The Digestive System
Journey of food from mouth to anus, organs, enzymes, and nutrient absorption — with Singapore examples and exam tips for PSLE Science.
Breaking Food Down So Your Body Can Use It
Food contains nutrients — carbohydrates, proteins, fats, vitamins, minerals, and water — but in forms that are too large for your body to absorb directly. The digestive system breaks food into small, soluble molecules that can pass through the walls of the intestine into the bloodstream and be carried to every cell.
Think of it like this: a sandwich is too big to fit through a door. Digestion cuts it into crumbs small enough to slide under the door. Once inside, the bloodstream delivers these "crumbs" (glucose, amino acids, fatty acids) to the cells that need energy and materials to grow.
Digestion in Everyday Singapore Life
When you eat chicken rice at a hawker centre, your body immediately begins work. The rice (starch) starts breaking down in your mouth via saliva. The chicken protein is denatured in your stomach's acid before enzymes attack it. The oil in the gravy is emulsified by bile in the small intestine before fat-digesting enzymes can break it down.
Singapore school canteens serving brown rice instead of white rice is a health initiative because brown rice contains more dietary fibre — which the body cannot digest, but which slows the absorption of glucose (reducing blood sugar spikes) and helps push waste through the large intestine.
Yakult, sold in Singapore supermarkets, contains live bacteria that support the gut. The billions of "good bacteria" in the large intestine help digest certain plant fibres, produce some vitamins (like vitamin K), and compete with harmful bacteria — a reminder that the digestive system is an ecosystem, not just a tube.
The Journey of Food Through Your Body
| Organ | What happens | Key point |
|---|---|---|
| Mouth | Teeth crush food (mechanical). Saliva moistens and amylase begins breaking starch into maltose (chemical). | Digestion begins here |
| Oesophagus | Muscular tube that pushes food down by peristalsis (wave-like muscle contractions). No digestion occurs. | Transport only |
| Stomach | Churns food (mechanical). Gastric acid (HCl) kills bacteria and creates acidic conditions. Protease enzymes begin protein digestion. | Protein digestion starts |
| Small intestine | Most digestion and ALL absorption happens here. Bile from liver emulsifies fats. Pancreatic enzymes (amylase, protease, lipase) complete digestion. | Most important organ |
| Large intestine | Absorbs water from undigested material. Bacteria break down some plant fibre. Remaining waste becomes faeces. | Water absorption |
| Rectum / Anus | Faeces stored in rectum, expelled through anus. | Exit point |
Mechanical vs Chemical Digestion
Digestion happens in two ways, and PSLE questions frequently ask students to distinguish between them:
- Mechanical digestion: Physical breaking up of food into smaller pieces — same substance, just smaller. Examples: chewing (teeth), churning (stomach muscles), peristalsis (oesophagus). No chemical change occurs.
- Chemical digestion: Enzymes break down large molecules into chemically different, smaller molecules. Examples: amylase converts starch → maltose (sugars); protease converts proteins → amino acids; lipase converts fats → fatty acids and glycerol.
Both work together: mechanical digestion increases the surface area of food so that enzymes (which work on surfaces) can act more efficiently. Chewing your food well speeds up the chemical digestion that follows.
How Nutrients Enter the Bloodstream
The small intestine is about 6–7 metres long and lined with millions of tiny finger-like projections called villi (singular: villus). Each villus is covered in even tinier projections called microvilli. Together, they give the small intestine a total surface area of about 250 m² — roughly the size of a tennis court.
This enormous surface area allows rapid absorption of:
- Glucose and amino acids → absorbed directly into blood capillaries inside each villus → carried to the liver first, then distributed to all cells
- Fatty acids and glycerol → absorbed into lymph vessels (lacteals) inside each villus → eventually enter the bloodstream
- Vitamins and minerals → absorbed alongside other nutrients
Villi work on the same principle as alveoli in the lungs: many tiny structures give a far greater surface area than one large structure, allowing faster absorption.
The Final Stage: Water Recovery
By the time food reaches the large intestine, most nutrients have already been absorbed. The large intestine's main job is to absorb water from the remaining undigested material (mostly plant fibre, dead cells, and bacteria).
This is why staying hydrated matters — if the large intestine absorbs too much water (e.g. during illness or dehydration), the faeces become hard and difficult to pass (constipation). If too little water is absorbed (e.g. during infections), diarrhoea results.
Dietary fibre (from vegetables, fruits, whole grains) is not digested by humans but plays two important roles: it slows glucose absorption and adds bulk to faeces, helping the large intestine push waste along efficiently.
Why Must Food Be Digested Before Absorption?
Starch, protein, and fat molecules are all too large to pass through the walls of the small intestine. The intestine wall acts like a filter — only small, soluble molecules can cross it into the bloodstream.
A starch molecule, for example, is a long chain of thousands of glucose units. It cannot be absorbed. But once amylase breaks it into individual glucose molecules, each tiny molecule can pass through the intestinal wall into a blood capillary. The same logic applies to proteins (broken into amino acids) and fats (broken into fatty acids and glycerol).
This is why people who cannot produce certain digestive enzymes (e.g. lactase for lactose in milk) experience discomfort — the undigested lactose cannot be absorbed and instead is fermented by bacteria in the large intestine, producing gas.
Common Mistakes
Key Points at a Glance
- Digestion starts in the mouth — saliva + amylase begins breaking down starch
- Mechanical digestion = physical; chemical digestion = enzymes change molecules
- Stomach: churns + acid kills bacteria + protease begins protein digestion
- Small intestine: most digestion + ALL nutrient absorption (via villi, 250 m² surface area)
- Bile from liver: emulsifies fat (not an enzyme). Pancreatic enzymes: amylase, protease, lipase
- Large intestine: absorbs water only. Fibre cannot be digested by humans
- Glucose + amino acids → blood capillaries. Fatty acids + glycerol → lymph vessels (lacteals)
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Related PSLE Topics
These topics are closely linked in the PSLE syllabus.