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Transcript
The Four Stages of Food
Processing
Ingestion



Digestion


Is the breakdown of food to small molecules
Absorption


Is another word for eating
Is the uptake of the small nutrient molecules by the
body’s cells
Elimination

Is the disposal of undigested materials from the food we
eat

Mechanical digestion


Begins the process
Involves physical processes like chewing
Increases the surface to
volume ratio of food
particles but it does not
break the chemical bonds
within a food molecule
Chemical Digestion:
enzymes and H2O used to break chemical bonds
Hydrolase
(pepsin)
Amino acid
Protein
Sugar
Hydrolase
(amylase)
Fatty acid
Glycerol
Hydrolase
(lipase)
Figure 22.4b
Anatomy of oral cavity (mouth)
The major salivary glands
Esophagus- delivers food to stomach
Anatomy of the Stomach

Stores and begins the chemical breakdown of
food into chyme (creamy paste)

Parts include the cardiac, fundus, pyloris

Sphincters at both ends

Rugae to allow expansion
Stomach- specialized structure for
further chemical digestion
Enzymes
target
proteins
and lipids
Anatomy of the stomach
Histology of the Stomach


Oblique musculature allows food to by churned while
being moved
Gastric pits with gastric glands: secrete gastric juice




Mucous neck cells: Acidic mucous
Parietal (oxynetic) cells: HCl and intrinsic factor (for B12
absorbtion in SI)
Chief (zygomatic) cells: Pepsin (protein digestion)
Enteroendocrine cells: Hormones to regulate digestion






gastrin
histamine
endorphins
serotonin
cholecystokinin
somatistatin
Microscopic anatomy of the stomach
Peristaltic waves
Small intestine – Primary site of
absorption of digested molecules
The small intestine

Three regions



Duodenum
Ileum
Jejunum
Duodenum-upper portion still
receives some digestive enzymes


Is the first part of the small intestine
Receives digestive agents from several organs
Fats are
emulsified for
absorption
Bile
Liver
Pancreasneutralizes
acids from
stomach
Gallbladder
Bile
Acid chyme
Pancreatic juice
Duodenum of
small intestine
Pancreas

The jejunum and ileum


Are parts of the small intestine
Are specialized for absorption
Nutrient
absorption
Blood vessels
Nutrient
absorption
Microvilli
Epithelial
cells
Interior of
intestine
Muscle
layers
Villi
Blood
capillaries
Lymphatic
vessel
Nutrient
absorption
Epithelial cells
Liver and Gall Bladder
Liver: Produce Bile (emulsifies fat)
 Gall Bladder: Stores Bile

Liver
 Liver lobules (sexagonal) with hepatocytes
 Portal triad at each corner (Hepatic artery, HPV,
and Bile Duct)
 Liver sinusoids with macrophages (Kupffer cells)
that remove bacteria and worn RBC’s

Microscopic anatomy of the liver
Bile
Yellow-green alkaline solution that emulsifies fat
 Bile salts, bile pigments, cholesterol, neutral fats,
phospholipids (lecithin, etc.) and electrolytes
 Bile salt: Cholic acid and chenodeoxycholic acid
(cholesterol derivatives) emulsify fats. Recycled
rather than secreted by the enterohepatic
circulation

Role of bile salts & fat emulsification
Gall Bladder

Stores, but does not produce, bile

Bile from hepatic ducts enters through a cystic
duct to the GB. Upon stimulation, bile leaves the
cystic duct, to the common bile duct (cbd) and
goes to the duodenum of the SI

Major stimulus: CCK (cholecystokinin) from SI
causes contraction (released when fat detected)
Pancreas

Secretes enzymes (in pancreatic juice) for the
breakdown of proteins and other foodstuffs

Enters via the main pancreatic duct

Pancreas has acini, whose cells are filled with
zymogen granules (enzymes)
Structure of acinar tissue of the pancreas
Pancreatic juice

Water, enzymes, and electrolytes (primarily
bicarbonate). Helps neutralize chyme.

Enzymes are released inactive, which activate
under the proper pH preventing self-digestion.

Pancreatic enzymes (amylase, lipase, nuclease)
may be active, but require ions or bile for
optimal activity
The Large Intestine

Function is to absorb water, not nutrients, from
fluid state chyme and secrete a semisolid feces

Three unique characteristics



Teniae coli: three bands of smooth muscle
Haustra: pocket-like sacs created by muscle bands
Epiploic appendages: fat filled pouches of the visceral
peritoneum (function unknown)
Colon: Large intestine- absorption
of water.
Colon: rectum – specialized region
for temporary storage
Anus –
exit from
digestive
systemseparate
exit from
the
urogenital
system