How Long Until Fat Is Absorbed From Food?
You may have noticed that a high-fat meal lingers longer in your stomach than a low-fat meal. The length of time until fat is absorbed from food depends on the nutrient makeup of the meal and may vary significantly from one person to another. The higher the fat content of a meal, the longer it takes to reach complete digestion and absorption. If you are healthy and do not have digestive problems, complete absorption of dietary fat from an average meal typically occurs in roughly eight hours.
Stomach Emptying
Before fat can be broken down and absorbed, the food you eat must undergo processing in your stomach and pass into your small intestine. Many factors of a meal affect the rate of stomach emptying, including the consistency of the food, the volume of food you consume, and the relative percentages of protein, carbohydrates and fats in the meal. Hormonal, nervous system and physical factors also affect the rate of stomach, or gastric, emptying. Fats empty from your stomach more slowly than carbohydrates and proteins. Your stomach typically empties a solid meal containing a mixture of fats, proteins and carbohydrates in roughly four to five hours.
Digestion
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As processed food enters your small intestine, it mixes with digestive enzymes from your pancreas and bile from your gallbladder. Bile solubilizes fats from your diet, which enables their breakdown by the pancreatic enzyme lipase. Cells lining the middle and distal portions of your small intestine absorb the digested fats, transferring them into your bloodstream.
Timing of Fat Absorption
Fat is an energy-rich nutrient that your digestive system works to capture as completely as possible. When you eat a meal with a small amount of fat, digestion and absorption occur relatively quickly once the food arrives in your small intestine. Your gastrointestinal system requires more time to break down a high-fat meal. Although there is great variability, fat from a typical meal goes through the digestive and absorptive processes within roughly three hours of entering your small intestine. The undigested remnants of a meal continue on to your large intestine, or colon, where they will eventually pass from your body as stool.
Conditions That Delay Fat Absorption
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Several medical conditions and diseases slow fat digestion and absorption. Nerve damage due to diabetes or a neurological disease can significantly slow gastric emptying and the movement of food through your intestines. Anxiety can also slow food digestion and absorption. Mechanical obstruction caused by ulcers in your small intestine can also interfere with the passage of food from your stomach, delaying fat digestion and absorption.
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References
- Colorado State University Pathophysiology Hypertext; Gastrointestinal Transit: How Long Does It Take?; Richard Bowen, D.V.M., Ph.D.; May 2006
- Colorado State University Pathophysiology Hypertext; Exocrine Secretions of the Pancreas; Richard Bowen, D.V.M., Ph.D.; July 2006
- Colorado State University Pathophysiology Hypertext; Absorption of Lipids; Richard Bowen, D.V.M., Ph.D.; August 2007
- MayoClinic.com; How Long Does It Take to Digest Food — From the Time You Eat It to the Time You Excrete It in Urine or Stool?; Michael Picco, M.D.; August 2010
- "Harrison’s Principles of Internal Medicine, 16th Edition"; Dennis L. Kasper, M.D., et al., Editors; 2004
Writer Bio
Dr. Tina M. St. John owns and operates a health communications and consulting firm. She is also an accomplished medical writer and editor, and was formerly a senior medical officer with the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. St. John holds an M.D. from Emory University School of Medicine.