Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
The Digestive System Chapter 14 Digestive Tract • General – digestive system – alimentary canal • anterior end - mouth • posterior end - anus – GI tract – primary structures • mouth --> pharynx --> esophagus --> stomach --> small intestine --> large intestine --> anus – accessory structures • tongue , salivary glands, teeth , pancreas , liver , gall bladder • Processes of digestion – ingestion – propulsion - peristalsis – mechanical - large --> smaller • chew, churn, mixing – chemical • enzymes & acid – absorption - into blood or lymph • monosaccharides, fatty acids, & amino acids – defecation - elimination of undigestables • feces • Mouth Alimentary Canal Organs – oral cavity – lips – cheeks – roof of mouth • hard palate - anterior • soft palate - posterior – tonsils – uvula – tongue • lingual frenulum - anchor tongue to floor of mouth • taste buds • Gums (gingivae) – gum inflammation - gingivitis periodontal disease • teeth – crown - exposed part of tooth – enamel - covers crown – neck - connects crown w/ gums – root - embedded in gum – Dentin- bonelike under enamel – Pulp cavity- under dentin supplies nutrients to tooth tissues– tooth decay • cavities, dental plaque, (sugar bacteria debris) , lactic acid - breaks down enamel Tooth – two sets of teeth • deciduous teeth - 6 months to 2 yrs ---> • 6 - 12 yrs • permanent teeth - 32 teeth – types of teeth • • • • incisors - 8 premolars - 8 canines - 4 molars - 12 • Mastication – (bolus) lump of food “ball” • salivary glands – reflex response – paired glands • parotids under ears • submaxillaries (sub mandibular) • sublinguals – amount • 1-2 liters Salivary Glands parotid sublingual submandibular 25-1 • saliva composition – 99% water - moisten – 1 % solutes: containing; • electrolytes • mucin - slippery • antibodies - IgA • lysozyme - enzyme breaks down bacteria • unknown - blocks viral entry (AIDS) • salivary amylase - enzyme breaks down starch --> disaccharide + water --> monosaccharides • Pharynx – throat • esophagus – 10 inch tube – passageway – serosa • outer layer peritoneum • visceral and parietal – layers • muscularis externa - smooth muscle • submucosa - connective tissue blood & lymph vessels • mucosa - innermost – ends are stratified squamos – simple columnar, goblet cells Pharynx pharyngeal constrictors upper esophageal sphincter 25-13 Esophagus X-ray: Swallowing in Esophagus Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. Upper esophagus Peristaltic contraction Figure 25.11b Bolus of ingested matter passing down esophagus (b) © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.,/Jim Shaffer, photographer 25-15 Greater omentum is mesentery that extends from greater curvature of stomach and loosely covers small intestine; "fatty hairnet“ Lesser omentum is mesentery that extends from lesser curvature of stomach to liver • Stomach on left side J or C shaped • Can hold up to 4 liters of liquidified food • Food in stomach for 2-6 hrs – a muscular organ • chemical breakdown of proteins • churning & acid, food --> chyme – anatomy • • • • • cardiac sphincter - circular muscle fundus - top body - middle pylorus - bottom sac holds 30 ml of chyme pyloric sphincter - circular muscle squirts out 3 ml of chyme into duodenum – Gastrin- hormone stimulates gastric glands to secrete HCl • Gastric glands – gastric juices • 2 to 3 liters a day – HCL pH of 1-2 – pepsin (peptidase)- enzyme breaks down protein --->amino acids – rennin - enzyme breaks down milk protein – autodigestion is prevented • mucus lining renewed 3-5 days – problems • vomiting - presence of irritants • hiatal hernia - structural abnormality, superior part of stomach protrudes above diaphragm • ulcer - acid eats away stomach wall – Gastritis- inflammation of lining • Small intestine – 21 ft in cadaver, 6 ft in living • completes digestion, absorbs nutrients 3-6 hrs – duodenum - 1st part of small intestine 10 inches chyme(pH 4-5) enters here from stomach • pancreatic juice & bile enter here, • pancreatic juice - made by pancreas – amylase - starch --> glucose – Trypsin (protease) - proteins --> amino acids – lipases - lipids --> fatty acids – Nucleases- breakdown nucleic acids -sodium bicarbonate pH 8- neutralize chyme’s acid pH • bile - made by liver secreted by gall bladder, emulsifies fat., – sodium bicarbonate- helps neutralize acid – jejunum • 8 ft allows pancreatic juice and bile time to work • Ileum- last part of small intestine – intestinal glands • secrete intestinal juice – – – – – – – villi maltase: maltose --> 2 glucoses (monosaccharides) sucrase: sucrose --> glucose & fructose lactase: lactose --> glucose & galactose intestinal lipase --> lipids --> fatty acids peptidases - protein --> amino acids Nucleases – microvilli (capillary within) – secrete brush border enzymes to – absorb nutrients – lacteals – within each villi absorb fatty acids into lymph Gross Anatomy of Small Intestine • Large intestine 5 – 6 feet – ileocecal sphincter to the anus – anatomy • caecum - sac attached to ileocecal • appendix - attached to caecum • colon – – – – ascending transverse descending sigmoid • rectum - store feces valves separate gas & feces • anal canal – sphincters » internal: smooth muscle » external : striated – anus - opening • Transport of fecal material – mucus - slide – mass movement - haustral movement – defecation reflex – bilirubin gives feces color • bile –reddish brown • absorption of vitamins and fluid • metabolism of waste products • mixture of gases - flatus - 500 ml – H2, N2, CO2, H2S, methane • bacteria synthesize vitamins – B12 red blood cells, K clotting • reabsorption of most water • disorders – diarrhea, constipation, diverticulitis, colitis Colon X-ray cecum ascending colon transverse colon rectum descending colon sigmoid colon Accessory Digestive Organs • Pancreas – anatomy – endocrine functions • insulin - lowers glucose in blood • glucagon - raises glucose in blood – exocrine functions • pancreatic juice composed of: water, enzymes(lipase, trypsins, amylase) electrolytes and sodium bicarbonate • pancreatic duct- goes to duodenum • Liver – largest gland of body – disorders • hepatitis • cirrhosis • jaundiced • gall bladder – Cystic(bile) duct – stores and concentrates bile – releases bile- emulsifies fats – sodium bicarbonate – gall stones • cholesterol may crystallize stones block flow of bile Nutrition & Metabolism • Nutrients – Six classes are required • • • • • • carbohydrates - 125-175 g proteins - 50 g lipids - 80 - 100 g vitamins electrolytes / minerals water 4calories/gram 4calories/gram 9calories/gram • Importance of water – solvent chemical reactions & body temp. • metabolism – BMR : amount of energy in kilocalories ; weight in kilograms x 1 male x .9 female – anabolism : make larger molecule, amino acids -> proteins – catabolism : break down digestion • carbohydrate metabolism – carbohydrate --> monosaccharide – phases of cellular respiration • lipid metabolism – lipids --> fatty acids • protein metabolism – proteins --> amino acids • General metabolic functions – glycogenesis : making of glucogen – glycogenolysis : breaking down of glycogen to glucose – glucogenesis : fats or proteins made into glucose • cholesterol metabolism – 15 % from diet & 85 % made by liver • LDL’s - low density lipoproteins transport cholesterol to body cells • HDL’s - high density lipoproteins transport cholesterol to liver and out of body. Body Energy Balance • regulation of food intake Chemical energy (high-energy electrons) • nutrient levels CO2 Chemical energy • hormones, body temp. CO2 • glucose in blood & psychological Mitochondrion Electron transport Glycolysis • body temperatureKrebs regulation chain and oxidative Glucose Cytosol of cell • heat acid promoting Pyruvic cycle phosphorylation – vasoconstricting » shivering, pyrogens H2O •Mitochondrial heat loss cristae – radiation --> blood vessels skin dilating – evaporation --> sweat Via oxidative phosphorylation ATP ATP ATP