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Transcript
Nutrients, Enzymes and Digestion Lesson 4: Digestion and Absorption
Digestive Tract and Accessory Organs
http://highered.mheducation.com/sites/0072495855/student_view0/chapter26/animation__organs_of_digestion.html 1
Pancreas:
Two types of tissues
1.digestive tissues ­ secrete digestive enzymes
2.Hormonal tissues ­ release hormones into the blood
Neutralizing Acids
­ Acids entering the small intestine from the stomach convert the chemical prosecretin to secretin
­ Secretin ­ carried by blood to the pancreas, stimulates the pancreas to release bicarbonate ions into the small intestine to neutralize the HCl from the stomach
­ The bicarbonate ions raise the pH in the small intestine from 2.5 to 9 ­ returns pepsin to its inactive form pepsinogen
Pancreatic Enzymes
­ The pancreas also secretes enzymes for digesting 1. Fats (lipids) ­ Lipases
2. Carbohydrates (starch) ­ Pancreatic amylase
3. Proteins ­ Trypsinogen (becomes trypsin in small intestine)
2
Small Intestine
o In mammals, the length of the small intestine is related to diet.
­ Meats are relatively easy to digest, while plant materials are more difficult to digest
­ carnivores, such as wolves and lions, have short small intestines
­ herbivores, such as rabbits, have long small intestines
­ Omnivores, such as raccoons, pigs, bears, and humans, have small intestines that are of intermediate length, allowing them to digest both types of food
o Length ­ approx. 3­4 meters long
o Diameter ­ approx. 2.5 centimetres wide
o Has 3 sections:
1. Duodenum ­ 25­30 cm long; majority of digestion occurs here
2. Jejunum ­majority of absorption occurs here
3. Ileum ­ more absorption
o Enzyme Secretions ­ ­ Erepsins ­ protein digesting enzymes (peptide chains è amino acids)
­ Enterokinase ­ activates trypsinogen
­ Maltase ­breaks down maltose (maltose è glucose)
­ Sucrase ­ breaks down sucrose (sucrose è glucose + fructose)
­ Lactase ­ breaks down lactose
o Villi ­ projections from the wall of the small intestine where absorption of nutrients take place.
­ The villi greatly increase the surface area for absorption to occur
­ There are millions of them all along the small intestine
­ Each villus is supplied with a blood vessel (capillary) and a lymph vessel (lacteal)
­ Capillary ­ absorbs amino acids and sugars
­ Lacteal ­ absorbs fats
­ Also have microvilli attached which provides more surface area
diffusion and by active transport ­ absorbtion of nutrients into blood vessels occurs by 3
Liver and Gall Bladder:
ØBile ­ produced in the liver and stored in the gall bladder
­ Produced from the breakdown of hemoglobin from dead red blood cells
­ carried by the bile duct to the small intestine when fats are present
­ In the small intestine, bile breaks apart fat globules into smaller pieces ­ increases surface area for enzyme action
ØFunctions of the liver
1. The liver produces and stores glycogen and vitamins
2. Produces bile (stored in the gall bladder)
3. Detoxifies chemicals (i.e. alcohol and drugs)
Ø
The liver is positioned next to your stomach on the right side of your body
4
Digestive Enzymes of the Pancreas and Small Intestine
Digestion of Proteins in the Small Intestine
Functions of the Liver
.
5
Large Intestine:
ØIncludes the cecum, colon, rectum, and anal canal
ØLength ­ approx. 1.5 m long
ØDiameter ­ approx. 7 cm wide
ØAbsorbs water, vitamins, salts
ØStores non digestible material until defecation
ØCecum ­ below the spot where the small intestine enters
ØAscending colon ­ goes up the right side of the body
ØTransverse colon ­ goes across the body just below the stomach
ØDescending colon ­ goes down the left side of the body
ØSigmoid colon ­ enters the rectum
ØRectum ­ last 20cm of the large intestine; opens at the anus
ØAnus ­ THE END!!!
ØFeces is brown due to the breakdown of pigments found in bile
ØFeces is smelly due to gases produced by bacteria in our colon
ØPolyps ­ small growths on the lining of the colon
­ can be benign or cancerous
­ caused by diets high in fat and low in fibre
Ø
Appendix ­ a vestigial (useless) organ attached to the cecum
­ if inflamed (appendicitis) it can rupture and cause infection in the body leading to illness and maybe death
ØDefecation ­ occurs when feces accumulates in the rectum causing it to stretch
­ the stretching initiates a reflex action which contracts rectal muscles and defecation occurs ØDiarrhea ­ Excess water in feces
Causes:
­ Infection ­ intestinal wall becomes irritated and peristalsis increases, preventing water absorption
­ Nervous stimulation ­ intestinal wall is stimulated, diarrhea results
ØConstipation ­ dry, hard feces
Causes
­ Dehydration ­ lack of water causes dry, hard feces
­ Lack of fibre ­ no bulk to stimulate rectal contraction
.
6