fakegut
Watching Your Food Digest--In a Fake Gut
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Have you ever wondered what happens to your
food after you swallow? Well, we all know that it goes down to the stomach and
it starts making some really weird noises. That's because it's digesting.
But, do you know what's actually happening? Now, there is a way to see what's
going on down there.
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ARS human physiologist (fizz-ee-ah-lo-jist) Raymond Glahn with the U.S. Plant,
Soil and Nutrition Laboratory in Ithaca, New York, has invented a fake gut.
The gut will help him understand how our bodies use the nutrients in the food
we eat. Dr. Glahn's fake gut uses cells from the human intestine called Caco-2.
The gut is the first to model in the lab what happens in a human intestinal
tract. Most important, it shows the food digestion process and absorbs
nutrients just like the real thing.
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Imagine being able to watch your pizza,
soda, ice cream and popcorn all mix together in one big bowl of mush. You'd
probably rather be watching TV, but watching food is Dr. Glahn's job.
He puts foods such as cereals, baby formulas, rice and corn into the fake gut.
He chose these foods because of how much iron they have.
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Iron is an important nutrient for people
to eat, so scientists want to learn more about it. Still, many people,
particularly women and young children, often don't get enough iron in their
diet.
Without enough iron, you don't form enough red blood cells and thus don't get
enough oxygen. You could then have a condition called anemia (ah-nee-mee-ah) that makes you weak, tired, pale and
cranky.
It is especially important for mothers to get enough iron when they are going
to have a baby so that the baby is healthy.
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"Yikes,
not another one!"
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Dr. Glahn is trying to
measure how much of the iron in foods our body actually absorbs. He is using
the fake gut because it is too hard and expensive to do this experiment with
animals. It costs a lot of money and the animals get full, unlike the fake
gut.
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It takes the fake gut three hours to digest all
of the food. After it digests, Dr. Glahn measures the amount of ferritin (fair-ah-tin), an iron storage protein, to see how much
of the iron was absorbed.
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Orange juice is one
source of vitamin C.
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So far, Dr. Glahn and his team have
found that adding vitamin C to rice cereal increases the amount of iron that
the body absorbs. It's not only how much iron a food has that's important, but
how your body uses it.
There are more than 2 billion people in the
world suffering from iron malnutrition. This research can help food companies
improve nutritional content of their products. It will also help scientists to
find out how much iron and zinc are found in important foods like beans, corn,
wheat and cassava.
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--By
Sarah Tarshis, based on an Agricultural Research
magazine article by Hank Becker, Information Staff,
Agricultural Research Service.
If you really want to get into Dr. Glahn's fake gut work, then click here and read the magazine's
longer version.
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