Yes, cholesterol and peptides can be absorbed without being digested. Thanks chacha.com
no, they will have to be acted on by the digestive enzymes passed into the small intestine before they are been transported or absorbed into the body.
Yes, that is the only way vitamins and minerals travel.
No . A molecule of triglyceride is composed of a molecule of glycerol in ... Triglyceridescannot be efficiently absorbed, and are enzymatically digested by pancreatic lipase into a 2-monoglyceride and 2 Free fatty acids. All of which can be absorbed. Other lipase's hydrolyse a triglyceride into glycerol and 3 fatty acids.
After being ground up in the gizzard, food passes to the grasshopper's stomach. While in the stomach nutrients from the food are absorbed into the haemocoel of the grasshopper's circulatory system.
Polysaccharide cannot be used as an energy source by humans because they are hard to break down. Enzymes find it difficult to break them down into glucose for the body to use as energy.
they are eaten by cats by being chomped and killed and digested
the world without bacteria we could not survive
cholesterol
It comes out the other end.
The nutrients that do not need to be digested they have to be smaller than the cells of the small intestine. Some of these are sugars and amino acids.
No . A molecule of triglyceride is composed of a molecule of glycerol in ... Triglyceridescannot be efficiently absorbed, and are enzymatically digested by pancreatic lipase into a 2-monoglyceride and 2 Free fatty acids. All of which can be absorbed. Other lipase's hydrolyse a triglyceride into glycerol and 3 fatty acids.
it is said because when digested food gets absorbed it means it is being well not pulled as such but something like that so it can get into the intestines.
Liquids Such as Water& Vitamins (Medicine)
All food is broken down before digestion.
Water is water. It is already in the right form to be absorbed, no breakup needed.
Water, oxygen, and carbon dioxide can enter or leave a cell by diffusion without being digested.
Beta-sitosterol has a relatively short half-life of around 5-6 hours, meaning it can stay in the system for about 24-30 hours after ingestion. However, this can vary depending on factors such as individual metabolism, dosage, and frequency of intake.
Glucose and fructose.
Alcohol and poison