the fat - the lipids - into smaller droplets.
From the duodenum we proceed to step five - the small intestine. The food is now a light fluid. Here there's an intestinal juice which also contains enzymes, and in the small intestine the last digestion takes place. The carbohydrates have been broken down into glucose, and the proteins have been converted to amino acids. These molecules are small enough to pass through the intestinal wall into the blood.
Some vitamins and minerals are also absorbed by the body from the small intestine. For this absorption to work as efficiently as possible, the intestinal wall is folded, and on these folds there are tiny flaps called intestinal villi. With the folds and the villi, the total area of the small intestine is close to thirty square meters! Now we have reached step 6 - the colon. To avoid losing too much water with the feces, water is drawn from the contents of the intestines into the body.
In the colon there are lots of bacteria, about 200 grams. Among other things they help to free vitamins from the intestinal contents. Some bacteria leave the body together with the poo. About half of our feces consists of bacteria, both living and dead. If the intestinal bacteria change or are harmed, that is, if too many of them die, we become very ill.
In the intestinal wall there are cells producing mucus that lubricates the feces, so it can exit the body more easily. And now we have reached the last step of the Gastro-Intestinal Tract: step seven - the rectum. In due course this is filled with matter from the colon, and when it's full we get an urgent feeling, just like Maria did. Then it's important that we go and poo, otherwise the body becomes unwell.