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Digestive System

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Function in mastication of bolus. Periodontal ligaments hold teeth in alveoli (bony sockets) ... Churn and fragment a bolus. Movement of digestive materials ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Digestive System


1
Digestive System
  • Chapter 16

2
The Digestive system includes
  • The muscular digestive tract
  • Various accessory organs

3
Fig. 16.28
4
Fig. 16.1
5
Functions of the digestive system
  • Ingestion
  • Mechanical processing
  • Digestion
  • Secretion
  • Absorption
  • Egestion

6
Fig. 16.2
7
The digestive system organs and the peritoneum
  • Some parts are retroperitonial
  • Mesenteries
  • Sheets of serous membranes that support portions
    of the digestive tract
  • Provides padding, protection, insulation, and
    energy reserves

8
Fig. 16.3
9
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10
Fig. 16.5
11
Fig. 16.6
12
Teeth
  • Function in mastication of bolus
  • Periodontal ligaments hold teeth in alveoli (bony
    sockets)

13
Fig. 16.7
14
Salivary glands
  • Serous mainly contain salivary amylase and
    dissolve food in liquid o taste
  • Mucous lubrication
  • lysozyme

15
The oral or buccal cavity
  • Its functions include
  • Analysis of material before swallowing
  • Mechanical processing by the teeth, tongue, and
    palatal surfaces
  • Lubrication
  • Limited digestion

16
The tongue
  • Main functions include
  • Mechanical processing
  • Assistance in chewing and swallowing
  • Sensation by touch, temperature, and taste
    receptors

17
Salivary glands (three pairs)
  • Parotid (serous), sublingual(serous mucous),
    and submandibular (mucous)
  • Saliva
  • watery solution
  • electrolytes, buffers, glycoproteins, antibodies,
    enzymes
  • Functions include
  • Lubricating, moistening, and dissolving
  • Initiating digestion of complex carbohydrates
    salivary amylase

18
The pharynx
  • Common passageway for food, liquids, along with
    air
  • Lined with stratified squamous epithelium
  • Pharyngeal muscles assist in swallowing
  • tonsils

19
The esophagus
  • Carries solids and liquids from the pharynx to
    the stomach
  • Materials pass through the esophageal hiatus (in
    diaphragm) and cardiac sphincter (also known as
    lower esophageal sphincter)

20
Functions of the stomach
  • Bulk storage of undigested food
  • Mechanical breakdown of food
  • Disruption of chemical bonds via acid and enzyme
    action
  • Production of intrinsic factor (required for B12
    absorption)

21
Stomach anatomy
  • Rugae
  • Ridges and folds in relaxed stomach flatten as
    the stomach fills
  • Muscles
  • Circular
  • Longitudinal
  • Oblique
  • Pyloric Sphincter
  • Regulates release of the chyme from the stomach

22
Histology of the stomach
  • Mucus cells mucous production
  • Gastric glands
  • 1. Parietal cells
  • Secrete intrinsic factor and HCl pH of 1.5-2.0
    needed to kill most ingested microorganisms, to
    break down connective tissues in meat, for
    activation and function of pepsin

23
  • 2. Chief cells
  • Secrete pepsinogen which is converted to pepsin,
    a protein-digestion enzyme

24
  • Pyloric glands
  • Produce a mucous secretion
  • Enteroendocrine cells scattered among the
    mucous-secreting (epithelial) cells produce
  • Gastrin stimulates the secretion of chief and
    parietal cells
  • Somatostatin inhibits release of gastrin

25
Digestion and absorption in the stomach
  • Preliminary digestion of proteins
  • Pepsin
  • Permits digestion of carbohydrates
  • Very little absorption of nutrients
  • However, some drugs are absorbed

26
Fig. 16.10a
27
Fig. 16.10b
28
Small intestine
  • Important digestive and absorptive functions
  • Secretions and buffers provided by pancreas,
    liver, gall bladder (accessory structures)
  • Three subdivisions
  • Duodenum
  • Jejunum
  • Ileum
  • Ileocecal sphincter
  • Transition between small intestine (ileum) and
    large intestine (cecum)

29
Histology of the small intestine
  • Plicae
  • Permanent transverse folds of the intestinal
    lining
  • Villi
  • Fingerlike projections of the mucosa (inner
    lining) increase SA (brush borders)
  • Lacteals
  • Lymphatic capillary in villus transports
    materials unable to enter blood capillaries
    (e.g., fatty acids)

30
  • Intestinal glands (located at the bases of the
    villi)
  • Lined by enteroendocrine, goblet and stem cells
  • Enteroendocrine cells produce several intestinal
    hormones (e.g., secretin)

31
Fig. 16.13
32
Fig. 16.14
33
Fig. 16.16a
34
Fig. 16.16bc
35
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37
Functions of the large intestine
  • Reabsorb water and compact material into feces
  • Absorb vitamins (e.g., K) produced by bacteria
  • Store fecal matter prior to defecation

38
The four areas of the colon
  • Ascending
  • Transverse
  • Descending
  • Sigmoid

39
Physiology of the large intestine
  • Reabsorption in the large intestine includes
  • Water
  • Vitamins K, biotin, and B5
  • Organic wastes urobilinogens and
    stercobilinogens
  • Bile salts
  • Toxins

40
The rectum
  • Last portion of the digestive tract
  • Terminates at the anal canal
  • Internal and external anal sphincters internal
    sphincter consists of smooth muscle while the
    external consists of skeletal.

41
Fig. 16.21
42
Movement of digestive materials
  • Visceral smooth muscle shows rhythmic cycles of
    activity
  • Pacemaker cells
  • Peristalsis
  • Waves that move a bolus
  • Segmentation
  • Churn and fragment a bolus

43
Peristalsis
Figure 24.4
44
Coordination secretion and absorption
  • Neural and hormonal mechanisms coordinate glands
  • GI activity stimulated by parasympathetic
    innervation
  • Inhibited by sympathetic innervation
  • Enterogastric, gastroenteric and gastroileal
    reflexes coordinate stomach and intestines

45
Carbohydrate digestion and absorption
  • Begins in the mouth
  • Salivary and pancreatic enzymes
  • Disaccharides and trisaccharides
  • Brush border enzymes
  • Monosaccharides
  • Absorption of monosaccharides occurs across the
    intestinal epithelia

46
Lipid digestion and absorption
  • Lipid digestion utilizes lingual and pancreatic
    lipases
  • Bile salts improve chemical digestion by
    emulsification
  • Lipid-bile salt complexes called micelles are
    formed micelles diffuse into intestinal
    epithelia and lipids are released into the blood
    via the lymphatic system as chylomicrons

47
Protein digestion and absorption
  • Low pH destroys tertiary and quaternary structure
    in stomach
  • Pancreatic peptidases in small intestine small
    peptides
  • Brush border enzyme
  • amino acids
  • Absorption

48
  • Vitamins
  • Water soluble vitamins are absorbed by diffusion
  • Fat soluble vitamins are absorbed as part of
    micelles
  • Vitamin B12 requires the intrinsic factor

49
Absorption
  • Water
  • Nearly all that is ingested is reabsorbed via
    osmosis
  • Ions
  • Absorbed via diffusion, primary active transport
    and cotransport

50
The Components of the Digestive System
Figure 24.1
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