Digestive Organs
Enzymes & Chemicals
Processes
Absorption & Nutrients
Challenge Zone
100

This is where digestion begins with chewing and salivary amylase is used.

Mouth

100

This substance in saliva starts breaking down starch.

Salivary amylase


100

Briefly explain mechanical digestion 

the physical breakdown of large food pieces into smaller ones without altering their chemical composition  in the mouth

100

Tiny structures that absorb nutrients in the small intestine.

Villi

100

This organ stores food and begins protein digestion.

Stomach

200

Choose the odd one out and why?

Mouth – Esophagus – Lung – Stomach

Lung
because its not a part of digestive system its a part of respiratory system

200

The stomach contains ______ acid.

Hydrochloric Acid


200

Name the movement that pushes food forward

Peristalsis


200

Where are most nutrients absorbed?

Small intestines


200

The esophagus digests food. (True/False) Why 

False. It is a tube through which food passes from the throat to the stomach 

300

Which part of the digestive system has the largest surface area

small intestines


300

Why doesn’t the stomach digest itself?

Protective mucus lining

300

Digestion turns large, insoluble molecules into small, ______ ones

soluble

300

A person can digest food but still feels weak and undernourished. What might be the issue?

Poor absorption (villi problem)

300

Why is the small intestine longer than the large intestine?

More time/surface area is needed for digestion & absorption

400

A doctor removes a patient’s gallbladder. The patient can still digest food, but struggles with fatty meals. Why?

Bile is not released in controlled amounts, so fat digestion becomes less efficient

400

Why does pepsin only work in the stomach and not in the small intestine?

It requires acidic conditions, which are found in the stomach

400

Why does food move in one direction through the digestive system and not backward under normal conditions?

Because sphincters control movement and prevent backflow

400

Why is it important that nutrients are absorbed into the blood rather than directly used inside the intestine?

Because blood transports nutrients to all body cells

400

A scientist removes all enzymes from a digestive system model. What would still happen, and what would not happen?

Mechanical breakdown would still occur, but chemical digestion would not

500

Why is the pancreas considered both a digestive and endocrine organ?

Produces both enzymes AND hormones (insulin)

500

If stomach pH becomes less acidic, what happens to protein digestion?

Becomes less effective because pepsin not activated

500

If bile is missing, what process will not take place, explain the process  

Emulsification process. The process where bile salts break large fat particles into tiny droplets in the small intestine 

500

A patient’s digestion produces glucose, amino acids, and fatty acids normally, but these substances are later found in the intestine waste. What does this tell you about the problem?

Absorption is not occurring properly, so nutrients are not entering the bloodstream

500

Why can a person survive without a stomach for a while but not without a small intestine?

Because digestion can occur elsewhere, but nutrient absorption (needed for survival) mainly happens in the small intestine

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