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Digestive System

The digestive system functions to ingest, digest, absorb, and excrete food and waste. It consists of the alimentary canal and accessory organs. The alimentary canal is a continuous hollow tube running from the mouth to the anus. It includes the mouth, pharynx, esophagus, stomach, small intestine, and large intestine. Food is ingested, broken down, absorbed, and waste is excreted through this system. Accessory organs like teeth and the tongue assist in digestion.

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83% found this document useful (6 votes)
2K views

Digestive System

The digestive system functions to ingest, digest, absorb, and excrete food and waste. It consists of the alimentary canal and accessory organs. The alimentary canal is a continuous hollow tube running from the mouth to the anus. It includes the mouth, pharynx, esophagus, stomach, small intestine, and large intestine. Food is ingested, broken down, absorbed, and waste is excreted through this system. Accessory organs like teeth and the tongue assist in digestion.

Uploaded by

Sweets Jar
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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DIGESTIVE SYSTEM ORGANS OF THE ALIMENTARY CANAL

 The alimentary canal is a continuous, coiled,


hollow tube that runs through the ventral cavity
THE DIGESTIVE SYSTEM FUNCTIONS from stomach to anus
 Ingestion  Mouth
 Taking in food  Pharynx
 Digestion  Esophagus
 Breaking food into nutrient molecules  Stomach
 Absorption  Small intestine
 Movement of nutrients into the  Large intestine
bloodstream  Anus
 Defecation
 Excretes to rid the body of indigestible
waste MOUTH
 Anatomy of the mouth

ANATOMY OF THE DIGESTIVE SYSTEM  MOUTH (ORAL CAVITY)


 Two main groups of organs  Mucous membrane–lined cavity
 Alimentary canal (gastrointestinal, or GI, tract)
 Continuous, coiled, hollow tube  LIPS (LABIA)
 These organs ingest, digest, absorb,  Protect the anterior opening
defecate
 Accessory digestive organs  CHEEKS
 Include teeth, tongue, and several large  Form the lateral walls
digestive organs
 Assist digestion in various ways  HARD PALATE
 Forms the anterior roof

Figure 14.1 The Human Digestive System: Alimentary  SOFT PALATE


Canal And Accessory Organs.  Forms the posterior roof

 UVULA
 Fleshy projection of the soft palate

 VESTIBULE
 Space between lips externally and teeth and
gums internally

 ORAL CAVITY PROPER


 Area contained by the teeth

 TONGUE
 Attached at hyoid bone and styloid
processes of the skull, and by the lingual
frenulum to the floor of the mouth

 TONSILS
 Palatine—located at posterior end of oral
cavity
 Lingual—located at the base of the tongue

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 Food is propelled to the esophagus by two
skeletal muscle layers in the pharynx:
 Longitudinal outer layer
 Circular inner layer
 Alternating contractions of the muscle layers
(peristalsis) propel the food

ESOPHAGUS
 ANATOMY
 About 10 inches long
 Runs from pharynx to stomach through the
diaphragm
 PHYSIOLOGY
 Conducts food by peristalsis (slow rhythmic
squeezing) to the stomach
 Passageway for food only (respiratory
system branches off after the pharynx)

LAYERS OF TISSUE IN THE ALIMENTARY CANAL


ORGANS
 Summary of the four layers from innermost to
outermost, from esophagus to the large
intestine (detailed next)
 Mucosa
 Submucosa
 Muscularis externa
 Serosa

MUCOSA
 Innermost, moist membrane consisting of:
 Surface epithelium that is mostly simple
columnar epithelium (except for
esophagus - stratified squamous
epithelium)
 Small amount of connective tissue
(lamina propria)
 Scanty smooth muscle layer
FUNCTIONS OF THE MOUTH
 Lines the cavity (known as the lumen)
 Mastication (chewing) of food
 Tongue mixes masticated food with saliva
SUBMUCOSA
 Tongue initiates swallowing
 Just beneath the mucosa
 Taste buds on the tongue allow for taste
 Soft connective tissue with blood vessels, nerve
endings, mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue,
and lymphatic vessels
PHARYNX
 Serves as a passageway for foods, fluids, and air
MUSCULARIS EXTERNA
 Food passes from the mouth posteriorly into
 Smooth muscle
the:
 Inner circular layer
 Oropharynx - posterior to oral cavity
 Outer longitudinal layer
 Laryngopharynx - below the oropharynx
and continuous with the esophagus

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STOMACH
SEROSA  C-shaped organ located on the left side of
 Outermost layer of the wall; contains fluid- the abdominal cavity
producing cells  Food enters at the cardioesophageal
 Visceral peritoneum - innermost layer that is sphincter from the esophagus
continuous with the outermost layer  Food empties into the small intestine at the
 Parietal peritoneum - outermost layer that lines pyloric sphincter (valve)
the abdominopelvic cavity by way of the  Regions:
mesentery  Cardial (cardia) - near the heart and
surrounds the cardioesophageal
sphincter
 Fundus - expanded portion lateral to
the cardiac region
 Body - midportion
 Greater curvature is the convex lateral
surface
 Lesser curvature is the concave medial
surface
 Pylorus - funnel-shaped terminal end

 Stomach can stretch and hold 4 L (1 gallon) of


food when full
 RUGAE—internal folds of the mucosa present
when the stomach is empty
 Lesser omentum
 Double layer of the peritoneum
 Extends from liver to the lesser curvature of
stomach
 Greater omentum
ALIMENTARY CANAL NERVE PLEXUSES  Another extension of the peritoneum
 Alimentary canal wall contains two intrinsic
 Covers the abdominal organs
nerve plexuses that are part of the autonomic
 Fat insulates, cushions, and protects
nervous system
abdominal organs
 Submucosal nerve plexus
 Myenteric nerve plexus
 Regulate mobility and secretory activity of the
GI tract organs
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SMALL INTESTINE

 The body’s major digestive organ


 Longest portion of the alimentary tube (2–4 m,
or 7–13 feet, in a living person)
 Site of nutrient absorption into the blood
 Muscular tube extending from the pyloric
sphincter to the ileocecal valve
 Suspended from the posterior abdominal wall
by the mesentery
 Subdivisions
 Duodenum
 Jejunum
 Ileum
 Structure of the stomach mucosa  Chemical digestion begins in the small intestine
 Simple columnar epithelium composed  Enzymes produced by intestinal cells and
almost entirely of mucous cells pancreas are carried to the duodenum by
 Mucous cells produce bicarbonate-rich pancreatic ducts
alkaline mucus  Bile, formed by the liver, enters the
 Dotted by gastric pits leading to gastric duodenum via the bile duct
glands that secrete gastric juice, including:  Hepatopancreatic ampulla is the location
 Intrinsic factor, which is needed for vitamin where the main pancreatic duct and bile
B12 absorption in the small intestine ducts join
 Chief cells—produce protein-digesting
enzymes (pepsinogens)
 Parietal cells—produce hydrochloric acid
that activates enzymes
 Mucous neck cells—produce thin acidic
mucus (different from the mucus produced
by mucous cells of the mucosa)
 Enteroendocrine cells—produce local
hormones such as gastrin

FUNCTIONS OF THE STOMACH


 Temporary storage tank for food
 Site of food breakdown
 Chemical breakdown of protein begins
 Delivers chyme (processed food) to the small
intestine

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 Structural modifications
 Increase surface area for food absorption
 Decrease in number toward the end of the
small intestine
 Villi—fingerlike projections formed by the
mucosa
 House a capillary bed and lacteal
 Microvilli—tiny projections of the plasma
membrane (brush border enzymes)
 Circular folds (plicae circulares)—deep
folds of mucosa and submucosa
 PEYER’S PATCHES
 Collections of lymphatic tissue
 Located in submucosa
 Increase in number toward the end of the LARGE INTESTINE
small intestine  Larger in diameter, but shorter in length at 1.5
m, than the small intestine
 More are needed there because remaining
 Extends from the ileocecal valve to the anus
food residue contains much bacteria
 Subdivisions (detailed next)
 Cecum
 Appendix
 Colon
 Rectum
 Anal canal
 CECUM—saclike first part of the large intestine
 Appendix
 Hangs from the cecum
 Accumulation of lymphoid tissue
that sometimes becomes inflamed
(appendicitis)
 COLON
 Ascending—travels up right side of
abdomen and makes a turn at the right colic
(hepatic) flexure
 Transverse—travels across the abdominal
cavity and turns at the left colic (splenic)
flexure
 Descending—travels down the left side
 Sigmoid—S-shaped region; enters the pelvis
 Sigmoid colon, rectum, and anal canal are
located in the pelvis
 Anal canal ends at the anus
 ANUS—opening of the large intestine
 External anal sphincter—formed by skeletal
muscle and is voluntary
 Internal anal sphincter—formed by smooth
muscle and is involuntary
 These sphincters are normally closed except
during defecation
 The large intestine delivers indigestible food
residues to the body’s exterior

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 Goblet cells produce alkaline mucus to lubricate
the passage of feces
 Muscularis externa layer is reduced to three
bands of muscle, called teniae coli
 These bands of muscle cause the wall to pucker
into haustra (pocketlike sacs)

 Teeth are classified according to shape and


function
 Incisors - cutting
ACCESSORY DIGESTIVE ORGANS  Canines (eyeteeth) - tearing or piercing
 Teeth  Premolars (bicuspids) - grinding
 Salivary glands  Molars - grinding
 Pancreas  Two major regions of a tooth
 Liver  Crown
 Gallbladder  Root

CROWN
TEETH  Exposed part of tooth above the gingiva (gum)
 Teeth masticate (chew) food into smaller  Enamel - covers the crown
fragments  Dentin - found deep to the enamel and
 Humans have two sets of teeth during a lifetime forms the bulk of the tooth, surrounds
 Deciduous (baby or milk) teeth the pulp cavity
 A baby has 20 teeth by age 2  Pulp cavity - contains connective tissue,
 First teeth to appear are the lower blood vessels, and nerve fibers (pulp)
central incisors  Root canal - where the pulp cavity
 Permanent teeth extends into the root
 Replace deciduous teeth between ROOT
ages 6 and 12  Cement—covers outer surface and attaches the
 A full set is 32 teeth (with the tooth to the periodontal membrane (ligament)
wisdom teeth)
 Periodontal membrane holds tooth in place in
the bony jaw
 Note: The neck is a connector between the
crown and root
 Region in contact with the gum
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LIVER
 Largest gland in the body
 Located on the right side of the body under the
diaphragm
 Consists of four lobes suspended from the
diaphragm and abdominal wall by the falciform
ligament
 Digestive role is to produce bile
 Bile leaves the liver through the common
hepatic duct and enters duodenum through
the bile duct
 Bile is yellow-green, watery solution
containing:
 Bile salts and bile pigments (mostly
bilirubin from the breakdown of
hemoglobin)
 Cholesterol, phospholipids, and electrolytes
 Bile emulsifies (breaks down) fats
SALIVARY GLANDS
 Three pairs of salivary glands empty secretions GALLBLADDER
into the mouth  Green sac found in a shallow fossa in the
 Parotid glands inferior surface of the liver
 Found anterior to the ears  When no digestion is occurring, bile backs
 Mumps affect these salivary glands up the cystic duct for storage in the
 Submandibular glands gallbladder
 Sublingual glands  While in the gallbladder, bile is
 Both submandibular and sublingual concentrated by the removal of water
glands empty saliva into the floor of the  When fatty food enters the duodenum, the
mouth through small ducts gallbladder spurts out stored bile
SALIVA
 Mixture of mucus and serous fluids OVERVIEW OF GASTROINTESTINAL PROCESSES AND
 Helps to moisten and bind food together into a CONTROLS/FUNCTIONS OF DIGESTIVE SYSTEMS
mass called a bolus  Essential processes of the GI tract
 Contains:  Ingestion - placing of food into the mouth
 Salivary amylase - begins starch digestion  Propulsion - movement of foods from one
 Lysozymes and antibodies - inhibit bacteria region of the digestive system to another
 Dissolves chemicals so they can be tasted  Peristalsis - alternating waves of
contraction and relaxation that
PANCREAS squeeze food along the GI tract
 Soft, pink triangular gland  Segmentation - movement of
 Found posterior to the parietal peritoneum materials back and forth to foster
 Mostly retroperitoneal mixing in the small intestine
 Extends across the abdomen from spleen to
duodenum
 Produces a wide spectrum of digestive enzymes
that break down all categories of food
 Secretes enzymes into the duodenum
 Alkaline fluid introduced with enzymes
neutralizes acidic chyme coming from stomach
 Hormones produced by the pancreas
 Insulin
 Glucagon

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 Food breakdown: mechanical ACTIVITIES OCCURRING IN THE MOUTH, PHARYNX,
breakdown AND ESOPHAGUS
 Examples  Food ingestion and breakdown
 Mixing of food in the mouth by  Food is placed into the mouth
the tongue  Physically broken down by chewing
 Churning of food in the  Mixed with saliva, which is released in
stomach response to mechanical pressure and
 Segmentation in the small psychic stimuli
intestine  Salivary amylase begins starch digestion
 Mechanical digestion prepares  Essentially, no food absorption occurs in the
food for further degradation by mouth
enzyme  Food propulsion—swallowing and peristalsis
 Pharynx and esophagus have no digestive
function
 Serve as passageways to the stomach
 Pharynx functions in swallowing
(deglutition)
 Two phases of swallowing
 Buccal phase
 Pharyngeal-esophageal phase
BUCCAL PHASE
 Voluntary
 Occurs in the mouth
 Food is formed into a bolus
 The bolus is forced into the pharynx by the
tongue
PHARYNGEAL-ESOPHAGEAL PHASE
 Food breakdown: digestion  Involuntary transport of the bolus by peristalsis
 Digestion occurs when enzymes  Nasal and respiratory passageways are blocked
chemically break down large  Peristalsis moves the bolus toward the stomach
molecules into their building blocks  The cardioesophageal sphincter is opened when
 Each major food group uses food presses against it
different enzymes
 Carbohydrates are broken
down to monosaccharides
(simple sugars)
 Proteins are broken down to
amino acids
 Fats are broken down to fatty
acids and glycerol
 Absorption
 End products of digestion are
absorbed in the blood or lymph
 Food must enter mucosal cells and
then move into blood or lymph
capillaries
 Defecation
 Elimination of indigestible
substances from the GI tract in the
form of feces

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ACTIVITIES IN THE STOMACH
 Food breakdown
 Gastric juice is regulated by neural and
hormonal factors
 Presence of food or rising pH causes the release
of the hormone gastrin
 Gastrin causes stomach glands to produce:
 Protein-digesting enzymes
 Mucus
 Hydrochloric acid
 Hydrochloric acid makes the stomach contents
very acidic
 Acidic pH
 Activates pepsinogen to pepsin for protein
digestion
 Provides a hostile environment for
microorgani
 Protein-digestion enzymes
 Pepsin - an active protein-digesting enzyme
 Rennin - works on digesting milk protein in
infants; not produced in adults
 Alcohol and aspirin are virtually the only items
absorbed in the stomach
 Food propulsion
 Peristalsis: waves of peristalsis occur from
the fundus to the pylorus, forcing food past
the pyloric sphincter
 Grinding: the pylorus meters out chyme
into the small intestine (3 ml at a time)
 Retropulsion: peristaltic waves close the
pyloric sphincter, forcing contents back into
the stomach; the stomach empties in 4–6
hours

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ACTIVITIES OF THE SMALL INTESTINE  Mass movements are slow, powerful
 Chyme breakdown and absorption movements that occur three to four times
 Intestinal enzymes from the brush border per day
function to:  Presence of feces in the rectum causes a
 Break double sugars into simple sugars defecation reflex
 Complete some protein digestion  Internal anal sphincter is relaxed
 Intestinal enzymes and pancreatic enzymes help  Defecation occurs with relaxation of the
to complete digestion of all food groups voluntary (external) anal sphincter
 Pancreatic enzymes play the major role in the
digestion of fats, proteins, and carbohydrates
 Alkaline content neutralizes acidic chyme and
provides the proper environment for the DEVELOPMENTAL ASPECTS OF THE DIGESTIVE SYSTEM
pancreatic enzymes to operate AND METABOLISM
 Release of pancreatic juice from the pancreas  The alimentary canal is a continuous, hollow
into the duodenum is stimulated by: tube present by the fifth week of development
 Vagus nerves  Digestive glands bud from the mucosa of the
 Local hormones that travel via the blood to alimentary tube
influence the release of pancreatic juice  The developing fetus receives all nutrients
(and bile) through the placenta
 Secretin  In newborns, feeding must be frequent,
 Cholecystokinin (CCK) peristalsis is inefficient, and vomiting is
 Hormones (secretin and CCK) also target the common
liver and gallbladder to release bile  Newborn reflexes
 Bile  Rooting reflex helps the infant find the
 Acts as a fat emulsifier nipple
 Needed for fat absorption and  Sucking reflex helps the infant hold on
absorption of fat-soluble vitamins (K, D, to the nipple and swallow
E, and A)  Teething begins around age 6 months
 Problems of the digestive system
 Gastroenteritis—inflammation of the
ACTIVITIES OF THE LARGE INTESTINE gastrointestinal tract; can occur at any
 Nutrient breakdown and absorption time
 No digestive enzymes are produced  Appendicitis—inflammation of the
 Resident bacteria digest remaining appendix; common in adolescents
nutrients  Metabolism decreases with old age
 Produce some vitamin K and some B  Middle-age digestive problems
vitamins  Ulcers
 Release gases  Gallbladder problems
 Water, vitamins, ions, and remaining water are  Later middle-age problems
absorbed  Obesity
 Remaining materials are eliminated via feces  Diabetes mellitus
 Feces contains:  Activity of the digestive tract in old age
 Undigested food residues  Fewer digestive juices
 Mucus  Peristalsis slows
 Bacteria  Diverticulosis and gastrointestinal
 Water cancers are more common
 Propulsion of food residue and defecation
 Sluggish peristalsis begins when food
residue arrives
 Haustral contractions are the movements
occurring most frequently in the large
intestine
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