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Digestive System Digestion • -changes foods into form body can assimilate – Carbohydrates hydrolyzed into simple sugars – Fats hydrolyzed into fatty acids and glycerol – Proteins hydrolyzed into amino acids • 3 nutrients that are not digested: minerals, vitamins, water Physical Chemical Types of Digestion • Large pieces of food are broken down into smaller pieces by 2 processes: mastication Peristalsis • Chemical change occurs as food changes form using the action of Enzymes in presence of water – Hydrolysis • Major groups of Enzymes – lipases – proteases – carbohydrases Structures of the Digestive System • Mouth, 3 sets of salivary glands, esophagus, stomach, gall bladder, liver, pancreas, small intestine, large intestine, rectum. • Structures containing food are: – Mouth – Esophagus – Stomach, SI, LI, rectum Digestion in mouth • Chemical Digestion – Mastication using teeth and of carbs (using amylase) tongue to mix food • and Lipids (using • Teeth (Permanent set, lingual lipase)begins deciduous set ) • Physical – Types: Salivary glands • Parotid- 70% of saliva production – Drained by ______duct • Sublingual- smallest, deep to tongue; 5% of saliva production – Drained by Rivinus’duct • Submandibular- deep to mandibula, 25% of saliva production – Drained by Wharton’s duct • Salivary gland involved in mumps: Parotid Alimentary Canal • Foods are digested in the: – Mouth – Stomach – Small intestine • Foods are absorbed in the: 90% in SI, 10% in LI Esophagus • Extends from laryngopharynx to Cardiac sphincter • Posterior to Trachea and heart • No digestive or absorptive function • Lined with stratified squamous (upper)and simple columnar epithelium (lower) • Food chute Stomach • proteases (enzymes)= for protein digestion into amino acids • Mechanically- mixes and churns food • 4 regions:Cardia, fundus, body, pylorus • 3 layers of gastric muscle:circular, longitudinal, oblique • Rugae – Are folds on empty inner stomach lining – Disappear as stomach becomes full • HCl- pH of 1.5-2/ kills pathogens, inactivates salivary enzymes, pepsinogen to pepsin, unfolds proteins(denatures) • Mucous- (mucous made by goblet cells) – Protects wall of stomach from its own acids Cells of Gastric lining – Parietal cells • HCl • Intrinsic factor – Chief or Zymogenic cells • Pepsinogen – more gastric contrac. + closes cardiac sph, opens pyloric • Rennin • Gastric lipase – G cells- gastrin • Stimulates Parietal cells and chief cells, stimulates stomach activity – D cells- somatostatin • Opp of gastrin’s effect – Mucous cells- protect inner wall of stomach HCl production • Why is this acid not produced intact? Would kill cells that are making it Need Chloride shift described below to happen. • H+ ions are made as a result of: – Carbon dioxide + water => an acid called carbonic acid • Then, acid called carbonic acid is broken down into=> bicarbonate ion + H+. – H+ actively transported into lumen – Bicarbonate ion moved into interstitial fluid, exchanged for Cl- ion ( move thru Cl channels into lumen, links to H + to form HCl. Layers of the GI tract • _________,__________,_______,_________,__________ _ • Mucosa has 2 layers= _________,________ • Submucosa = contains ENS or___ • Muscularis externa= 4 places where part of this layer is skeletal muscle: ________,________,_______,__________ – Modification in stomach_____________________ – Circular layer is____ and longitudinal layer is _____ • Serosa + peritoneum= 4 places in Dig System that do not have visceral peritoneum _______________________________________ – Linked to adjacent parts by___________ Mesenteries + Peritoneal folds • Falciform ligament • Greater omentum – ‘Beer belly’ • Lesser omentum • Mesentery Other Glands of the Digestive System • Gall Bladder- stores bile – Drained by cystic duct • Job of bile= emulsification= breaks big fat globs into smaller fat globs • Liver- produces bile , largest internal body organ – When fat digestion not happening, bile and concentrated in GB – Liver drained by R + L hepatic duct, join to cystic duct and form common bile duct. Liver = 3.3____ 1. In R/L hypochondriac, epigastric and umbilical regions. Color =Reddish brown 2. Falciform ligament divides the R/L lobes 3. Thickening in # 1s posterior surface =ligamentum teres 4. On posterior surface of liver IVC divides=R and caudate 5. Between GB and L lobe is quadrate lobe 6. 1/3 of blood supply from hepatic artery, 2/3 from hepatic portal veins 7. Liver lobules1. 2. hexagon shapes- each corner a triad or portal area caontaining= hepatic poratl vein, hepatic artery, bile duct Each lobule looks like a wheel with spokes, spokes are irregular rows of liver cells. Each lobule separated by septa. Liver • 3.3 lbs. – Produces blood cells=hematopoiesis + filters poisons= detoxification – L, R, caudate + quadrate lobes; can regenerate – L + R divided by falciform ligament (liver to diaphragm) – Common bile duct joins Pancreatic duct or duct of Wirsung to enter SI thru ampulla of Vader – Spincter of Oddi( inside the ampulla of Vader)can close off flow of bile into SI, then it refluxes into liver and blood . Microscopic Anatomy of Liver • Hepatocytes- liver cells • sinusoids- ‘capillary like’ blind sacs in liver, exchange or filtering happens here • triad- hepatic artery, central vein, bile duct • The route of blood to liver from GI: – Hepatic portal vein Sinusoids • Exchange vessels within a lobule, very similar to capillaries • Empty blood into a central vein, to hepatic vein to IVC – Sinusoids have larger crossection than the capillary – Gaps between cells in sinusoid wall allow blood solutes and large proteins to exit the blood stream • Lining of sinusoids- contains Kuppfer cells – Aka stellate reticuloendothelial cells – Phagocytic • Engulf pathogens, cell debris, damaged RBC’S • Store iron, lipids and heavy metals like tin and mercury More Liver functions • Synthesizes proteins from amino acids – Prothrombin, thrombin, albumin • Ammonia to Urea= deamination (removal of amino groups) • Glycogenesis -glucose --- glycogen • Lipogenesis- synthesis of lipids from nonipid precursors • Glycogenolysis- glycogen----glucose • Glyconeogenesis – synthesis of glucose from proteins or lipids • Cholesterol synthesis from fatty acids More liver functions • Bilirubin made – From old RBCs , gotten rid of with wastes in feces • Stores FATsoluble vitamins(A,D,E,K) and Vit B12 • Detox= removal of drugs and alcohol • Stores these minerals = iron+ iron-protein complexes • Synthesizes plasma proteins=albumins(maintain water content of blood) • Absorbs cholecalciferol (Vit D) , made into 25 hydroxy-D3. 25 H-D3 is absorbed by kidneys and used to make calcitriol. Pancreas • Retroperitoneal, exocrine = >90% of organ, 12 in long • Name means ‘all flesh’ – Drained by pancreatic duct or duct of Wirsung(if blocked, pancreas will……digest itself – Accessory pancreatic duct or Duct of Santorini – Empties into ampulla of Vater into SI – produces pancreatic juice as its exocrine function – Pancreatic juice has pH>7 and [high] of bicarbonate ion HCO3– Glucagon +insulin are produced as its endocrine function – Insulin hyposecretion Drops blood sugar levels. • Symptoms: polyuria( lots of urine), polydipsia (thirsty), and polyphagia (hungry) Pancreatic Juice • 1000 to 1500 pancreatic juice made a day • Drains from duct of Wirsung and duct of Santorini into Ampulla of Vater • Made of H2O, NaCl and NaHCO3 • Basic pH= 7.1-8.2 because of bicarbonate ion • Basic nature stops action of HCl, prepares chyme for SI digestion Pancreatic secretions proenzymes converted to enzymes Proenzymes- end in suffix ogen or begin with prefix pro• Proteases /Proteolytic enzymes – – – – Trypsinogen - enterokinase needed to make trypsin Chymotrypsinogen- needs trypsin to make chymotrypsin Procarboxypeptidase needs trypsin to make carboxypeptidase Proelastase needs trypsin to make elastase • Pancreatic lipase- breaks down lipids • When Duodenum senses chyme – CCK makes GB squeeze out bile, increases production of all intestinal enzymes – Secretin- makes bile in iver, increases production of all intestinal buffers by liver and pancreas/ reduces stomach activity • Pancreatic Amylase- breaks down starches, almost identical to salivary amylase Gall Bladder • Pear shaped muscular sac located in the recess of the R lobe of the liver • 3 parts: fundus, body, neck • Produces one liter of bile each day • Chyme entering duodenum stimulates CCK secretion • CCk causes strong contraction of the gall bladder – More CCK secreted the more lipids are present • Holds 40-70 ml of bile and as it is left there, water leaves the bile and it is gradually Concentrated, • Gall stones are crystals of insoluble minerals and salts • Cholecystitis= inflammation of the GB Terms of importance in digestion • Deglutition = swallowing • Peristalsis Rhythmic contractions of the smooth muscle in walls of digestive organs pushing food along. • Defecation-release of solid waste from anus • Sphincter- circular muscles that close circular openings – – – – Cardiac- between esophagus and stomach Oral beginning of alimentary canal Anal- end of alimentary canal Pyloric between duodenum and stomach Small Intestine • Most important digestive organ/ pH is >7 • 23feet long/ 1 in diameter • Duodenum= bile+ pancreatic juice enter thru the bile duct + pancreatic duct( common papilla) • Villi- fingerlike, has capillaries + lacteals, increase Mucosal surface area from 3.2 sq. feet to 2200sq. Ft. • Plicae circularis- permanent duodenal, jejunal and midileal muscular folds • Ileum= means" twisted” • Peyer’s Patches- lymph tissue at end of ileum, protects SI from bacteris in LI • All food types are chemically changed in SI • All food absorption occurs in SI More SI jobs 1. GIP- k cells 2. Secretins cells 3. CCKCCK cells 4. mucous pH <7 1. GIP=stops stomach emptying, starts insulin release 2. SECRETIN= Incr. bicarbonate in pancreatic juice, stops gastric juice secre. 3. Incre. Bile secretions from liver + GB, closes pylorus, gives feeling of fullness= satiety 4. Mucous made by Brunner’s glands Villi • “tuft –like srtructures” • Cells have brush border or cells lining the villi with microvilli covering their surfaces. • lacteals =Lymph capillaries, collect absorbed chylomicrons • Paneth cells– are found in the intestinal tract. They contain zinc and lysozyme (an enzyme that lyses certain kinds of bacteria) as well as large eosinophilic refractile granules within their apical cytoplasm. Their exact function is unknown but due to the presence of lysozyme it is likely that Paneth cells contribute to host defense. Colon • 5 to 6 feet long/ 3 in wide • Several sections: – Cecum, ascending, transverse, descending, sigmoid • Reabsorbs water from undigested food • Stores waste until defecation • Bacterial residents of colon make 3 vitamins available for use: – Vitamin K- necessary for liver to make clotting factors like prothrombin – Biotin- needed for glucose metabolism – Vitamin B5- needed for the manufacture of steroid hormones and certain neurotransmitters