Digestion and Absorption Class 11 Chapter 16 gives you 3 to 4 questions worth 12 to 16 marks in every NEET paper. It has appeared without exception in every NEET from 2015 to 2025. That makes it one of the most reliable scoring chapters in Human Physiology NEET 2026.
Most students lose marks here not from missing concepts but from three very specific traps: confusing bile’s role with lipase, swapping the activation of pepsinogen vs trypsinogen, and misidentifying which teeth are absent in primary dentition. This guide closes all three gaps — and every other one between you and full marks.
This Digestion and Absorption NEET 2026 guide covers: digestive enzyme sequence with activation steps, nutrient absorption sites and mechanisms, gastrointestinal hormones, gastric gland cell types, year-wise PYQs (2015–2025), a Quick Revision Grid and a full FAQ block. Estimated reading time: 20 minutes.
Quick Answer What Is Digestion and Absorption for NEET 2026?
Digestion and Absorption is Chapter 16 of Class 11 NCERT Biology. It covers how food is chemically broken down by enzymes from the mouth to the large intestine and how the resulting molecules — glucose, amino acids, fatty acids — are absorbed into blood or lymph. For NEET 2026, the chapter tests enzyme sequences, absorption sites, gastrointestinal hormones and specific cell types across 3 to 4 questions per paper.
What this guide covers:
- Full digestive enzyme sequence — every enzyme, substrate, site and activation step NEET tests
- Absorption site table — where glucose, fatty acids, Vitamin B12, iron and every key nutrient is absorbed, and by which mechanism
- Gastrointestinal hormones — gastrin, secretin and CCK source-stimulus-target-function, including the trap that catches students every year
- Gastric gland cell types — oxyntic, chief, mucus neck cells and what each secretes (highest-frequency match-the-following sub-topic)
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How Many Questions Come from Digestion and Absorption in NEET 2026?
Digestion and Absorption generates 3 to 4 questions per NEET paper worth 12 to 16 marks. It has been tested in every single NEET paper from 2015 to 2025 — 11 consecutive papers without a gap.
Year-wise Question Count
Sub-topic Priority Ranking for Digestion and Absorption NEET 2026
What Is the Digestive Enzyme Sequence for Digestion and Absorption NEET 2026?
The digestive enzyme sequence is the most tested sub-topic in this chapter — it appeared in all 11 NEET papers from 2015 to 2025. NEET tests it as: which enzyme acts on which substrate, which organ produces it, and which enzymes are secreted as inactive zymogens requiring activation.
Complete Enzyme Sequence Table — Mouth to Large Intestine
NEET Trap: “Oxyntic cells secrete pepsinogen.”
Correct answer: Chief cells (peptic cells) secrete pepsinogen. Oxyntic cells (parietal cells) secrete HCl and intrinsic factor. This is one of the most confirmed NEET match-the-following traps. HCl from oxyntic cells activates pepsinogen to pepsin — but HCl and pepsinogen come from two completely different cell types.
NEET Trap: “Pancreatic juice is secreted in active form and contains trypsin.”
Correct answer: NEET 2011 confirmed — pancreatic juice contains trypsinogen (inactive zymogen), not active trypsin. Trypsinogen is activated by enterokinase in the duodenum. Any question presenting “pancreatic juice contains active trypsin” is false.
Contextual MCQ 1:
What happens when parietal cell secretion is blocked by an inhibitor?
A) Gastric juice will be deficient in chymosin
B) Pepsinogen will not be secreted
C) Inactive pepsinogen cannot be converted to active pepsin
D) Enterokinase will not be released from duodenal mucosa
Answer: C
Parietal (oxyntic) cells secrete HCl. HCl is what activates pepsinogen → pepsin. If parietal cell secretion is blocked, HCl is absent — pepsinogen remains inactive. Option A is wrong: chymosin (rennin) is from chief cells, unrelated to parietal cell blockage. Option B is wrong: pepsinogen is from chief cells, not parietal cells. Option D is wrong: enterokinase is from duodenal mucosa — unrelated to parietal cell function.
Why Is Rennin Only Found in Infants? (NEET 2014 Confirmed)
Rennin (chymosin) is a proteolytic enzyme in the gastric juice of infants that converts soluble casein in milk to insoluble paracasein. NEET 2014 confirmed: “The initial step in digestion of milk in humans is carried out by rennin.” This applies specifically to infants. In adults, pepsin handles casein digestion — rennin activity is negligible. Any NEET question specifying “infant + milk digestion” — the answer is rennin.

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Where Are Digested Nutrients Absorbed in the Human Body — and How?
Nutrient absorption occurs primarily in the small intestine (mainly jejunum), with specific nutrients absorbed at specific segments by specific mechanisms. This sub-topic appeared in 10 of 11 NEET papers and is tested as both site identification and mechanism identification (active transport vs facilitated diffusion vs osmosis).
Nutrient Absorption Site and Mechanism Table
NEET Trap: “Chylomicrons are transported from the intestine into blood capillaries.”
Correct answer: This is a confirmed NEET false statement (NEET 2019–2020 question bank). Chylomicrons are small lipoprotein particles that enter lacteals (lymph capillaries inside each villus) — NOT blood capillaries directly. They travel through the lymphatic system and enter blood via the thoracic duct. Only short-chain fatty acids and glycerol enter blood capillaries directly.
Contextual MCQ 2:
Which of the following correctly describes the absorption of digested fatty acids in the small intestine?
A) Micelles are reformed into chylomicrons → enter blood capillaries → carried to liver
B) Fatty acids diffuse into epithelial cells → enter blood capillaries → transported as free fatty acids
C) Micelles move into intestinal mucosa → fatty acids reformed into chylomicrons → transported into lacteals
D) Long-chain fatty acids directly enter lacteals without forming micelles
Answer: C
The confirmed NEET sequence for fat absorption: fatty acids and glycerol incorporate into micelles (bile salt emulsification) → micelles move into intestinal mucosa → fatty acids re-esterified into triglycerides → packaged into chylomicrons (protein-coated fat globules) → chylomicrons enter lacteals → lymph → thoracic duct → blood. Option A is wrong: chylomicrons enter lacteals, not blood capillaries directly. Option D is wrong: micelle formation is an essential intermediate step.
Why Does Vitamin B12 Need Intrinsic Factor for Absorption?
Vitamin B12 (cyanocobalamin) is a large water-soluble vitamin that cannot be absorbed by simple diffusion. It must first bind to intrinsic factor — a glycoprotein secreted by parietal (oxyntic) cells in the stomach. The B12–intrinsic factor complex is then recognized and actively absorbed in the terminal ileum. Without intrinsic factor (e.g., after gastrectomy or autoimmune destruction of parietal cells), B12 absorption fails, causing pernicious anaemia — which NEET tests as a disorder question.
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What Are the Gastrointestinal Hormones Tested in Digestion and Absorption NEET 2026?
Three gastrointestinal hormones — gastrin, secretin and cholecystokinin (CCK) — appear in NEET 9 of 11 years (2015–2025). The question format is almost always match-the-following: source organ → stimulus → hormone → effect. NEET specifically exploits the secretin/CCK confusion because both come from the duodenum but stimulate different pancreatic products.
Gastrointestinal Hormone Table
NEET 2016 Confirmed Question: “Which hormones stimulate the production of pancreatic juice and bicarbonate?” The options included insulin+glucagon, CCK+secretin, gastrin+insulin, angiotensin+epinephrine. The correct answer is cholecystokinin and secretin — CCK stimulates enzyme-rich juice, secretin stimulates bicarbonate-rich juice. Both stimulate pancreatic juice but in different forms.
NEET Trap: “Secretin stimulates enzyme-rich pancreatic juice; CCK stimulates bicarbonate-rich juice.”
Correct answer: This is reversed. Secretin → bicarbonate-rich juice (alkaline, neutralises acid chyme). CCK → enzyme-rich juice (contains digestive enzymes like lipase, amylase, proteases) + gallbladder contraction. Mental trigger: “Secretin = sodium bicarbonate” (both start with S). Read More: NEET Dropper Mental Health — The Complete Guide to Managing Anxiety, Burnout and Depression During Your Drop Year
Contextual MCQ 3:
A student states: “Cholecystokinin is secreted by duodenal cells in response to acidic chyme and stimulates bicarbonate secretion from the pancreas.” How many errors does this statement contain?
A) Zero — the statement is correct
B) One — CCK stimulus is fats/proteins, not acidic chyme; bicarbonate secretion is correct
C) Two — CCK stimulus is fats/proteins; and CCK stimulates enzyme-rich juice, not bicarbonate
D) Two — CCK is not from duodenal cells; and it does not act on pancreas
Answer: C
The statement contains two errors. Error 1: CCK is stimulated by fats and proteins in the duodenum — not by acidic chyme (that is the stimulus for secretin). Error 2: CCK stimulates enzyme-rich pancreatic juice, not bicarbonate-rich juice. Bicarbonate-rich juice is stimulated by secretin. The source (duodenal I-cells) is correct. The target (pancreas) is correct. Only the stimulus and the product type are wrong.
What Is the Dental Formula for NEET 2026 and How Is It Tested?
The dental formula is tested in 8 of 11 NEET papers as either a direct calculation, a teeth-count identification (2-year-old with 20 teeth), or a statement asking which tooth type is absent in primary dentition. This is the easiest 4 marks in the entire Human Physiology NEET 2026 unit — don’t give them away.
Dental Formula Table
Calculation method for NEET: Dental formula reads as teeth per quadrant (one side of one jaw). Multiply by 4 (4 quadrants) for total. Primary: (2+1+0+2) × 4 = 20. Permanent: (2+1+2+3) × 4 = 32.
NEET 2017 confirmed: “A baby boy aged two years is admitted to play school and passes through a dental check-up. The dentist observed that the boy had twenty teeth. Which teeth were absent?” Options: A) Incisors B) Premolars C) Molars D) Canines. Answer: B — Premolars.
NEET 2015 confirmed: “The primary dentition in humans differs from permanent dentition in not having one of the following types of teeth.” Answer: Premolars.
NEET Trap: “Primary dentition lacks molars.”
Correct answer: Primary dentition lacks premolars — it has 2 molars per quadrant (8 total). Molars ARE present in primary dentition. Students confuse this because premolars appear only in permanent dentition and students assume molars were the “new” teeth. Premolars replace the primary molars — they don’t add to them.
Contextual MCQ 4:
How many premolars are present in the full permanent dentition of an adult human?
A) 4 — B) 6 — C) 8 — D) 12
Answer: C
Permanent dental formula: 2123 per quadrant × 4 quadrants = 32 total. Premolar count: 2 per quadrant × 4 quadrants = 8 premolars total. Option A (4) is the number of canines. Option D (12) is the number of molars. Primary dentition has 0 premolars — they appear only in permanent dentition.
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What Cell Types in the Small Intestine Wall Are Tested in NEET 2026?
Small intestine wall cell types appear in 7 of 11 NEET papers in match-the-following format. The highest-frequency trap involves Paneth cells vs argentaffin cells in the Crypts of Lieberkühn — both are in the same location, making them easy to confuse in MCQ format.
Small Intestine Wall Cell Type and Function Table
NEET 2017 Confirmed: “Which cells of Crypts of Lieberkühn secrete antibacterial lysozyme?” Options: A) Argentaffin cells B) Zymogen cells C) Kupffer cells D) Paneth cells. Answer: D.
NEET 2010 Confirmed: “If for some reason our goblet cells are non-functional, this will adversely affect…” Answer: “smooth movement of food down the intestine.” Goblet cells secrete mucus that lubricates the intestinal lining. Non-functional goblet cells = no mucus = impaired peristaltic food movement.
NEET Trap: “Brunner’s glands are present in the submucosa of the stomach and secrete pepsinogen.”
Correct answer: Both facts in that statement are wrong. Brunner’s glands are in the submucosa of the duodenum (not stomach). They secrete alkaline mucus (not pepsinogen). Pepsinogen is secreted by chief cells in the gastric glands. This was a confirmed false statement in a NEET question bank.
Contextual MCQ 5:
Which of the following is NOT a component of succus entericus (intestinal juice)?
A) Maltase
B) Nucleases
C) Nucleosidase
D) Lipase
Answer: D
Succus entericus (secreted by Crypts of Lieberkühn) contains maltase, sucrase, lactase, peptidases, nucleases and nucleosidases — but NOT lipase. Lipase is a pancreatic enzyme secreted by the exocrine pancreas. This is a confirmed NEET question from NEETPrep question bank. Students who assume intestinal juice contains all digestive enzymes choose lipase incorrectly.
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What Cell Types Are Present in the Gastric Glands for NEET 2026?
Gastric gland cell types are tested in 9 of 11 NEET papers — primarily as a match-the-following sub-topic. The three cell types and their secretions must be memorised precisely. Confusing which cell type secretes pepsinogen vs HCl is the single most common error in this sub-topic.
Gastric Gland Cell Type Table
Gastric juice of infants contains: pepsinogen + lipase + rennin (chymosin). In adults, rennin is absent or minimal.
NEET Trap: “Parietal cells secrete pepsinogen.”
Correct answer: Parietal (oxyntic) cells secrete HCl and intrinsic factor. Pepsinogen is from chief (peptic) cells. This swap is placed as a direct false statement in NEET match-the-following. Students who haven’t separated “oxyntic = HCl” from “chief = pepsinogen” in their memory choose the trap answer.
Contextual MCQ 6:
Match List I (Cell Type) with List II (Secretion):
Options: A) A–III, B–I, C–II, D–IV B) A–II, B–I, C–III, D–IV C) A–I, B–III, C–IV, D–II D) A–III, B–IV, C–I, D–II
Answer: A — A–III, B–I, C–II, D–IV
Peptic cells (chief cells) = pepsinogen (III). Goblet cells = mucus (I). Oxyntic cells (parietal cells) = HCl + intrinsic factor (II). Hepatic cells (hepatocytes) = bile juice (IV). This exact match-the-following has appeared in NEET PYQ format with these four pairings.
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What Are the Liver’s Functions Beyond Bile Production for NEET 2026?
The liver is the largest gland in the human body and is tested in Digestion and Absorption NEET 2026 both for bile production (most tested) and for secondary functions that appear in assertion-reason and statement-evaluation formats. Students who only memorise “liver produces bile” miss 1 to 2 marks per paper where liver’s other functions appear as correct statements to identify.
Complete Liver Function Table for NEET
Structure of the Liver for NEET:
The liver is organised into hepatic lobules — the structural and functional units of the liver. Each hepatic lobule contains hepatic cells (hepatocytes) arranged in the form of cords around a central vein. Liver sinusoids (blood spaces between hepatocyte cords) contain Kupffer cells.
NEET Trap: “Kupffer cells are phagocytic cells found in the spleen.”
Correct answer: Kupffer cells are resident macrophages found in liver sinusoids — not the spleen. They phagocytose old red blood cells, bacteria and foreign particles from portal blood. The spleen has its own macrophages but they are not called Kupffer cells. This exact false location appears in NEET statement questions.
Contextual MCQ 7:
Infant stools are yellowish in colour. This yellow colour is due to:
A) Undigested milk protein casein present in stools
B) Pancreatic juice passed along with stools
C) Bile pigments passed through bile juice
D) Intestinal juice containing yellowish enzymes
Answer: C
This is a confirmed NEET question from NEETPrep PYQ bank. Bile pigments (mainly bilirubin and biliverdin) give bile its characteristic greenish-yellow colour. When bile enters the intestine and bile pigments pass into stools, they give stools their yellowish colour. Undigested casein (Option A) is white. Pancreatic juice (Option B) is colourless. Intestinal juice (Option D) is also colourless.
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What Are the Digestive Disorders Tested in Digestion and Absorption NEET 2026?
Digestive disorders appear in 4 to 5 of 11 NEET papers (2015–2025) as direct identification questions — match the disorder to its correct definition, cause or symptom. Jaundice and vomiting are tested most frequently. The anxiety + indigestion link is a confirmed NEET question.
Digestive Disorders Table
NEET Confirmed (NEETPrep PYQ bank): “Anxiety and eating spicy food together in an otherwise normal human may lead to ____.” Options: A) indigestion B) jaundice C) diarrhoea D) vomiting. Answer: A — indigestion. Anxiety increases gastric acid secretion; spicy food further irritates gastric mucosa → incomplete digestion → indigestion.
NEET Confirmed (NEET 2011): “Two friends are eating together. One suddenly starts coughing while swallowing food. This would be due to improper movement of ____.” Answer: epiglottis. The epiglottis normally folds over the glottis (opening of larynx) during swallowing to prevent food entering the respiratory tract. Improper epiglottis movement allows food particles to enter the larynx, triggering the cough reflex.
NEET Trap: “Jaundice is a disorder of the kidney.”
Correct answer: Jaundice is a disorder of the liver (confirmed NEET question from examside.com PYQ bank). The liver’s failure to process bilirubin (from degraded haemoglobin) leads to excess bilirubin accumulating in the blood. Bilirubin deposits in the skin and whites of the eyes cause the characteristic yellow discolouration.
Contextual MCQ 8:
Which of the following is correctly matched?
Answer: C
Kwashiorkor is protein deficiency WITHOUT calorie deficiency (Option A reverses this — that is Marasmus). Marasmus is combined protein AND calorie deficiency (Option B reverses this — that is Kwashiorkor). Jaundice — excess bilirubin due to liver dysfunction (Option C — CORRECT). Indigestion is caused by excess HCl, spicy food or anxiety — not improper epiglottis movement (Option D describes the cause of coughing while swallowing, not indigestion).
Year-wise Confirmed NEET PYQ Table — Digestion and Absorption (2011–2025)
Every question in this table is from a confirmed NEET paper. Use this table to cross-check every sub-topic section above — if the same concept appears 3 or more times across different years, it is a guaranteed exam focus area for Digestion and Absorption NEET 2026.
Quick Revision Grid — Digestion and Absorption NEET 2026
Three columns. Scan this the night before NEET. Every row is one potential question.
What Are the Top 3 Mistakes That Cost Students Marks in Digestion and Absorption NEET 2026?
These are the three errors most responsible for incorrect answers in confirmed NEET papers. Each one has appeared as the core trap in at least two different NEET questions.
Mistake 1: Writing “bile digests fats” or “bile contains lipase”
What students write: “Bile digests fat. Bile contains lipase.”
What is correct: Bile has zero digestive enzymes. Bile salts emulsify large fat globules into tiny emulsified droplets (micelles), increasing surface area for pancreatic lipase to act. Digestion of fats is done entirely by pancreatic lipase — not by bile. Bile = emulsification only.
Why NEET uses this: The question “which component of digestive secretion digests fats?” places both “bile” and “pancreatic lipase” as options. Students who haven’t fixed this distinction choose bile — losing 4 marks (−1 penalty + missed +4).
Mistake 2: Swapping the activation pathways — writing “enterokinase activates pepsinogen” or “HCl activates trypsinogen”
What students write: “Pepsinogen is converted to pepsin by enterokinase” or “trypsinogen is activated by HCl.”
What is correct: Two separate activation events in two separate organs.
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Stomach: Pepsinogen → activated by HCl (from parietal cells) → pepsin
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Duodenum: Trypsinogen → activated by enterokinase (from intestinal mucosa) → trypsin
Enterokinase acts on trypsinogen only. HCl acts on pepsinogen only. Crossing these two is the most common single error in the enzyme sequence sub-topic. NEET 2019 confirmed this with “what activates trypsinogen?”
Mistake 3: Confusing Paneth cells and argentaffin cells in NEET questions about Crypts of Lieberkühn
What students write: “Argentaffin cells secrete lysozyme” or choose argentaffin cells when the question asks for the cell secreting the antibacterial substance.
What is correct: Paneth cells secrete lysozyme (antibacterial). Argentaffin cells (enterochromaffin cells) secrete serotonin and local hormones. Both cell types are in the Crypts of Lieberkühn — which is exactly why NEET uses them together as options. NEET 2017 confirmed this with Paneth cells as the correct answer for lysozyme secretion.
What Is the Best Exam Strategy for Digestion and Absorption NEET 2026?
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Study the enzyme sequence as a physical flow, not a list. Draw the GI tract from mouth to large intestine. At each organ, write the enzyme, its inactive form (if any), and what activates it. Students who study the sequence spatially (organ-by-organ) stop confusing pepsinogen/HCl with trypsinogen/enterokinase because they remember the enzyme in context of its location.
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Build the mental trigger “Secretin = Sodium bicarbonate.” Both start with S. Secretin stimulates sodium bicarbonate-rich juice. CCK stimulates enzyme-rich juice. This one memory anchor resolves the most repeated gastrointestinal hormone confusion across 9 of 11 NEET years.
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Lock in the two absorption routes — blood vs lymph. Everything except long-chain fats enters blood capillaries: glucose, fructose, amino acids, short-chain fatty acids, water-soluble vitamins. Long-chain fats form chylomicrons and enter lacteals. Vitamin B12 is the one exception among water-soluble vitamins — absorbed in ileum, requires intrinsic factor. These three rules cover every absorption site NEET question.
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Treat dental formula as guaranteed 4 marks. Primary = 20 teeth, no premolars. Permanent = 32 teeth, premolars present. Every 2 years, NEET gives you this question. Knowing this one table earns 4 marks for 5 seconds of recall. Not knowing it drops 4 marks for a fact that takes 1 minute to memorise.
Digestion and Absorption NEET 2026 — Frequently Asked Questions
How many questions come from Digestion and Absorption in NEET 2026?
Digestion and Absorption generates 3 to 4 questions per NEET paper worth 12 to 16 marks. It appeared in every NEET paper from 2010 to 2025 — 15 consecutive papers — making it the most consistently tested chapter in Human Physiology NEET 2026. The highest sub-topic frequency is the digestive enzyme sequence, appearing in all 11 papers from 2015 to 2025.
Which digestive enzyme converts trypsinogen to trypsin for NEET?
Enterokinase (also called enteropeptidase) — secreted by the intestinal mucosal cells of the duodenum — activates trypsinogen to active trypsin. This was directly confirmed in NEET 2019. Trypsin then activates chymotrypsinogen and procarboxypeptidase in a cascade. HCl does not activate trypsinogen — HCl activates pepsinogen to pepsin in the stomach.
What is the site of absorption of glucose and amino acids for NEET?
Both glucose and amino acids are absorbed primarily in the jejunum (middle section of the small intestine) by active transport — coupled to sodium ion (Na⁺) co-transport. This is energy-dependent (requires ATP). The correct NEET answer is jejunum and active transport. Duodenum is the main digestion site; ileum absorbs Vitamin B12 and bile salts.
What do oxyntic cells and chief cells secrete in the stomach?
Oxyntic cells (parietal cells) secrete HCl and intrinsic factor (required for Vitamin B12 absorption in the ileum). Chief cells (peptic cells / zymogen cells) secrete pepsinogen — the inactive proenzyme that HCl converts to active pepsin. This exact distinction appears in NEET match-the-following almost every year. Never swap the two.
What is the difference between Kwashiorkor and Marasmus for NEET?
Kwashiorkor is caused by protein deficiency without significant calorie deficiency. Symptoms: oedema, pot belly, hair discolouration. Marasmus is caused by combined protein AND calorie deficiency. Symptoms: severe muscle wasting, emaciation, no oedema. Both are forms of PEM (Protein-Energy Malnutrition). The NEET trap: Kwashiorkor and Marasmus definitions are presented as swap options.
Why does jaundice cause yellow skin in NEET Biology?
Jaundice is a liver disorder in which the liver fails to process bilirubin normally. Bilirubin is produced when old red blood cells are broken down. In a healthy liver, bilirubin is conjugated and excreted in bile. In jaundice, excess bilirubin accumulates in the blood and deposits in the skin, mucous membranes and sclera (whites of the eyes), causing the characteristic yellow discolouration.










