Absorption small intestine

Cards (17)

  • What is the primary function of the small intestine?
    To absorb the products of digestion
  • How are large food molecules broken down during digestion?
    By enzymes into smaller molecules
  • What enzyme digests starch into simple sugars?
    Amylase
  • Where are the products of digestion absorbed?
    Into the bloodstream in the small intestine
  • How long is the human small intestine?
    Around 5 meters
  • Why is the length of the small intestine important?
    It provides a large surface area for absorption
  • What structures cover the interior of the small intestine?
    Millions of villi
  • How do villi contribute to absorption?
    They massively increase the surface area
  • What are microvilli?
    Small projections on the surface of villi
  • How do microvilli affect absorption?
    They increase the surface area even further
  • Why is a good blood supply important for villi?
    It rapidly removes products of digestion
  • What effect does a good blood supply have on concentration gradient?
    It increases the concentration gradient
  • What feature of villi ensures a short diffusion path?
    A thin membrane underneath the villi
  • What is the result of the adaptations of the small intestine?
    A rapid rate of diffusion into the bloodstream
  • How are molecules that cannot be absorbed by diffusion taken up?
    By active transport
  • What should students expect in the vision workbook regarding the small intestine?
    Plenty of questions on its adaptations
  • What are the adaptations of the small intestine for absorption?
    • Long length (around 5 meters)
    • Millions of villi increase surface area
    • Microvilli further increase surface area
    • Good blood supply for rapid absorption
    • Thin membrane for short diffusion path
    • Active transport for non-diffusible molecules