Lipid digestion is the procedure that a large portion of the fat ingested by the body is emulsified into little particles by bile and afterward the lipase discharged by the pancreas and small digestive tract hydrolyzes the unsaturated fats in the fat into free unsaturated fats and monoglycerides. A limited quantity of unsaturated fats is totally hydrolyzed into glycerol and unsaturated fats. After hydrolysis these little atoms, for example, glycerol, short-chain and medium-chain unsaturated fats, are retained into the blood by the small digestive system. After the ingestion of monoglycerides and long-chain unsaturated fats, triglycerides will be re-integrated in little intestinal cells and alongside phospholipids, cholesterol and proteins to frame chylomicron which will enter the blood course from the lymphatic framework. The liver and pancreas are significant locales for lipid digestion and assume a significant job during the time spent lipid assimilation, ingestion, combination, disintegration and transport.