Digestive System, Day 3 (Professor Powerpoint)
... • Break down old RBCs, WBCs, toxins, & bacteria ...
... • Break down old RBCs, WBCs, toxins, & bacteria ...
The Digestive System
... Heartburn - called gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD) occurs when stomach acids are pushed into the esophagus Causes – alcohol, some foods, defective esophageal sphincter, pregnancy, obesity, hiatal hernia, and repeated vomiting. Treatment ...
... Heartburn - called gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD) occurs when stomach acids are pushed into the esophagus Causes – alcohol, some foods, defective esophageal sphincter, pregnancy, obesity, hiatal hernia, and repeated vomiting. Treatment ...
GI System
... cell carcinoma. There is an association with tobacco use, chronic friction (i.e., with ill-fitting dentures), and alcohol abuse. Most oral cancers are squamous cell variety, and these have a 50% five-year mortality rate due to metastasis at time of diagnosis. Treatment includes local excision an ...
... cell carcinoma. There is an association with tobacco use, chronic friction (i.e., with ill-fitting dentures), and alcohol abuse. Most oral cancers are squamous cell variety, and these have a 50% five-year mortality rate due to metastasis at time of diagnosis. Treatment includes local excision an ...
Proteins
... impairment(Confusion,Disori entation,loss of CognitionMemory,COMA.) • Treatment • Reducing load to liver by feeding non absorbable carbohydrate-lactulose it traps luminal ammonia. • Liver transplant. ...
... impairment(Confusion,Disori entation,loss of CognitionMemory,COMA.) • Treatment • Reducing load to liver by feeding non absorbable carbohydrate-lactulose it traps luminal ammonia. • Liver transplant. ...
• Physiological functions of the liver. • Describe the major functions
... impairment(Confusion,Disori entation,loss of CognitionMemory,COMA.) • Treatment • Reducing load to liver by feeding non absorbable carbohydrate-lactulose it traps luminal ammonia. • Liver transplant. ...
... impairment(Confusion,Disori entation,loss of CognitionMemory,COMA.) • Treatment • Reducing load to liver by feeding non absorbable carbohydrate-lactulose it traps luminal ammonia. • Liver transplant. ...
Cancer of the Stomach
... cancer. This surgery removes part or all of the stomach, as well as some of the ...
... cancer. This surgery removes part or all of the stomach, as well as some of the ...
Liver bile
... In this way about 94% of all bile salts are re circulated into the bile, so that on the average these salts make the entire circuit some 17 times before being carried out in the feces. The small quantities of bile salts lost in to the feces are replaced by new amount formed continuously by liver ce ...
... In this way about 94% of all bile salts are re circulated into the bile, so that on the average these salts make the entire circuit some 17 times before being carried out in the feces. The small quantities of bile salts lost in to the feces are replaced by new amount formed continuously by liver ce ...
Digestive System Notes - Full Version
... 2. Islets of Langerhans – area of the pancreas that contains cells that secrete insulin & glucagon to control blood sugar a. Glucagon is an important hormone produced by the pancreas. It is released when the glucose level in the blood is low (hypoglycemia), causing the liver to convert stored glycog ...
... 2. Islets of Langerhans – area of the pancreas that contains cells that secrete insulin & glucagon to control blood sugar a. Glucagon is an important hormone produced by the pancreas. It is released when the glucose level in the blood is low (hypoglycemia), causing the liver to convert stored glycog ...
Slide 1 - UTH e
... phase, interact with water and repel each other, causing the fatty globule to be physically broken up into small fat droplets. (E. Marieb, HA&P, 2004) ...
... phase, interact with water and repel each other, causing the fatty globule to be physically broken up into small fat droplets. (E. Marieb, HA&P, 2004) ...
C23/v2/5: Accessory Organs of the Digestive System
... Functions of Hepatocytes • after a meal, the hepatocytes absorb nutrients from the blood – glucose, amino acids, iron, vitamins, and other nutrients for metabolism or storage (eg glycogen) ...
... Functions of Hepatocytes • after a meal, the hepatocytes absorb nutrients from the blood – glucose, amino acids, iron, vitamins, and other nutrients for metabolism or storage (eg glycogen) ...
The Vertebrate (mostly human) Digestive System Mouth
... Allows faster digestion of fat Bile is stored and concentrated in gall bladder Fatty food in duodenum triggers contraction of gallbladder to release bile Contraction of gallbladder may result in pain under right shoulder blade ...
... Allows faster digestion of fat Bile is stored and concentrated in gall bladder Fatty food in duodenum triggers contraction of gallbladder to release bile Contraction of gallbladder may result in pain under right shoulder blade ...
The Vertebrate (mostly human) Digestive System Mouth
... Allows faster digestion of fat Bile is stored and concentrated in gall bladder Fatty food in duodenum triggers contraction of gallbladder to release bile Contraction of gallbladder may result in pain under right shoulder blade ...
... Allows faster digestion of fat Bile is stored and concentrated in gall bladder Fatty food in duodenum triggers contraction of gallbladder to release bile Contraction of gallbladder may result in pain under right shoulder blade ...
Colorectal (Colon Cancer)
... Sedentary lifestyle Diabetes Obesity Smoking Alcohol Growth hormone disorder Radiation therapy for cancer ...
... Sedentary lifestyle Diabetes Obesity Smoking Alcohol Growth hormone disorder Radiation therapy for cancer ...
Digestion - Belle Vernon Area School District
... l. Kupffer cells – Phagocytic cells that remove bacteria from the blood that came from the digestive tract. m. Bile Canaliculi- Secrete bile. n. right hepatic duct o. cystic duct p. Common bile duct q. Duodenal papilla opening in small intestines from the common bile duct and the pancreatic duct. ...
... l. Kupffer cells – Phagocytic cells that remove bacteria from the blood that came from the digestive tract. m. Bile Canaliculi- Secrete bile. n. right hepatic duct o. cystic duct p. Common bile duct q. Duodenal papilla opening in small intestines from the common bile duct and the pancreatic duct. ...
Digestive System—This system consists of several organs that work
... Identify the right and left medial lobes, right and left lateral lobes, and the single caudal lobe. The liver lobules filter a tremendous blood volume from the hepatic portal system, removing some substances from the blood while adding others. a. The falciform ligament is a fold of the peritoneum th ...
... Identify the right and left medial lobes, right and left lateral lobes, and the single caudal lobe. The liver lobules filter a tremendous blood volume from the hepatic portal system, removing some substances from the blood while adding others. a. The falciform ligament is a fold of the peritoneum th ...
Cat Dissection of the Digestive System
... Identify the right and left medial lobes, right and left lateral lobes, and the single caudal lobe. The liver lobules filter a tremendous blood volume from the hepatic portal system, removing some substances from the blood while adding others. a. The falciform ligament is a fold of the peritoneum th ...
... Identify the right and left medial lobes, right and left lateral lobes, and the single caudal lobe. The liver lobules filter a tremendous blood volume from the hepatic portal system, removing some substances from the blood while adding others. a. The falciform ligament is a fold of the peritoneum th ...
Digestion
... Chief cells- secrete pepsinogen, which is converted to pepsin, by the hydrochloric acid released in parietal cells ...
... Chief cells- secrete pepsinogen, which is converted to pepsin, by the hydrochloric acid released in parietal cells ...
Alcohol and the Liver
... production of CYP2E1 does not do much to stabilize the effects of long-term alcohol abuse that damages the liver. For people without liver disease, chronic alcohol abuse will lead to the deposit of fat in the liver cells (steatosis or fatty liver), leading to inflammation and cell death. After a tim ...
... production of CYP2E1 does not do much to stabilize the effects of long-term alcohol abuse that damages the liver. For people without liver disease, chronic alcohol abuse will lead to the deposit of fat in the liver cells (steatosis or fatty liver), leading to inflammation and cell death. After a tim ...
PANKREAS - Univerzita Karlova v Praze
... almost 10 % of the body’s total blood volume). In cardiac failure it can be stored there up to 1 l of blood. 6. Immunity (Kupffer cells = macrophages) 7. Vitamins - metabolism and storage of vitamins A, D and B12 8. Relation to blood formation storage of vitamin B12 metabolism of iron and its st ...
... almost 10 % of the body’s total blood volume). In cardiac failure it can be stored there up to 1 l of blood. 6. Immunity (Kupffer cells = macrophages) 7. Vitamins - metabolism and storage of vitamins A, D and B12 8. Relation to blood formation storage of vitamin B12 metabolism of iron and its st ...
The Digestive System
... Cholecystokinin (CCK): released when fatty, proteinrich chyme enters SI; causes release of enzyme-rich pancreatic juices and bile Brush border enzymes: process long peptides, nucleic acids, and sugars into smaller ones ...
... Cholecystokinin (CCK): released when fatty, proteinrich chyme enters SI; causes release of enzyme-rich pancreatic juices and bile Brush border enzymes: process long peptides, nucleic acids, and sugars into smaller ones ...
About Small Intestine Cancer What Is a Small Intestine Cancer?
... What’s New in Small Intestine Adenocarcinoma Research and Treatment? There is always research going on in the field of gastrointestinal (GI) cancer. Scientists look for the causes of these cancers, as well as ways to prevent, and treat GI cancers. Small intestine adenocarcinoma is studied less often ...
... What’s New in Small Intestine Adenocarcinoma Research and Treatment? There is always research going on in the field of gastrointestinal (GI) cancer. Scientists look for the causes of these cancers, as well as ways to prevent, and treat GI cancers. Small intestine adenocarcinoma is studied less often ...
2.30 Recall that bile is produced by the liver and stored in the gall
... Bile is made in the liver and stored in the gall bladder. It is a greenish yellow alkaline liquid. The function of bile is to neutralize the acidic contents, which come out of the stomach and enter the small intestine. ...
... Bile is made in the liver and stored in the gall bladder. It is a greenish yellow alkaline liquid. The function of bile is to neutralize the acidic contents, which come out of the stomach and enter the small intestine. ...
Functions of the Liver The liver performs important digestive and
... readily removed from the circulation by the kidneys. Hepatocytes remove ammonia from the circulation and convert it to urea, which is less toxic than ammonia and is secreted into the circulation and then eliminated by the kidneys in the urine. Other substances are removed from the circulation and ex ...
... readily removed from the circulation by the kidneys. Hepatocytes remove ammonia from the circulation and convert it to urea, which is less toxic than ammonia and is secreted into the circulation and then eliminated by the kidneys in the urine. Other substances are removed from the circulation and ex ...
Liver cancer
Liver cancer or hepatic cancer (from the Greek hēpar, meaning liver) is a cancer that originates in the liver. Liver tumors are discovered on medical imaging equipment (often by accident) or present themselves symptomatically as an abdominal mass, abdominal pain, yellow skin, nausea or liver dysfunction.The leading cause of liver cancer is cirrhosis due to either hepatitis B, hepatitis C, or alcohol. In 2013, 300,000 deaths from liver cancer were due to hepatitis B , 343,000 to hepatitis C and 92,000 to alcohol. Liver cancers are not the same as liver metastases, which start in another part of the body and spread to the liver. Liver cancers are formed from either the liver itself or from structures within the liver, including blood vessels or the bile duct.Primary liver cancer is globally the sixth most frequent cancer, and the second leading cause of cancer death. In 2012 it occurred in 782,000 people and resulted in 746,000 deaths. Higher rates of liver cancer occur where hepatitis B and C are common, including East-Asia and sub-Saharan Africa. Five year survival rates are 17% in the United States.