NUR101-ModuleO
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Transcript NUR101-ModuleO
Chapter 15 - The Digestive System
Irregular tube; open at both ends, called
“Alimentary canal” or “Gastrointestinal (GI)
Tract”
29 feet long (adults) - 9 meters
Food & other substances that enter tube are not
really inside body
Passageway of food: broken down (digested) and
absorbed thru walls < entering body - cells
Both - Mechanical & Chemical Digestion
Break Down of Food
Teeth- first physical breakdown
Stomach-churning of food (physical)
Mouth- first chemical breakdown (salvia)
Digestive enzymes throughout GI tract
Digestion - Process where large food particles
reduced to absorbable molecules
Absorption - Process of small molecules passing
thru digestive system walls into body
Key Organs of the GI Tract
Know Main & Accessory organs, Table 16-2; page
476
Small Intestine : Duodenum, Jejunum, & Ileum
Large Intestines (elimination > feces):
Cecum, Colon: Ascending, Transverse, Descending,
Sigmoid
Wall of Digestive Tract
Mouth to anus
Four layers of tissue; surrounding the hollow
space within the tube “lumen”
May vary in structure in different organs
Mucosa or mucous membrane - tough in
esophagus, delicate, for absorption or
secretion in rest of tract
Submucosa - connective tissue, blood
vessels & nerves
Muscularis - 2 layers, responsible for
wavelike, rhythmic contractions
(peristalsis), moves contents, assists in
mixing & mechanical breakdown
Serosa - outermost covering, composed
of visceral peritoneum
Mesentery - double folded peritoneal
tissue, anchors loops of digestive tract to
posterior wall of abdominal cavity
Mouth
Oral cavity - hollow chamber (roof, a floor, &
walls)
Entrance of food; digestion begins immediately
Mucous membranes > mucus, protects against
digestive juices & lubricates food passage
This mucous protects & lubricates
Hard palate - bony structure, front portion
Soft palate - posterior, chiefly muscles
Uvula - cone-shaped process hanging down from
soft palate. W/ help of soft pal., prevents food or
liquid from entering nasal cavity
Floor of the mouth Tongue - skeletal muscular structure, covered
w/ mucous membrane
Anchored to bones in skull > hyoid bone
Frenulum- thin membrane; attaches tongue to
floor of mouth
Tongue-tied: too short
Papillae: small elevations on surface
Vallate type - largest, inverted V-shaped row of
about 10-12 mushroomlike elevations - tastebuds
Teeth Four major types Incisors - (sharp/cutting)
Canines - cuspids (pierce/tear)
Premolars - bicuspids & Molars tricuspids (grinding/crush)
Mastication > chewing of food
Forms a bolus > ready for swallowing
By age 2 - full set 20 teeth (cut 1st - 2 yrs.)
By age 17 to 24 - 32 permanent teeth (cut
1st - 6 yrs.)
Typical Tooth Three main parts
Crown - visible, covered w/ enamel (hardest
tissue in body)
Neck - narrow portion surrounds by gum tissue
(gingiva)
Root - fitted into socket in upper or lower jaw,
lined by fibrous, periodontal membrane
Inside Structure - Enamel on outside, Dentin, Pulp
cavity (blood vessels & nerves) moving inward
Salivary Glands 3 Pairs - ducts drain saliva into oral cavity,
secretes about 1 liter/day
Parotid - in front of each ear (mumps tender)
Submandibular - ducts by fernullum
Sublingual - ducts into floor of mouth
Saliva contents - salivary amylase (begins
CHO digestion), mucus (moistens food)
Pharynx Behind nasal cavity & mouth
Tubelike structure made of muscles, lined
w/ mucous membrane
Part of respiratory & digestive systems
Esophagus Passage for food to stomach
Tube-like structure, 10 inches long
Mucous lined
GERD - often caused by hiatal hernia
Stomach Upper part of abdominal cavity, under
diaphragm
Pouch for food, hollow, expands (can push
up on diaphragm > discomfort)
Lower esophageal sphincter (LES) or
cardiac sphincter - rings of muscle tissue at
end of esophagus - keeps food from
reentering the esophagus when the stomach
contracts
Chyme - semi-solid mixture, produced
by contraction of stomach muscles that
mixes food w/ gastric juices
Stomach contractions Created by 3 layers of muscles, run
lengthwise, around, obliquely
Makes stomach one of strongest organs >
peristalsis
Breaks food into tiny particles
Mucous membranes line stomach contains gastric glands > secrete gastric
juice & hydrochloric acid
When empty, wrinkled folds - rugae
Three divisions of stomach Fundus, body, pylorus
Pyloric sphincter - holds food in stomach,
empties contents slowly into small
intestine
Ulcer - carterlike wound or sore in
membrane of stomach
• 1 in 10 persons suffer in USA
• Helicobacter pylori bacterium (H. pylori)
Small Intestines
Portion of digestion tract that extends from the
pylorus to the ileocecal valve
12- 20 feet in length, coiled, convoluted, and
occupies most of the abdominal cavity
Intestinal glands - secrete digestive juices
Smooth muscle wall - contracts > peristalsis
Plicea - circular folds covered w/ villi,
increases surface area > absorption
In or on the villi Blood capillaries - absorb CHO & protein end
products (glucose & amino acids)
Lacteal - lymphatic vessel - absorb lipids
Microvilli - brushlike border, > surface more
Chemical digestion - most occurs in 1st
subdivision of duodenum
Minor & major duodenal papillae - ducts
where pancreatic enzymes & bile enter small
intestine
Liver
Large organ, fills R upper abdominal cavity
Exocrine gland - secretes bile into ducts
Hepatic - means liver
Bile - essential for breaking up or emulsification
of fats
CCK (cholecystokinin) - hormone secretion
triggered by lipids in chyme > makes gallbladder
contract & release bile
Drains from common bile duct into duodenum
Gallbladder - concentrates & stores bile
Pancreas C-shaped, exocrine gland that lies behind the
stomach & duodenum
Pancreatic juice - most important digestive
juice - contains enzymes for all 3 food groups
Sodium bicarbonate (alkaline substance) neutralizes hydrochloric acid
Enters small intestine thru same duct as bile
Islets of Langerhans - hormones produced
Pancreatitis - inflammation (blockage, CF)
Large Intestine Begins with the ending of the ileum at the
ileocecal valve - called the cecum
Approximately 5 feet in length, much larger
in diameter than small intestine
Contents - not called chyme
Function - reabsorb water & salts
Material acted on by bacteria > more nutrients
from cellulose & other fibers
Synthesis Vit. K needed for blood clotting,
Production of some B-complex vit.
Not as well suited for absorption as small
intestine - no villi
Normal passage of material thru large intestine
- 3 to 5 days
Subdivisions - flow in GI Tract one-way
Cecum - pouchlike area
Ascending colon - right side of body
Bends at hepatic or right colic flexure
Transverse colon - extends across front
Bends at splenic or left colic flexure
Descending colon - left side abdomen
Sigmond colon - S-shaped segment,
terminates in rectum
Anal canal - terminal end of rectum, ends at
external opening - anus
Inner anal sphincter - involuntary, smooth
muscle, keeps anus closed except during
defecation
Outer anal sphincter - striated, voluntary
muscle
Appendix
Vermiform appendix - “worm-shaped”, tubular
structure, blind tube
No important digestive fnc. - digest cellulose
Appendicitis - inflammation
Peritoneum
Large, moist, slippery sheet of serous membrane
Peritoneal space - small space between parietal &
visceral layers - surfaces slide freely
Retroperitoneal - organs outside peritoneum
Extensions of peritoneum-mesentary, greater
omentum - both assist in anchoring abd. contents
Digestion -Chemical & mechanical breakdown
CHO - amylase in mouth, slight effect
amylase from pancreas - into small intestine
Absorption of simple sugars (glucose)
Proteins - stomach (HCL/pepsinogen> pepsin)
Finished in small intestine by pancreatic (trypsin)
& peptidases in intestinal juice
Amino acids - basic protein units
Fats - in small intestine
Bile emulsification of fats > pancreatic
lipase > fatty acids & glycerol
Key digestive juices & enzymes
* page 410 Table 15-2
Absorption - taking food, breaking it
down in form for utilization of body
Just as important as digestion