Ch. 14 Notes - dix
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Transcript Ch. 14 Notes - dix
14
PART A
The Digestive System
and Body Metabolism
PowerPoint® Lecture Slide Presentation by Jerry L. Cook, Sam Houston University
ESSENTIALS
OF HUMAN
ANATOMY
& PHYSIOLOGY
EIGHTH EDITION
ELAINE N. MARIEB
Copyright © 2006 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings
The Digestive System and Body
Metabolism
Functions of digestive system:
Ingestion: Taking in food.
Digestion: Breaking down food physically
and chemically.
Absorption: Absorption of nutrients into
the blood.
Defecation: Ridding the body of
indigestible remains.
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Organs of the Digestive System
Figure 14.1
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Organs of the Alimentary Canal -a.k.a.
gastrointestinal (GI) tract
Mouth
Pharynx
Esophagus
Stomach
Small intestine
Large intestine
Anus
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Mouth (Oral Cavity) Anatomy
Lips (labia) – protect
the anterior opening
Cheeks – form the
lateral walls
Hard palate – forms
the anterior roof
Soft palate – forms
the posterior roof
Uvula – fleshy
projection of the
soft palate
Figure 14.2a
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Mouth (Oral Cavity) Anatomy
Vestibule – space
between lips and
teeth/gums.
Oral cavity – area
contained by the teeth.
Tongue – muscle
attached at hyoid and
styloid processes of the
skull.
Tonsils - Palatine and
lingual.
Lingual Frenulum – fold
of membrane that secures
tongue to floor of mouth.
Figure 14.2a
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Processes of the Mouth
Mastication (chewing) of food
Mixing masticated food with saliva
Initiation of swallowing by the tongue
Taste
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Pharynx Anatomy
Nasopharynx
(not part of the
digestive system)
Oropharynx
Laryngopharynx
Figure 14.2a
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Pharynx Function
Passageway for air and food
Two muscle layers alternately contract to
propel food (peristalsis):
Longitudinal inner layer
Circular outer layer
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Esophagus
Runs from pharynx to stomach
Conducts food by peristalsis
Passageway for food only
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4 Tissue Layers of Alimentary Canal Organs
1. Mucosa – moist innermost layer.
2. Submucosa – lies beneath mucosa made of
connective tissue with blood vessels, nerve
endings and lymph tissue.
3. Muscularis externa –smooth muscle
containing both circular (inner) and
longitudinal (outer) layers.
4. Serosa - Outermost (visceral) layer that
contains serous fluid-producing cells
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Layers of Alimentary Canal Organs
Figure 14.3
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Stomach Anatomy
Food enters at the cardioesophageal sphincter
Regions of the stomach
Cardiac region
Fundus
Body
Pylorus
Food empties into the small intestine at the
pyloric sphincter
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Stomach Anatomy
Rugae – internal stomach folds of the mucosa
Lesser curvature: concave medial surface.
Greater curvature: convex lateral surface.
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Stomach Anatomy
Figure 14.4a
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Stomach Functions
Food storage tank
Food breakdown
Chemical breakdown of protein begins
Delivers chyme (processed food) to the small
intestine
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Specialized Mucosa of the Stomach
Made of simple columnar epithelium
containing:
Gastric pits – formed by folds in mucosa
Gastric glands (secrete gastric juice)
Chief cells – produce protein-digesting
enzymes (pepsinogens)
Parietal cells – produce HCl
Endocrine cells – produce gastrin
Mucosa secretes sticky mucus.
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Structure of the Stomach Mucosa
Figure 14.4b–c
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Small Intestine
Body’s major digestive organ extending from
pyloric sphincter to the ileocecal valve.
Site of nutrient absorption into the blood
Suspended from the posterior abdominal wall
by the mesentery (fan-shaped membrane)
Average length: 2.5 – 7 meters
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3 Subdivisions of the Small Intestine
1. Duodenum: “twelve finger-widths long”
(smallest)
a. Attached to the stomach
b. Curves around the head of the pancreas
2. Jejunum: “empty”
a. Attaches anteriorly to the duodenum
3. Ileum: “twisted intestine” (largest)
a. Extends from jejunum to large intestine
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Chemical Digestion in the Duodenum
Pancreatic enzymes enter duodenum through the
pancreatic duct.
Bile from the liver enters duodenum through bile
duct.
Pancreatic ducts and bile ducts join to form
hepatopancreatic ampulla.
Pancreatic enzymes and bile then travel through
duodenal papilla together to enter duodenum.
Small intestine cells also secrete some enzymes in
duodenum.
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Chemical Digestion in the Small Intestine
Figure 14.6
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Absorption of the Small Intestine
Three structures that
increase absorption:
1. Microvilli –
extensions of the cell
membrane (makes it
seem “fuzzy”)
2. Villi: Fingerlike
structures formed by
the mucosa (more
surface area)
3. Circular folds: (a.k.a.
plicae circulares) deep
folds of small
intestine.
Figure 14.7a
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Large Intestine
Larger in diameter, but shorter than the small
intestine
Frames the internal abdomen
Extends from ileocecal valve to anus
Function:
Absorption of water
Eliminates indigestible food from the body as
feces
Does not participate in digestion of food
Goblet cells produce mucus to act as a lubricant
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Large Intestine
Figure 14.8
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Structures of the Large Intestine
Cecum – saclike first part of the large intestine
Appendix - lymphatic tissue hanging from cecum
that sometimes becomes inflamed (appendicitis)
Colon
Ascending
Transverse
Descending
Sigmoid Colon
Rectum
Anus – contains external anal sphincter which is
kept closed except during defecation.
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Accessory Digestive Organs
Salivary glands – empty saliva secretions into mouth to aid in
food breakdown and taste.
Parotid (anterior to ears)
Submandibular
Sublingual
Teeth
Two sets of teeth (“baby” teeth (20)and adult teeth (32
with wisdom))
Pancreas
Secretes enzymes into duodenum through pancreatic duct
Produces hormone insulin
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Accessory Digestive Organs
Liver
Largest gland in the body
Contains 4 lobes
Suspended by diaphragm and abdominal wall by
falciform ligament.
Produces bile through common hepatic duct; enters
duodenum through bile duct.
Bile: contains many substances that break down fats
(yellowish-green in color).
Gallbladder
Located on inferior surface of liver
Stores bile when digestion is not occurring
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Processes of the Digestive System
1. Ingestion – getting
food into the mouth
2. Propulsion – moving
foods from one region
of the digestive system
to another (peristalsis
(a)/segmentation (b)).
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Processes of the Digestive System
3. Mechanical digestion
Mixing of food in the mouth by the tongue
Churning of food in the stomach
Segmentation in the small intestine
4. Chemical Digestion: enzymes break down
food molecules into their building blocks
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Processes of the Digestive System
5. Absorption: products of digestion are
absorbed in the blood or lymph.
6. Defecation: elimination of indigestible
substances as feces
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Processes of the Digestive System
Figure 14.11
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Control of Digestive Activity
Mostly controlled by the parasympathetic
division
Chemical and mechanical receptors in organ
walls
Production of hormones (p. 475)
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