Chapter 14 Digestive System
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Transcript Chapter 14 Digestive System
Chapter 14
Digestive System
Anatomy and Physiology II
Ms. Harborth
PART I:
Digestive System
Takes in food (ingests)
Breaks it down physically (digests)
Absorbs nutrients
Rids body of indigestible remains
(defecates)
Anatomy of the Digestive System
Alimentary
canal (GI tract)
◦ Ingests, digests,
absorbs,
defecates
Accessory
digestive organs
◦ Teeth, tongue,
large digestive
glands
Alimentary Canal
Continuous, hollow muscular tube
Submucosal and myenteric nerve plexuses
30 feet long in cadaver
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Mouth
Pharynx
Esophagus
Stomach
Small intestine
Large intestine
Anus
Mouth
Labia
Cheeks
Hard and soft
palate
Uvula
Vestibule
Oral cavity
proper
Tongue
Lingual frenulum
Pharynx
Oropharynx
Laryngopharynx
2 skeletal muscle
layers
◦ Inner layer
longitudinal
◦ Outer layer circular
Peristalsis
Esophagus
10 inches long
4 tissue layers
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Mucosa – innermost
Submucosa
Muscularis externa
Serosa
Visceral peritoneum
Parietal peritoneum
Mesentery
Stomach
10 inches long, can
hold 1 gallon
Diameter changes
Cardiac region
◦ Cardioesphageal
sphincter
Fundus
Body
Pylorus
◦ Pyloric sphincter
Stomach
Rugae
Greater curvature
Lesser curvature
Lesser omentum
Greater omentum
Stomach
Gastric pits
◦ Gastric glands
◦ Gastric juice
Ex: Intrinsic factor
Chief cells
◦ pepsinogens
Parietal cells
Mucous neck cells
Chyme
Small Intestine
6-13 ft long
Ileocecal valve
Duodenum
Jejunum
Ileum
Pancreatic ducts
Bile duct
Peyer’s patches
Food Absorption
Microvilli
Villi
◦ Lacteal lymphatic
capillary
Circular folds
Large Intestine
5 ft
Cecum
Appendix
Colon
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Ascending colon
Transverse colon
Descending colon
Sigmoid colon
Rectum
Anal canal
Accessory Digestive Organs
Salivary glands
◦ Parotid glands
◦ Submandibular glands
◦ Sublingual glands
Saliva
◦ Bolus
◦ Salivary amylase
◦ Lysozyme and IgA antibodies
Accessory Digestive Organs
Teeth
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Masticate
Deciduous teeth
Permanent teeth
Incisors
Canines
Premolars (bicuspids)
Molars
Teeth Continued
Crown and Root
Gingiva
Enamel
Neck
Cementum
Periodontal membrane (ligament)
Dentin
Pulp cavity
Pulp
Root canal
Accessory Digestive Organs
Pancreas
◦ Retroperitoneal
◦ Digestive
enzymes in
alkaline fluid
◦ Endocrine organ
Accessory Digestive Organs
Liver and Gallbladder
◦ Liver
4 lobes
Bile
Common hepatic duct
◦ Gallbladder
Cystic duct
Stores and concentrates bile
Functions of Digestive System
1. Ingestion
2. Propulsion
3. Food breakdown: mechanical digestion
4. Food breakdown: chemical digestion
5. Absorption
6. Defecation
digestion animation
Digestion Reflexes
Mechano/Chemoreceptors triggered by:
◦ Stretch of organ by food
◦ pH of contents
◦ Presence of certain breakdown products
Activate or Inhibit:
◦ Glands that secrete digestive juices or
hormones
◦ Smooth muscles that mix and propel food
Activities of Mouth, Pharynx, and
Esophagus
Mouth – mechanical and
chemical digestion
Deglutition (tongue, soft palate,
pharynx, and esophagus)
◦ Buccal phase
◦ Pharyngeal-esophageal phase
FYI: Swallowing can occur while
standing on your head!
Activities of Stomach
Sight, smell, and taste of
food stimulates
parasympathetic reflexes
◦ Gastric juices secreted
◦ Hormone gastrin released
Makes stomach glands produce
pepsinogens, mucus, and HCl
FYI:You make 2-3 Liters of gastric
juice a day!
Chemistry in the Stomach
HCl makes pepsinogen
pepsin
Rennin: works on milk protein (only in
infants)
Hardly any chemical digestion occurs
◦ Aspirin and alcohol are absorbed through
stomach wall
Food Propulsion from Stomach
Chyme is end product
Pylorus only allows liquid and
small particles to pass through
sphincter
Each contraction squirts 3 ml
of chyme
Rest is squeezed back into
stomach
◦ Causing enterogastric reflex
FYI: It usually takes 4 hours for
your stomach to empty, or 6 hours
if meal was high in fat
Activities of Small Intestine
Carb and protein digestion had begun in stomach,
but no fat digestion
Microvilli make few enzymes
◦ Brush border enzymes
◦ Hormones:
Secretin
Cholecystokinin (CCK)
Pancreatic juices are enzyme and bicarbonate rich
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Complete digestion of starch
Carry out ½ of protein digestion
Responsible for fat digestoin
Digest nucleic acids
Absorption in Small Intestine
Water and end products absorbed
through intestinal cell plasma membranes
via active transport
◦ Except lipids – absorbed through diffusion
Then to the hepatic portal vein
By the end of ileum, only water and
indigestible food materials and LOTS of
bacteria
FYI: Takes about 3-6 hours for food to go
through small intestine
Activities of Large Intestine
Bacteria metabolize and
release gases (methane and
hydrogen sulfide) and some
vitamins
These gases make feces
smell
Peristalsis and mass
movements
Defecation reflex
PART II:
Nutrition and Metabolism
Major nutrients
◦ Carbohydrates
◦ Lipids
◦ Proteins
Vitamins and minerals
Water
Metabolism
Catabolism and
anabolism
Carbohydrate
metabolism
Fat metabolism
Protein metabolism
Carbohydrate Metabolism
Glucose
ATP
Cellular
respiration
◦ Glycolysis, Krebs
cycle, electron
transport chain
Fat Metabolism
Liver
Fat is broken down
to acetic acid
Acetic acid is
broken down in
mitochondria to
make ATP, CO2, and
water
Protein Metabolism
Proteins are broken down
into amino acids
Cellular uptake
20 amino acids are needed,
8 can’t be made by our cells
(“essential amino acids”)
IF no other energy source is
available, amine groups are
removed as ammonia, and
rest is used by mitochondria
for ATP
Liver’s Role in Metabolism
Used in digestion, detoxifying drugs &
alcohol, degrades hormones, makes
cholesterol, albumin, clotting proteins and
lipoproteins, and METABOLISM
Blood circulates through, liver grabs
nutrients and macrophages kill pathogens
Liver
Glycogenesis
Glycogenolysis
Gluconeogenesis
Cholesterol
HDL and LDL
Body Energy Balance
Energy intake = heat + work + energy
source
Rising or falling blood levels of nutrients,
hormones, or body temperature affect
eating behavior
Psychological factors influence as well
Metabolic Rate
Basal metabolic rate
◦ Amount of heat produced when at rest
◦ Influenced by:
Surface area
Sex
Age
Emotions
Amount of thyroxine
Total metabolic rate
◦ Amount of kilocalories body needs to fuel all
activities
◦ Stays elevated well after exercise
Body Temperature Regulation
Hypothalamus
◦ Heat-promoting mechanisms
Vasoconstriction
Shivering
◦ Heat loss mechanisms
Radiation through skin