* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download Adv Bio #14 - Digestive System 9th ed rev 14x
Human microbiota wikipedia , lookup
Intestine transplantation wikipedia , lookup
Glycogen storage disease type I wikipedia , lookup
Colonoscopy wikipedia , lookup
Bariatric surgery wikipedia , lookup
Fatty acid metabolism wikipedia , lookup
Gastric bypass surgery wikipedia , lookup
Surgical management of fecal incontinence wikipedia , lookup
Digestive System Digestive system functions 1. 2. Ingestion Mixing and movement of food. – 3. Digestion of foods. – – 4. 5. Peristalysis Chemical Mechanical Absorption of digested foods. Defecation. Layers of the GI tract • Alimentary canal vs Accessory organs. • Wall of GI tract is composed of four layers (inside->outside) – – – – Mucosa Submucosa Muscularis Serosa • Peritoneum • Mesentery Layers of the GI tract Salivary Glands • Saliva is secreted from 3 pairs of glands • Parotid glands (back) • Submandibular glands (jaw) • Sublingual (below tongue) • Composition of saliva: – 99.5% water – 0.5% solutes • Salivary amylase- (digestive enzyme for starch) • Mucus (lubrication) • lysozyme (kills bacteria) Tortora 516 Control of Salivary Glands – Parasympathetic ANS stimulates production of saliva. – Stimuli: • Food touching the tongue • Smell • Taste • Thought of food. Chewing • Mechanical digestion involves – Muscular manipulation by the tongue – Teeth grind food into smaller pieces – Saliva mixes in Result: a soft, flexible, easily swallowed mass called a bolus Swallowing • Voluntary stage – Bolus is pushed to back of mouth by tongue. • Pharyngeal stage – Breathing stops. – Bolus passes through pharynx • Esophageal stage – Peristalysis – Heartburn Tortora Pages 519-520 Esophagus • Connects mouth to stomach. • Lies behind the trachea (flat side) • Passes through the diaphragm • Contains two layers of smooth muscle. • Food has to pass over trachea @ epiglottis Tortora Pages 518-520 Stomach • J shaped, lies under diaphragm. • A mixing chamber and holding reservoir- size varies • Divided into four areas: – – – – Cardia Fundus Body Pylorus/ Pyloric sphincter • Rugae 520-521 Wall of Stomach • • • • 4 layers: Mucosa Submucosa Muscularis: 3 layers of muscle – Longitudinal layer – Circular layer – Oblique layer • Serosa Tortora Pages 439-443 Gastric Gland secretions • Mucous cells – Mucus • Chief cells – Pepsinogen • Parietal Cells – HCL – Intrinsic factor (B12) • G cells – Gastrin (hormone) Tortora Page 522 Stomach & Digestion • Mechanical digestion – Bolus converted to chyme. – Mixing waves push chyme into duodenum. – Pyloric sphincter releases into SI • Chemical digestion – Pepsin breaks down proteins into peptides. – Lipase digests triglycerides (in acid) into diglycerides Tortora 522-523 Stomach & Absorption • Mucus protects the stomach lining from being digested itself • Little absorption of nutrients here • Stomach wall does absorb: – – – – Water Electrolytes Some drugs (aspirin) Alcohol Tortora 523 Pancreas • Pancreas lies behind the stomach • Secretions pass through pancreatic duct into duodenum • Pancreatic juice: Bicarbonate counteracts acid from chyme • Digestive enzymes • Islets of Langerhans produce hormones: insulin Tortora 523 Enzymes produced by the pancreas that work in the small intestine: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. Pancreatic amylase – turns starches to dissacharides Trypsin - proteins to polypeptides. Chymotrypsin - proteins to peptides. Carboxypeptidase - proteins to peptides. Pancreatic lipase - triglycerides to fatty acids & monoglcerides Ribonuclease -nucleic acid digestion Liver • Heaviest gland in the body: 3 lbs. • Involved in filtration, storage (glycogen), protein metabolism, and excretion • Produces bile – Emulsifies lipids (fats) – Bile leaves liver through cystic duct. Tortora 524-525 Gall Bladder • Bile (made in the liver) is stored in the gall bladder. • Carried by cystic duct to common bile duct, then released into duodenum. • Bile emulsifies lipids Gall stones (crystallized cholesterol) Tortora 525526 Small Intestine • Composed of – Duodenum – Jejunum – Ileum • Food is released through ileocecal sphincter into the cecum Tortora 526-527 Small Intestine • Mucosa • Villi extend from wall of sm. intestine. – Capillary network – Lacteal- lymph – Duodenal glandssecrete alkaline mucus – Microvilli-increases surface area for absorption Enzymes produced by small intestine • • • • • • Maltase maltose to glucose Sucrase sucrose to glucose & fructose Lactase lactose to glucose & galactose Peptidases peptides to amino acids Ribonuclease RNA to sugar & bases Deoxyribonuclease DNA to sugar & bases Absorption in the Small Intestine • Carbohydrates & proteins move into capillaries. • Fatty acids & monoglycerides move into the lacteal (lymph capillaries) Tortora 530 Large Intestine/ colon • 5 ft in length/2.5 inches diameter • Ileocecal sphincter: allows material to pass from sm. intestine to the colon • Has ascending, transverse, descending, and sigmoid portions. • Puckered due to contraction of muscular bands (teniae coli) Tortora 532-533 Digestion and absorption – Bacteria ferment & digest foodreleasing H2, CO2, methane gases (flatulence) – Bacteria produce vitamin B & K (absorbed by colon) – Bacteria break down bilirubin- brown color – Absorbs much of the water and ions, forming feces. Appendix • Structure: – Short finger-like extension of the lg. intestine – Attaches to the cecum – Stores a sample of healthy colon bacteria, to recolonize the colon after an intestinal disease. Appendicitis: inflammation requiring removal of the appendix Tortora 532 Inflamed appendix Defecation reflex – Mass peristalysis pushes contents from the sigmoid colon to the rectum – Stretch receptors initiate the defecation reflex – Initiated by food in the stomach/ ANS controlled. – Internal sphincter(involuntary) opens – External sphincter releases (voluntary control) + downward pushing of the diaphragm push out the feces Tortora 533-534 Colon cancer Healthy colon • One of the deadliest cancers • Detected by stool samples, or sigmoid/colonoscopies • Polyp removal using a wire snare