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Digestive System
1.
Objectives
What are the nutrients that the body uses
2. What is the purpose of digestion
3. Organs of the Digestive System
Nutrients of the Body
• Carbohydrates – Provide energy for the
body
– Fiber – helps food move through your
digestive tract
– Starch – Complex carbohydrate
– Sugar – Simple carbohydrate. It is the
building block of all carbohydrates
Fats
• Provides energy for the body when
carbohydrates are not available
– Fatty acids and glycerol – building blocks of
fats
– Saturated – from animals mainly
– Unsaturated – from plants mainly
Proteins
• Provides energy for the body when fats
and carbohydrates are not available.
• Used to build and repair the body
– Amino acids – building blocks of proteins
Minerals, Vitamins, Water
• Minerals -- Helps your body function
properly (ex. Keeps muscle, bones, nerves
healthy)
• Vitamins – needed for chemical reaction to
occur in the body (ex. Aids in blood
clotting)
• Water – chemical reactions of the body
take place in water.
Digestive System
• Purpose of the digestive system is to fuel the
body with energy from nutrients.
• Types of Digestion
– Mechanical – physical action of breaking food down
into smaller pieces (done in mouth and stomach)
– Chemical – food is broken down
into the essential nutrients the body can
use with the help of chemicals such as
enzymes
“Lock and Key” System
=
+
carbohydrate
enzyme
Sugars
“Lock and Key” System
• Enzymes
– Chemicals that help bread down substances (foods)
– Often end in “ase”
• Examples:
– Amylase  carbohydrates
– Protease  proteins
– Lipase  fats (lipids)
Mouth
Tongue
Esophagus
Liver
Gall bladder
Large Intestine
Stomach
Pancreas
Small Intestine
Rectum
Anus
Organs of the Digestive System
• Mouth
– Food is mechanically disgested with the help of the
teeth and tongue
– Food is chemically digested with the help of saliva
and the enzyme amlyase
• Saliva breaks down carbohydrates into sugars
• Salivary glands – secretes saliva into the mouth
– Food doesn’t enter the salivary glands
– Chyme is the name of the chewed food in your mouth
Esophagus and Stomach
• Esophagus – transports food to the
stomach. Smooth muscles push food
through the digestive tract, this is known
as peristalsis
• Stomach – produces gastric juice. A layer
of mucus protects the stomach lining from
gastic juice. Churns food with strong
muscles
– Gastric juice breaks down proteins into amino
acids
Liver and Gall Bladder
• Liver – produces bile
– Bile chemically digests food in the small
intestine.
– Food doesn’t enter the liver
– Bile breaks down fats into fatty acids
• Gall Bladder – small sac
underneath the liver which
stores bile.
– Food doesn’t enter the liver
Pancreas
• Known as the “super gland”
• Produces pancreatic juice. It chemically
digests food in the small intestine
• Food doesn’t enter the pancreas
• Pancreatic juice breaks down
carbohydrates, fats, and proteins
Small Intestine
• The most important digesting organ (22-24ft
long)
• Bile and pancreatic juice digest food in the small
intestine
• The small intestine produces intestinal juice
• Intestinal juice breaks down carbohydrates and
protein
• Most nutrients digested are absorbed in the
lining of the small intestine (villi)
Villi
• Fingerlike projections
inside the small
intestine
• Increase the surface
area for the absorption
of nutrients
• Absorption =
mechanical digestion
Large Intestine
• Water is absorbed in the large intestine (34 ft long)
• Waste products are collected in the large
intestine (feces) and are stored in the
rectum
• Wastes are expelled from the body
through the anus
• No digestion occurs here