In what area of the body are proteins mostly absorbed?
What is jejunum?
What are the two pathways for carbohydrates after they exist the enterocyte?
What is hepatic portal to liver and skeletal?
What is micelles?
What type of transportation do proteins use to be able to enter the blood vessels?
What is facilitated diffusion?
What enzyme in the oral cavity is used to breakdown carbohydrates?
What is salivary amylase?
What type of transport do monoglyceride use to enter the enterocyte?
What is diffusion?
What do proteins use to be able to enter the enterocyte?
What is co-transport?
What type of cells do carbohydrates enter through facilitated diffusion and co-transport?
What is enterocyte?
What does the liver convert the lipids into?
What is LDLs?
Proteins that are found in the stomach as pepsinogen is then converted into ____?
What is pepsin?
After carbohydrates are broken down and enter both the liver and skeletal muscles, what is produced?
What is glucose?
After lipids enter the lacteal it enters the systemic circulation, it then goes into either ___ or ___?
What is capillary beds or hepatic portal to liver?
In the duodenum, additional enzymes of protease, proteolytic, and peptidase are added. What is there function?
What is to break down proteins?
What is the function of the GIP, which is released in the duodenum?
What is release of insulin, which is used to help produce cellular respiration?
In the golgi, triglyceride and golgi protein are combined to for ___?
What is chylomicron?