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Chapter 7. Digestive System Aside: The Systemic Hierarchy • Cells, similar in type and function are organized into tissues • Several tissue types are organized into organs • Several organs (types) are organized into systems such as nervous, circulatory, respiratory, digestive, lymphatic et al. 7.1 Food Utilization The digestive system is responsible for the breakdown of food items into their component parts to make them available to the body for utilization. Nutrients cannot be used until they are transformed into useable ‘pieces’ to provide your body with the necessary raw material to • build new cells and tissues • repair damaged cells and tissues • provide energy for movement, etc. The Mouth Function: • break down large chunks of food into smaller, swallow-able pieces and to increase surface area of food; WHY? • pre-mix with a lubricant for easy swallowing and initial digestion. • positioning of food for swallowing 1 How accomplished: • Teeth – to tear, cut, crush and grind food into smaller particles. (a.k.a. - physical digestion) • Tongue – to taste (avoid baddies); to move food into favourable position for swallowing; to mix food with saliva. • Salivary glands – to produce saliva (which moistens food for easy passage to stomach and to add digestive enzymes to begin breaking down process, especially of complex carbohydrates which are broken down into glucose) (a.k.a. – chemical digestion) The Esophagus Function: • Transfer of food to stomach through tube (esophagus) • Protect respiratory system from foreign particles food How accomplished: • Peristalstis (-ic contractions) – this is a wave of relaxation and contraction of the muscles that form rings around the esophagus. This causes food to move, even f you are hanging upside down. 2 • Epiglottis – a flap which covers the trachea during swallowing. The epiglottis is marked by the number 2. Notice how it is in the closed position to keep Food from going into the lungs. Demo: Peristalsis Review 7.1(?) 3 7.2 The Stomach Function: • physically digestion - mix and churn chime(food) with digestive enzymes. • chemical digestion – produce chemicals which will further break down chime. • storage – provide storage while chime is broken down into proper consistency for next phase consistency How accomplished: • Contraction and relaxation of stomach walls • Production of: Pepsin – breaks down proteins Hydrochloric acid – assists in protein breakdown (pepsin works better in presence of acid) Mucus – protects stomach lining from pepsin + HCl. • Pyloric sphincter – muscle on the exit end of stomach, only opens when chime reaches a certain acidity. 4 Aside: Heartburn, acid reflux and the cardiac sphincter In the above diagram, the stomach acid has seeped back through the opening at the top of the stomach (called the cardiac sphincter). It has eaten away at esophagus and has caused scarring. This causes a burning sensation, but is actually quite dangerous because it can lead to cancer. Review 7.2 (?) 7.3 The Intestines and related organs 5 The above diagram shows how all of the digestive glands and the tubes carrying the chemicals they produce are located right under the stomach. As a matter of fact, once the food leaves the stomach all these additional chemicals are added to the mix within the first 25 cm of the small intestine. This gives time for each chemical to do its job in further breaking down the food into useable molecules as the food travels down the tube. What chemical are used? Organ Chemical What it does Hydrochloric acid Kills most bacteria Increases activity of pepsin Pepsin Breaks down protein Mucus Protects stomach walls from being attacked by acid and pepsin and it Lubricates the food. Mucus Lubricates food Protection from the hydrochloric acid Enzymes Break down food Enzymes Break down food Pancreas Neutralizer To neutralize hydrochloric acid so it won't warm the intestine. Bile Breaks down fats Liver (but it is stored in the gall bladder) Stomach Small intestine The last 3.75 to 5.75 meters of the small intestine is dedicated to absorbing these molecules. 6 How nutrients are absorbed from the intestine: The inner walls of the intestines are covered with small finger-like projections called villi. These villi greatly increase the surface area of the intestine so much more contact can be made with the broken down food (and hence, increase how fast absorption takes place). Below is a diagram of a single villus. See class room overhead diagrams. 7