Pancreatic amylase
Lipase
Pepsin
Salivary amylase
Maltase
Rennin (younger version of pepsin mostly found in babies)
In the small intestine, carbohydrates, fats and proteins are being emulsified with the help of some digestive enzymes.
enzymes are used to cure some cancers and are in some drugs like worming tablets. The body also has enzymes in places like the digestive system. Enzymes are very useful =]
The small intestine is the site of work of some digestive enzymes that are secreted there. It is not an ideal site for the continued work of enzymes from the stomach, as the pH is not hospitable for the work of those gastric enzymes.
the digestive system and the respiritory sytem
YesThey contain many enzymes for recycling. Some are protease,nuclease,lypase etc
Yes, the respiratory system provides oxygen to the digestive system.
The digestive system has several functions - two main functions of the digestive system is to break down food, using digestive secretions and enzymes, and the second is to absorb the nutrients from that food, namely from the microvilli in the small intestine. The digestive system also contributes to our immune system, with the HCl in the stomach killing some pathogens, bacteria germs, as well as the symbiosis between beneficial and detrimental bacteria in the large intestine having a major influence on our immune system. Hope that helps!
some parts of the digestive system are the small and large intestine, liver, gallbladder, and stomach.
the gall bladder is part of the digestive system because it It produces and stores the bile.
Noodles are made of some flour and mainly refined wheat flour. This flour contain carbohydrates and carbohydrates is mixture of sugars and other things so that is what your digestive system do, it separates the sugars and other things and digest them at different levels of digestive system by different enzymes.
no that is what enzymes do to particles of nutrients wich are to big to digest. some particles are taken into the blood vessels to be taken to somewhere else. is that the answer U wanted? :)
Spit, which more formally is called saliva, is mostly water, with some digestive enzymes in it.