Transcript pancreas

Body Systems
Circulatory System
Digestive System
Circulatory System
On average, your body has about 5 liters of
blood continually traveling through it by
way of the circulatory system. The heart,
the lungs, and the blood vessels work
together to form the circle part of the
circulatory system. The pumping of the
heart forces the blood on its journey.
Parts of the Circulatory System
The circulatory System is divided into three
major parts:
• The Heart
• The Blood
• The Blood Vessels
The Heart
• But the heart muscle is special because of what
it does. The heart sends blood around your
body. The blood provides your body with the
oxygen and nutrients it needs. It also carries
away waste.
• Your heart is sort of like a pump, or two pumps
in one. The right side of your heart receives
blood from the body and pumps it to the lungs.
The left side of the heart does the exact
opposite: It receives blood from the lungs and
pumps it out to the body.
Anatomy of the heart
Blood Vessels
Your arteries carry blood away from the
heart. Oxygenated blood is pumped out
of the heart through the body's main
artery — the aorta. Arteries that branch
off the aorta transport blood throughout
the body, supplying tissues with oxygen
and nutrients.
Your veins carry blood back toward the
heart. Tiny vessels called capillaries in
organs and tissues of the body deliver
deoxygenated blood into small veins called
venules, which join to form veins. Blood
flows through the veins to the body's two
main veins (called the vena cavae), which
deliver the blood back into the heart.
Major Veins and Arteries
Circulation and Lungs
1. Oxygen-poor blood (shown in blue) flows from the body into the right
atrium.
2. Blood flows through the right atrium into the right ventricle.
3. The right ventricle pumps the blood to the lungs, where the blood
releases waste gases and picks up oxygen.
4. The newly oxygen-rich blood (shown in red) returns to the heart and
enters the left atrium.
5. Blood flows through the left atrium into the left ventricle.
6. The left ventricle pumps the oxygen-rich blood to all parts of the
body.
• blood movement
• blood movement in heart
• circulation in different animals (The
Vertebrate Circulatorium )
• http://www.nhlbi.nih.gov/health/dci/Disease
s/hhw/hhw_electrical.html
Digestive System
Chewing
When food is being chewed, saliva is squirted into
the mouth. Saliva helps to soften the food. It
contains an enzyme that helps break down the
starch in the food.
Swallowing
When you swallow a small ball of mushed-up food or liquids, a special
flap called the epiglottis (say: eh-pih-glah-tiss) flops down over the
opening of your windpipe to make sure the food enters the
esophagus and not the windpipe.
Esophagus
The food is moved along the
small intestine in a
squeezing motion known
as peristalsis. This motion
is much the same as
squeezing a tube of
toothpaste. All of this
movement causes the
noise when we say our
stomach is "growling."
Stomach
The stomach is a sac shaped like a "j" and is
about eight inches long. In the stomach,
food is mixed with acids. The muscles in
the stomach move, which helps break
down the food. The stomach is protected
from the acid by a lining. From the
stomach, the food pulp is sent to the small
intestine. Food leaves the stomach a little
bit at a time.
Other “players” in breaking down food
• Liver
• Pancreas
• Gallbladder
Liver
The liver processes and
distributes nutrients. The liver
creates bile, which is important
in chemically breaking down the
food in the small intestine. It also
processes damaged red blood
cells and stores vitamins A and
D. This organ is also where
alcohol, drugs, bacteria and old
blood cells are broken down and
removed from the body.
Pancreas
The pancreas is an elongated
gland that is below the stomach.
The pancreas produces
pancreatic juice. The pancreas
makes enzymes which are
released into the small intestine
to break down the food. The
enzymes neutralize the
hydrochloric acid from the
stomach and stimulates the liver
into producing bile and secretes
insulin which transports sugar.
Gallbladder
The gallbladder is a small sac on the
underside of the right lobe of the liver.
When there is no food in the small
intestine bile from the liver is sent to the
gall bladder where it is stored in a
concentrated form, to be released when
food enters the digestive tract.
Small Intestine
(1) the duodenum, a receiving area for chemicals
and partially digested food from the stomach
(2) the jejunum, where most of the nutrients are
absorbed into the blood
(3) the ileum, where the remaining nutrients are
absorbed before moving into the large
intestine.
Absorption
Lining the small
intestine are millions
of fingers called villi.
These absorb the
chemicals that we
need from the food
into the body. It is at
this point the food is
actually in the body.
Appendix
• The appendix has no function in modern
humans; however it is believed to have
been part of the digestive system in our
primitive ancestors.
Large Intestine
• Waste products and food that are not absorbed in the
small intestine pass into the large intestine. This waste
material is called feces. The large intestine is only five
feet long but is larger in diameter than the small
intestine. The large intestine includes the colon.
• In the large intestine, feces are formed from water,
undigested food and bacteria. Water is absorbed back
into the body so the waste material becomes more solid
as it travels through the colon. It may take as long as
twenty hours for food to pass completely through the
large intestine.
A meal may take up to three days to pass
through your digestive system. It spends
about three hours in your stomach.
http://kitses.com/animation/swfs/digestion.s
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