The Digestive System Chapter 16
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Transcript The Digestive System Chapter 16
The Digestive System
Chapter 25
Function of the Digestive System
To break down food into a “usable”
(absorbable) form
To supply our cells with the nutrients they
need for energy, growth & repair
Organs of the Digestive System
Gastrointestinal tract (GIT) – continuous
passageway which contains the food from the time
it enters the body, until it leaves; organs include:
mouth (oral cavity), pharynx, esophagus, stomach,
small intestine, large intestine, rectum, anus
Accessory organs - participate in digestive
processes; organs include:
teeth, tongue, salivary glands, liver, gall bladder,
pancreas
Processes of Digestion
1. Ingestion
2. Movement along GIT
Voluntary – e.g. swallowing
Involuntary – e.g. peristalsis
3. Secretion – release of water, enzymes, acids,
buffers, mucous, etc. into GIT for physical
(mechanical) & chemical digestive processes
Processes of Digestion
4. Digestion
Mechanical processing – physical breakdown
of food; e.g. mastication, emulsification, mixing
waves, segmentation
Chemical digestion – chemical breakdown of
food; disassembling of organic molecules into
their component parts; requires enzymes
carbohydrates disaccharides
monosaccharides
proteins amino acids
lipids fatty acids & monoglycerides
Processes of Digestion
5. Absorption – movement of nutrients from GIT into
blood capillaries (monosaccharides, amino acids,
H2O, vitamins, minerals) or lymphatic capillaries
(fatty acids)
6. Excretion (Defecation) – removal of waste
products from GIT
Histology of the GIT
4 layers of tissue surround the
lumen of the GIT
epithelium – stratified squamous or simple
Mucosa columnar
lamina propria – loose CT
muscuaris mucosa – smooth muscle
Submucosa
CT with BV’s,
nerves &
lymphatics
Muscularis externa
Skeletal muscle at beginning & end of
GIT, smooth muscle (inner circular;
outer longitudinal layer) from lower
esophagus to rectum
Serosa (a.k.a.
viseral peritoneum)
Peritoneum & Mesenteries
The abdominal cavity is lined with parietal
peritoneum & many of the organs within are
covered with visceral peritoneum
Folds of peritoneum called “mesenteries” attach
some organs to others
greater omentum
lesser omentum
mesentery proper
mesocolon
Mouth (oral cavity)
Regions include the vestibule & oral cavity proper
Roof comprised of hard & soft palate; floor primarily comprised of
tongue
Mucosa of stratified squamous epithelium
(non-keratinized)
Joins to the oropharynx at the fauces
Tongue –
stratified sqamous epith. over skeletal muscle
intrinsic & extrinsic muscles
papillae
filiform
fungiform
circumvallate
taste buds
Salivary glands –
secrete saliva – made
of H2O, salts &
“salivary amylase”
Parotid duct
Parotid
gland
Sublingual
gland
Submandibular duct
Submandibular
gland
Teeth – involved in “mastication”
2 sets of teeth – deciduous & permanent
4 types of teeth – incisors, cuspids
(canines), bicuspids (premolars), molars
Parts of a tooth –
crown – dentin surrounded by
enamel, has hollowed pulp cavity
filled with CT pulp
neck – at gingival border
root – within mandible & maxilla,
has hollowed root canal with BVs
& nerves, root canal opens at
apical foramen
Pharynx
Common passageway for air & food
oropharynx & laryngopharynx lined with
stratified squamous epithelium (nasopharynx
lined with PSCC)
uvula & epiglottis protect airway when
swallowing (“deglutition”)
nasopharynx
uvula
oropharynx
epiglottis
laryngopharynx
Esophagus
muscular tube running from pharynx, posterior to trachea, down thoracic
cavity, through “esophageal hiatus” of diaphragm, to lower esophageal (a.k.a.
cardiac) sphincter at junction of stomach
functions in “deglutition” through action of peristalsis
mucosa is stratified squamous epithelium
variations in muscularis externa – begins as skeletal muscle at upper 1/3,
mixed skeletal & smooth muscle in middle, smooth muscle by lower 1/3
Stomach - Gross Anatomy
Lower esophageal (cardiac) sphincter
Pyloric sphincter
Stomach - Histology
Rugae – folds of mucosa & submucosa to allow
for expansion of stomach
Mucosa of simple
columnar epithelium with
mucous cells
Gastric pit leading to
gastric glands
Stomach – Histology (cont)
- Secrete mucus to protect
epithelial cells from enzymes
& acid
- Secrete HCl (for protein
digestion) & intrinsic factor
(for B12 absorption)
- Secrete pepsinogen which
(peptic cells) gets converted to “pepsin”
when mixed with HCl; for
protein digestion
Entero(G-cells)
- Secrete gastrin to regulate
stomach emptying
Stomach
Modifications in stomach include 3 layers of smooth
muscle in muscularis externa – outer longitudinal, middle
circular, innermost oblique layer
Functions of stomach include
temporary storage of food
mechanical breakdown of food to “chyme”
through powerful mixing waves
intrinsic factor for vitamin B12 absorption
start of chemical digestion of proteins –
pepsin
proteins
HCl
polypeptides
Small Intestine - Anatomy
- connects stomach to large intestine; 15-20’ long; 1” diameter; held
together in abdominal cavity by “mesentery proper”
- site for completion of chemical digestion & absorption of nutrients
- comprised of three regions:
Duodenum – 10” in length;
receives chyme from
stomach, secretions from
liver, gallbladder & pancreas
Jejunum – 8’ long; most
digestion & absorption
occurs here
Ileum – 12’ long; connects to
cecum of large intestine at
iliocecal valve (sphincter)
Small Intestine
Modifications in mucosa & submucosa of intestinal wall designed to
increase functional surface area:
Plicae circulares (circular folds) –
large transverse ridges; most abundant in
jejunum
Villi – small finger-like projections of
mucosal folds across surface of intestine
Plicae
circulares
Small Intestine
Villi
Villi lined with “absorptive cells” - mucosal epithelium of simple columnar
epithelium with microvilli “brush border” . These cells also produce
enzymes (disaccharidases & peptidases) for final digestion of carbs and
proteins
Submucosa of each villus contains a capillary network & a “lacteal”
(lymphatic capillary) for absorption of nutrients
Small Intestine
Intestinal crypts
containing stem
cells and
intestinal glands
Villi
Between villi are intestinal crypts. Stem cells here can replace old cells
found lining villi
Intestinal glands within intestinal crypts secrete “intestinal juice” – provides
watery medium to keep enzymes & digestive products in solution for help with
absorption.
Pancreas
Stomach
Tail
Body
Head
Duodenum
Pancreatic
duct
Retroperitoneal elongated
organ lying posterior to
stomach, from duodenum to
spleen
Both endocrine (pancreatic
islets of Langerhans –
secretes insulin & glucagon)
& exocrine gland (pancreatic
acini – secretes pancreatic
juice (aka pancreatin)
through pancreatic duct(s) to
duodenum
Pancreas
Pancreatic juice – mixture of enzymes & buffers (sodium
bicarbonate) secreted by acinar cells into pancreatic duct &
released into duodenum
pancreatic amylase
Starch
lipase
Lipids
maltose
fatty acids + monoglycerol
proteases (trypsin, chymotrypsin, carboxypeptidase)
Proteins & polypeptides
nucleases – digest RNA & DNA
small peptides
tri & dipeptides
sodium bicarbonate – neutralizes acidic chyme
because enzymes in small intestine need an alkaline pH
Liver - Anatomy
Largest organ within the body
Comprised of 4 lobes:
Large right & left lobes divided by falciform ligament;
small caudate (by IVC) & quadrate (by gall bladder ) lobes
falciform ligament continues at inferior margin as
ligamentum teres (round ligament) (remnant of umbilical
vein)
Lobes of liver functionally divided into microscopic lobules
Liver - Histology
Lobules comprised of rows of Hepatocytes arranged radially around a
central vein
Hepatocytes surround blood sinusoids (capillary structures) which are
partially lined with phagocytic Kupffer (aka stellate reticuloendothelial) cells
hepatocytes
central vein
sinusoids
Liver
One function of hepatocytes is to produce bile, which gets
secreted into bile canaliculi of lobule
Bile canaliculi merge to form bile ducts, which are part of
the portal triad seen at each corner of the lobules. Bile ducts
merge to eventually create the right & left hepatic ducts
Liver & gall bladder
Right & left hepatic ducts unite to form common hepatic duct
which merges with cystic duct of gall bladder to form common
bile duct which joins with pancreatic duct & enters the
Right hepatic duct
Left hepatic duct
duodenum
Gall bladder – hollow
muscular sac under right lobe
of liver; stores &
concentrates bile; releases
bile through cystic duct
Bile released into duodenum
functions in emulsification of lipids,
absorption of fats (due to presence
of bile salts), & excretion of bilirubin
Pancreatic & bile ducts
Common bile duct
Accessory
pancreatic duct
Stomach
Tail
Body
Head
Pancreatic
duct
Liver - Functions
The liver has over 200 functions including (but not limited to):
Bile production & excretion
Metabolic regulation –
storage of glycogen, fatty acids, fat-soluble vitamins &
minerals
interconversion of nutrients (“gluconeogenesis”)
detoxification & removal of drugs, toxins & hormones
hematological regulation –
phagocytosis of worn-out RBCs, bacteria & other
pathogens
synthesis of plasma proteins
Blood Supply to Liver
In order for the liver to perform all of its functions, it receives
blood through 2 vessels:
Hepatic artery - delivers oxygenated blood into sinusoids of
liver
Hepatic Portal vein – delivers de-oxygenated, nutrient-rich
blood from digestive organs to sinusoids of liver
Liver uses O2 &
nutrients within blood of
sinusoids & then blood
drains into central veins
of lobule which merge to
form the hepatic veins,
which drain into the IVC
Large Intestine
Begins at the ilium & ends at the
anus; 5’ long; 3” in diameter
Transverse
colon
3 regions:
cecum - blind pouch; has appendix
attached
colon – ascending, (hepatic flexure),
transverse, (splenic flexure),
descending, sigmoid
rectum – last 1” known as “anal canal”
Hepatic (rt.
Colic) flexure
Splenic (lt. colic)
flexure
Ascending
colon
Descending
colon
ileum
Ileocecal sphincter
Rectum
Anal canal
Cecum
Sigmoid colon
Vermiform appendix
Rectum
Anal canal
Internal anal
sphincter
Rectum
External anal
sphincter
Anus
Large Intestine
main functions – H2O re-absorption; absorption of some vitamins &
minerals; formation & temporary storage of fecal material
no chemical (enzymatic) digestion but some bacterial
Simple columnar epithelium in mucosa,
except at anal canal (strat. Squam.)
No plicae circularis or villi
Modifications in muscularis externa &
serosa :
haustra
taeniae coli
longitudinal muscle layer forms bands
called “taeniae coli” which create puckers
known as “haustra”
serosa forms “epiploic appendages”
epiploic appendages
THE END (literally!)