“…After gastric digestion, the lipid droplet size of the emulsion increases significantly, and the lipid particle diameter gradually decreases in the digestive phase of the small intestine. Many studies have revealed why samples undergo changes during the oral, gastric, and intestinal stages [13] , [23] . After oral digestion, the mean particle diameter of the lipid emulsion droplets increased, indicating that salivary mucin in simulated oral fluid may cause aggregation and bridging of fat emulsion droplets [24] .…”