Bile is a natural "soap." It breaks up and surrounds the oil, forming little droplets. The droplets can be assimilated without being digested. So you body doesn't have to break down fats into not-fat parts; it can use the oils as constructed. This is a more efficient way to get fats (oils) into the body.
The juice in the liver is called bile. Bile is a green-yellow liquid and its function is to help break down fat during digestion.
Bile, to help with fat digestion.
True!
BILE JUICE IS A JUICE SECRETED BY THE LIVER DURING DIGESTION WHICH CONTAINS BILE SALT THAT BREAKS FAT THAT ARE PRESENT IN THE SMALL INTESTINE AS LARGE FAT GOBULES INTO SMALL FAT GOBULES. THUS, INCREASING THE EFFICIENCY OF ENZYME ACTION.
The Gall bladder stores bile. Bile is made by the liver. Bile is essential for the proper digestion of fats. If fats are not properly digested, fat soluble vitamins are also not absorbed.
Bile acts like a detergent, dissolving and dispersing the droplets of fat found in fatty foods.
The liver synthesizes bile, which is essential for fat digestion. Bile is stored in the gallbladder and released into the intestine, where it emulsifies fats, breaking them down into smaller droplets for easier digestion by enzymes. Additionally, bile salts help facilitate the absorption of fat-soluble vitamins.
It produces bile to help the body absorb fat
bile salts in bile speed up fat digestion
Bile aids in the chemical digestion of fat. The lipids and salts found in bile help break fats into smaller pieces while enzymes can more easily break down fat molecules.
Bile
Bile is the liqued produced by the liver and stored and contrated in the gall bladder until needed for digestion. Bile acts like a detergent to break up large fat globules into smaller ones that pancreatic enzymes in pancreatic juice can break down small enough that fat can be absorbed through the small intestine wall. The enzyme that breaks down fat (lipids) is called lipase. When food, in the form of 'chyme', goes into the small intestine from the stomach, bile and digestive juices from the pancreus are added via the common bile duct (a tube that conveys the bile from the liver and the panreatic juice from the pancreus to the SI (small intestine)).