Various lipases break up fat. Some produced by the tongue (lingual lipase), a little lipase by the stomach but most by the pancreas (pancreatic lipase). Bile helps to break down fat into little pieces so that the lipases in the small intestine have more surface area to work on.
Fat digestion begins in the small intestine, specifically in the duodenum, with the help of bile produced by the liver and stored in the gallbladder. Bile emulsifies fats into smaller droplets, allowing pancreatic enzymes like lipase to break down fats into triglycerides, fatty acids, and glycerol for absorption into the body.
Your stomach.
.....The stomache.....
The gall bladder breaks up fats
bile
Bile, which is produced by the liver and stored in the gallbladder, breaks up fat particles in the digestive system. The bile salts in bile act as emulsifiers to break down fats into smaller droplets, making it easier for enzymes to further break them down for digestion.
Because it breaks the food up that your eating I think
bile
bile salts in bile speed up fat digestion
Yes, digestion starts in the mouth, before peristalsis takes place. The mouth breaks up food, and starts the chemical digestion of starches.
Digestion begins in the mouth right after ingestion. There is mechanical and chemical digestion. Your teeth breaks up the food into smaller pieces (mechanical digestion) and your saliva contains salivary amylase which digests starch into maltose (chemical digestion).
Its Bile