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10.1: Prelude to the Digestive System

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    57054
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    Digestion is often thought of in a negative context—as in indigestible, and indigestion. We don’t think much about it unless something goes wrong. We take for granted that we can put a great variety of substances in our mouths, of which a certain amount of leftovers will exit the digestive tract—and the body will somehow make use of what disappears in between.

    We give little thought to how the body can accommodate a tremendous variety of foods, in many different circumstances, and extract and make use of what it needs without generally being aware of anything going on—unless something reminds us of our digesting innards. But even then we tend to think only of the sensation that has our attention.

    As a matter of fact, the digestive process is an amazing cooperative enterprise that involves a variety of substances, and processes what we consume in an orderly and efficient way, day in and day out, throughout our lives. It makes a good story, one that answers a lot of questions we seldom think to ask.

    The essential purpose of digestion is so simple that it’s been correctly understood for thousands of years. It’s expressed by the old Latin word digestio, which means “a breaking down.” Even before the time of the Roman Empire, classic Greek physicians realized that digestion served to break down food so that its nutritive values would be made available to the body.

    But for some twenty centuries following the time of Hippocrates, physicians sought in vain to learn how the process worked. Again and again, they studied what went into the body at one end and what came out at the other. But they found no real clues to what was happening in between.

    This chapter begins with a short narrative of some early discoveries of the digestive process. We then proceed—from mouth to colon—to what we know today.


    This page titled 10.1: Prelude to the Digestive System is shared under a CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Judi S. Morrill via source content that was edited to the style and standards of the LibreTexts platform.