Food f low
We eat to refuel our bodies. We need fuel
from food to provide energy, as well as for
growth and repair. Digestion is the process
by which the food we eat is broken down
to extract the nutrients we need. Waste
matter is then passed out of the body.
TAKE A MOUTHFUL
Digestion begins with ingestion when you
take in and chew food, mixing it with saliva
to make it easier to swallow. Swallowing
moves the food into the esophagus, from
where it goes into the stomach.
u A GOOD CHURNING
A meal spends up to four
hours in your stomach before
being passed slowly on into
the small intestine.
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Beneath the tough
surface enamel,
each tooth has its
own blood supply.
u CHEWING FOOD The bolus
of food is about to be swallowed.
The epiglottis is in its usual position.
u SWALLOWING FOOD On
swallowing, the epiglottis moves
down to close entry to the trachea.
Three muscle
layers enable the
stomach to twist
into different
shapes.
Acid and food
are churned
together.
THE HUMAN BODY
What’s in a tooth?
Humans have four types of
teeth: chisel-shaped incisors
cut, while pointed canines
tear. The flatter premolars
and molars crush and grind.
These are the largest teeth.
Churned food is
passed into the small
intestine.
Whan food arrives
your stomach
stretches to
store it.
Down it goes
Once food has been chewed, it is
swallowed as a ball called a bolus.
It is prevented from entering the
larynx and trachea by the epiglottis,
a flap of cartilage.
■ Inside the stomach Food enters
your stomach about eight seconds
after you swallow. It is mixed with
acids (called gastric juice) and
churned into a semiliquid. Up to
6 pints (3 liters) of gastric juices are
made in the stomach every day.
THE STOMACH AND HOW IT WORKS
Salivary glands
Saliva is produced by
glands in the mouth.
It makes food
slippery and begins
the process of
digestion. About
3 pints (1.5 liters) of
saliva is secreted into
the mouth each day.
Food bolus
Pharynx
Tongue
Epiglottis
Larynx
Trachea
Esophagus
Soft palate
closes nasal
cavity
Food bolus
Pharynx
Tongue
Epiglottis folds
down to cover
trachea
Trachea
Esophagus
Longitudinal Circular Oblique
THE HUMAN BODY
Premolar Canine
Incisor
Molar