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The Digestive System

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Title: The Digestive System


1
The Digestive System
  • Chapter 25

2
The Digestive System
  • General anatomy and digestive processes
  • Mouth through esophagus
  • Stomach
  • Liver, gallbladder and pancreas
  • Small intestine
  • Chemical digestion and absorption
  • Large intestine

3
Digestive Functions
  • Ingestion
  • ________________
  • Digestion
  • breakdown of molecules
  • ___________
  • uptake nutrients into blood/lymph
  • ____________
  • elimination of undigested material

4
Stages of Digestion
  • Mechanical digestion
  • ___________________________
  • Teeth, churning action of stomach intestines
  • _______________________
  • hydrolysis rxns break macromolecules into
    monomers
  • Proteins ? _____________
  • Polysaccharides ? simple _________________________
    _
  • Lipids ? glycerol and fatty acids
  • enzymes in saliva, stomach, pancreas and
    intestines

5
Digestive Processes
  • ________________
  • Motility
  • muscle contractions break up food, mix it with
    enzymes and move it along
  • _______________________
  • digestive enzymes and hormones
  • Membrane transport
  • ___________________________

6
Subdivisions of Digestive System
  • Digestive tract (_________)
  • 30 foot long tube
  • from mouth to anus
  • Accessory organs
  • __________________________________________________
    ______

7
Tissue Layers
  • _______________
  • epithelium
  • lamina propria
  • muscularis mucosae
  • Submucosa
  • _________________________
  • inner circular layer
  • outer longitudinal layer
  • Adventitia or Serosa
  • areolar tissue or mesothelium

8
Enteric Nervous Control
  • Able to function independently of CNS
  • Composed of two nerve networks
  • submucosal plexus
  • controls glandular secretion of mucosa
  • contractions of muscularis mucosae
  • myenteric plexus
  • controls peristalsis
  • contractions of muscularis externa

9
Relationship to Peritoneum
  • Duodenum, pancreas and parts of large intestine
    are __________________________
  • Dorsal mesentery attaches GI tract and forms
    visceral peritoneum of stomach/ intestines
  • Ventral mesentery forms lesser (stomach) and
    greater omentum
  • CT contains lymph nodes vessels, blood vessels
  • ___________________ colon to rear wall

10
Regulation of Digestive Tract
  • Neural control
  • Hormones
  • Paracrine secretions
  • messengers diffuse to nearby target cells

11
Oral Cavity
  • Cheeks and lips
  • __________________
  • keeps food between teeth needed for speech and
    suckling in infants
  • Tongue manipulates food
  • papillae and taste buds on dorsal surface
  • lingual glands secrete saliva, tonsils
  • _______________________
  • allow breathing and chewing at same time

12
Dentition
  • Baby teeth (20) by 2 years Adult (32) between 6
    and 25
  • Occlusal surfaces and cusp numbers differ

13
Tooth Structure
  • __________________
  • anchors into alveolus
  • __________________
  • living tissue
  • __________________
  • Root canal leads into pulp cavity
  • nerves and blood vessels
  • Gingiva or gums

14
Mastication or Chewing
  • Breaks food into small pieces
  • ? surface area ? digestive enzymes
  • Contact of food triggers chewing reflex

15
Saliva
  • Functions
  • Moisten
  • begin starch/fat digestion
  • cleanse teeth, inhibit bacteria
  • bind food together into bolus
  • Hypotonic solution of 99.5 water and solutes
  • salivary amylase? starch digestion
  • lingual lipase, digests fat activated by stomach
    acid
  • mucus, aids in swallowing
  • lysozyme, enzyme kills bacteria
  • immunoglobulin A, inhibits bacterial growth
  • electrolytes Na, K, Cl-, phosphate and
    bicarbonate
  • pH of 6.8 to 7.0

16
Salivary Glands
  • Small intrinsic glands under mucous membrane of
    mouth, lips, cheeks and tongue - secrete at
    constant rate
  • 3 pairs ducted extrinsic glands
  • parotid, submandibular and sublingual
  • Total of 1 to 1.5 L per day
  • Food stimulates receptors

17
Pharynx and Esophagus
  • Pharynx
  • Skeletal muscle
  • Straight muscular tube 25-30 cm long
  • nonkeratinized stratified squamous epithelium
  • glands in submucosa
  • skeletal muscle in upper part and smooth in
    bottom
  • Esophagus
  • from pharynx to cardiac stomach
  • Lower esophageal sphincter closes orifice to
    reflux

18
Swallowing (Deglutition)
  • Series of muscle contractions coordinated by
    center in medulla and pons
  • Buccal phase
  • tongue collects food and pushes it into
    oropharynx
  • Pharyngeal- esophageal phase
  • soft palate rises and blocks nasopharynx
  • hyoid muscles lift larynx epiglottis folded back
  • pharyngeal constrictors push bolus down esophagus
  • liquids in 2 seconds -- food bolus may take 8
    seconds
  • lower esophageal sphincter relaxes

19
Stomach
  • Mechanically breaks up and liquifies food and
    begins chemical digestion (protein and fat)
  • resulting soupy mixture is called chyme
  • Doesnt absorb significant amount of nutrients
  • absorbs aspirin and some lipid-soluble drugs

20
Gross Anatomy of Stomach
  • Muscular sac (volume 50ml - 4L)
  • J - shaped organ with lesser and greater
    curvatures
  • regions
  • cardiac region
  • fundus - domed portion superior to esophageal
    opening
  • body - main portion of organ
  • pyloric region - narrow inferior end
  • Pylorus
  • opening to duodenum
  • thick ring of smooth muscle/sphincter

21
Circulation
  • All blood from stomach enters hepatic portal
    circulation and is filtered through liver before
    returning to heart

22
Stomach Wall
  • Mucosa
  • simple columnar glandular epithelium
  • lamina propria is filled with tubular glands
    (gastric pits)
  • Muscularis externa (3 layers)
  • outer longitudinal, middle circular and inner
    oblique layers

23
Cells of Gastric Glands
  • Mucous cells secrete mucus
  • Parietal cells
  • secrete HCl acid and intrinsic factor
  • Chief cells
  • secrete pepsinogen
  • chymosin and lipase in infancy
  • Enteroendocrine cells
  • secrete hormones and paracrine messengers

24
Gastric Secretions
  • 2/3 L of gastric juice/day (H2O, HCl and pepsin)
  • Parietal cells contain carbonic anhydrase (CAH)
  • CO2 H2O ? H2CO3 ? HCO3- H
  • H is pumped into stomach lumen
  • ATP is used to pump H out and K in
  • HCO3- exchanged for Cl- (chloride shift)
  • Cl- pumped out to join H forming HCl
  • ? HCO3- in blood causes alkaline tide (blood pH ?)

25
Functions of Hydrochloric Acid
  • Activates pepsin and lingual lipase
  • Converts ingested ferric ions (Fe3) to ferrous
    ions (Fe2)
  • absorbed and used for hemoglobin synthesis
  • Destroys ingested bacteria and pathogens

26
Gastric Enzymes and Intrinsic Factor
  • Intrinsic factor
  • essential for B12 absorption by small intestine
  • RBC production (lack causes pernicious anemia)
  • Pepsin - protein digestion
  • secreted as pepsinogen (inactive)
  • HCl converts it to pepsin (active)
  • Gastric lipase and chymosin
  • lipase digests butterfat of milk in infant
  • chymosin curdles milk by coagulating proteins

27
Chemical Messengers
  • Many produced by enteroendocrine cells
  • hormones enter blood ? distant cells
  • paracrine secretions ? neighboring cells
  • Gut-brain peptides
  • signaling molecules produced in digestive tract
    and CNS

28
Vomiting
  • Induced by
  • excessive stretching of stomach, psychological
    stimuli or chemical irritants (bacterial toxins)
  • Emetic center in medulla causes
  • retching
  • lower esophageal sphincter to relax
  • stomach and duodenum to contract spasmodically
  • vomiting
  • when abdominal contraction forces upper
    esophageal sphincter to open

29
Regulation of Gastric Function (Phases 1-2)
  • Cephalic phase
  • sight, smell, taste or thought of food vagus
    nerve stimulates gastric secretion and motility
  • Gastric phase
  • activated by presence of food or semidigested
    protein
  • by stretch or ? in pH
  • secretion stimulated by
  • ACh (from parasympathetic fibers), histamine
    (from gastric enteroendocrine cells) and gastrin
    (from pyloric G cells)
  • receptors on parietal and chief cells

30
Regulation of Gastric Function (Phase 3)
  • Intestinal phase - duodenum regulates gastric
    activity (hormones and nerve reflexes)
  • at first gastric activity increases (if duodenum
    is stretched or amino acids in chyme cause
    gastrin release)
  • enterogastric reflex - duodenum inhibits stomach
  • caused by acid and semi-digested fats in duodenum
  • chyme stimulates duodenal cells to release
    secretin, cholecystokinin (CCK) and gastric
    inhibitory peptide
  • all 3 suppress gastric secretion and motility

31
Liver, Gallbladder and Pancreas
  • Release important secretions into small intestine
    to continue digestion

32
Gross Anatomy of Liver
  • 3 lb. organ inferior to the diaphragm
  • 4 lobes - right, left, quadrate and caudate
  • falciform ligament separates left and right
  • round ligament, remnant of umbilical vein
  • Gallbladder adheres to ventral surface between
    right and quadrate lobes

33
Microscopic Anatomy of Liver
  • Cylinders called hepatic lobules (2mm by 1mm)
  • Central vein surrounded by hepatocytes separated
    by sinusoids lined with fenestrated epithelium
  • Blood filtered by hepatocytes on way to central
    vein

34
Histology of Liver - Hepatic Triad
  • Structures found at corners of lobules
  • hepatic portal vein and hepatic artery bring
    blood to liver
  • bile duct collects bile from bile canaliculi
    between sheets of hepatocytes to be secreted from
    liver in hepatic ducts

35
Ducts of Gallbladder, Liver, Pancreas
  • Bile
  • bile canaliculi ? bile ductules ?right left
    hepatic ducts
  • Right and left ducts join outside liver to form
    common hepatic duct
  • Cystic duct from gallbladder joins common hepatic
    duct to form bile duct
  • Pancreatic and bile duct form hepatopancreatic
    ampulla emptying into duodenum at duodenal
    papilla
  • sphincter of Oddi (hepatopancreatic sphincter)
    regulates release of bile and pancreatic juice

36
Gallbladder and Bile
  • Sac on underside of liver -- 10 cm long
  • 500 -1000 mL bile secreted daily
  • Gallbladder stores and concentrates bile
  • bile backs up into gallbladder from a filled bile
    duct
  • between meals, bile is concentrated 20X
  • Yellow-green fluid ?minerals, bile acids,
    cholesterol, bile pigments and phospholipids
  • bilirubin pigment from hemoglobin breakdown
  • intestinal bacteria convert to urobilinogen
    brown color
  • bile acid (salts) emulsify fats and aid in their
    digestion

37
Gross Anatomy of Pancreas
  • Retroperitoneal, posterior to stomach
  • head, body and tail
  • Endocrine and exocrine gland
  • secretes insulin and glucagon into the blood
  • secretes 1500 mL pancreatic juice into duodenum
  • water, enzymes, zymogens, and sodium bicarbonate
  • other pancreatic enzymes are activated by
    exposure to bile and ions in the intestine
  • Pancreatic duct runs length of gland to open at
    sphincter of Oddi
  • accessory duct opens independently on duodenum

38
Pancreatic Acinar Cells
  • Zymogens proteases
  • trypsinogen
  • chymotrypsinogen
  • procarboxypeptidase
  • Other enzymes
  • amylase
  • lipase
  • ribonuclease and deoxyribonuclease

39
Activation of Zymogens
  • Trypsinogen converted to trypsin by intestinal
    epithelium
  • Trypsin converts other 2 (also digests dietary
    protein)

40
Hormonal Control of Secretion
  • Cholecystokinin released in response to acid and
    fat
  • contraction of gallbladder, secretion of
    pancreatic enzymes, relaxation of
    hepatopancreatic sphincter
  • Secretin released in response to acidic chyme
  • stimulates secretion of more bicarbonate
  • Gastrin from stomach and duodenum stimulates
    gallbladder contraction and pancreatic enzyme
    secretion

41
Small Intestine
  • Nearly all chemical digestion and nutrient
    absorption occurs in small intestine

42
Small Intestine
  • Duodenum curves around head of pancreas (10 in.)
  • retroperitoneal along with pancreas
  • receives stomach contents, pancreatic juice and
    bile
  • neutralizes stomach acids, emulsifies fats,
    pepsin inactivated by pH increase, pancreatic
    enzymes
  • Jejunum - next 8 ft. (in upper abdomen)
  • has large tall circular folds walls are thick,
    muscular
  • most digestion and nutrient absorption occur here
  • Ileum - last 12 ft. (in lower abdomen)
  • has peyers patches clusters of lymphatic
    nodules
  • ends at ileocecal junction with large intestine

43
Small Intestine - Surface Area
  • Circular folds (plicae circularis) up to 10 mm
    tall
  • involve only mucosa and submucosa
  • chyme flows in spiral path causing more contact
  • Villi are fingerlike projections 1 mm tall
  • contain blood vessels and lymphatics (lacteal)
  • nutrient absorption
  • Microvilli 1 micron tall
  • cover surface
  • brush border on cells
  • brush border enzymes for final stages of
    digestion

44
Intestinal Crypts
  • Pores opening between villi lead to intestinal
    crypts
  • absorptive cells, goblet cells and at base,
    rapidly dividing cells
  • life span of 3-6 days as migrate up to surface
    and get sloughed off and digested
  • paneth cells antibacterial secretions
  • Brunners glands in submucosa secrete
    bicarbonate mucus
  • Peyer patches are populations of lymphocytes
  • Secrete 1-2 L of intestinal juice/day
  • water and mucus, pH 7.4-7.8

45
Intestinal Motility
  • Mixes chyme with intestinal juice, bile and
    pancreatic juice
  • Churns chyme to increase contact with mucosa for
    absorption and digestion
  • Moves residue towards large intestine
  • segmentation
  • random ringlike constrictions mix and churn
    contents
  • 12 times per minute in duodenum
  • peristaltic waves begin in duodenum but each one
    moves further down
  • push chyme along for 2 hours
  • suppressed by refilling of stomach
  • Food in stomach causes gastroileal reflex
    (relaxing of valve and filling of cecum)

46
Segmentation in Small Intestine
  • Purpose of segmentation is to mix and churn not
    to move material along as in peristalsis

47
Peristalsis
  • Gradual movement of contents towards colon

48
Carbohydrate Digestion - Small Intestine
  • Salivary amylase stops working in stomach (pH lt
    4.5)
  • 50 of dietary starch digested before it reaches
    small intestine
  • Pancreatic amylase completes first step in 10
    minutes
  • Brush border enzymes act upon oligosaccharides,
    maltose, sucrose, lactose and fructose
  • lactose indigestible after age 4 in most humans
    (lactase declines)

49
Protein Digestion and Absorption
  • Pepsin has optimal pH of 1.5 to 3.5 --
    inactivated when passes into duodenum and mixes
    with alkaline pancreatic juice (pH 8)

50
Protein Digestion and Absorption
  • Pancreatic enzymes take over protein digestion by
    hydrolyzing polypeptides into shorter
    oligopeptides

51
Protein Digestion and Absorption
  • Brush border enzymes finish task, producing amino
    acids that are absorbed into intestinal
    epithelial cells
  • Infants absorb proteins by pinocytosis (maternal
    IgA)

52
Fat Digestion and Absorption
53
Fat Digestion and Absorption
54
Fat Digestion and Absorption
55
Nucleic Acids, Vitamins, and Minerals
  • Nucleases hydrolyze DNA and RNA to nucleotides
  • Vitamins are absorbed unchanged
  • A, D, E and K with other lipids -- B complex and
    C by simple diffusion and B12 if bound to
    intrinsic factor
  • Minerals are absorbed all along small intestine

56
Water Balance
  • Digestive tract receives about 9 L of water/day
  • .7 L in food, 1.6 L in drink, 6.7 L in secretions
  • 8 L is absorbed by small intestine and 0.8 L by
    large intestine
  • Water is absorbed by osmosis following the
    absorption of salts and organic nutrients
  • Diarrhea occurs when too little water is absorbed
  • feces pass through too quickly if irritated
  • feces contains high concentrations of a solute
    (lactose)

57
Anatomy of Large Intestine
58
Gross Anatomy of Large Intestine
  • 5 feet long and 2.5 inches in diameter in cadaver
  • Begins as cecum and appendix in lower right
    corner
  • Ascending, transverse and descending colon frame
    the small intestine
  • Sigmoid colon is S-shaped portion leading down
    into pelvis
  • Rectum - straight portion ending at anal canal

59
Microscopic Anatomy
  • Mucosa - simple columnar epithelium
  • anal canal has stratified squamous epithelium
  • No circular folds or villi to increase surface
    area
  • Intestinal crypts (glands sunken into lamina
    propria) produce mucus only
  • Muscularis externa
  • muscle tone in longitudinal muscle fibers
    (concentrated in taeniae coli) form pouches
    (haustra)
  • Transverse and sigmoid have a serosa, rest
    retroperitoneal
  • epiploic appendages are suspended fatty sacs

60
Bacterial Flora and Intestinal Gas
  • Bacterial flora populate large intestine
  • ferment cellulose and other undigested
    carbohydrates we absorb resulting sugars
  • synthesize vitamins B and K
  • Flatus (gas)
  • average person produces 500 mL per day
  • most is swallowed air but hydrogen sulfide,
    indole and skatole produce odor

61
Absorption and Motility
  • Transit time is 12 to 24 hours
  • reabsorbs water and electrolytes
  • Feces consist of water and solids (bacteria,
    mucus, undigested fiber, fat and sloughed
    epithelial cells
  • Haustral contractions occur every 30 minutes
  • distension of a haustrum stimulates it to
    contract
  • Mass movements occur 1 to 3 times a day
  • triggered by gastrocolic and duodenocolic
    reflexes
  • filling of the stomach and duodenum stimulates
    motility
  • moves residue for several centimeters with each
    contraction

62
Anatomy of Anal Canal
  • Anal canal 3 cm
  • Anal columns are longitudinal ridges separated by
    mucus secreting anal sinuses
  • Hemorrhoids are permanently distended veins

63
Defecation
  • Stretching of the rectum stimulates defecation
  • intrinsic defecation reflex via the myenteric
    plexus
  • defecation occurs only if external anal sphincter
    is voluntarily relaxed
  • parasympathetic defecation reflex involves spinal
    cord
  • stretching of rectum sends sensory signals to
    spinal cord

64
Neural Control of Defecation
  • 1. Filling of the rectum
  • 2. Reflex contraction of rectum and relaxation of
    internal anal sphincter
  • 3. Voluntary relaxation of external sphincter
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