Chapter 6 Digestion - Lecture Notes
Chapter 6 Digestion - Lecture Notes
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Chapter 6: Digestion
• Ingestion
• Digestion Physical + Chemical Digestion
• Absorption
• Assimilation
• Egestion
Oesophagus
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6.1 Mouth and Buccal Cavity (Ingestion Phase)
Teeth
• Function: grind and break down food expose food to a large surface area for
enzyme action
Tongue:
• Function: Rolls food into bolus (a ball of solid mass of food) before swallowing Physical
Digestion
Salivary Glands secrete saliva into the buccal cavity
Function of saliva:
• Dilutes and moistens food mucus sticks food together form bolus
• Lubricates bolus for swallowing
• Contains Salivary Amylase
Salivary amylase
- Function: breaks down starch into sugars: Starch Maltose
• A cavity that connects the mouth to the Oesophagus, it also connects the nose
and mouth (via the larynx) with the trachea (windpipe)
• Epiglottis flap-like cartilage (a soft bone)
o Prevents food particles from entering trachea
o Covers the larynx when food is being swallowed
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6.3 Oesophagus
• Muscular tube takes food from the mouth and pushes it down through the neck
into the stomach.
• Moves food by waves of muscle contractionperistalsis.
Circular muscle
contracts Contracts
Pyloric sphincter
• Have thick muscles in its wall contract to mash the food into a sloppy soup.
• Mucous coat lining contain gastric pits
o Gastric pits contain gastric glands secrete gastric juices.
• Two valves control the entrances of food into and out of the stomach
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o Pyloric Sphincter – when relaxes, it opens the entrance to the small intestine.
o A layer of mucus prevents the stomach from digesting itself.
o Food in the stomach is converted into a thick acidic liquid called chyme, which
then moves into the small intestine (via peristalsis)
o Length of 6 m in Man.
o Consists of
o U-shaped duodenum,
o Jejunum
o Ileum
o Lining contains glandsproduce digestive
enzymes that continue the chemical
breakdown on the food. Finally the
nutrients are small enough to pass through
the lining of the small intestine, and into the
bloodcarried away to the liver and other
body parts to be processed, stored and
distributed.
o The small intestine consists of minute
fingerlike projections called villiincrease
the surface area of the small intestines.
6.6 Pancreas
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6.7 Gall Bladder
6.8 Liver
o Produces bile.
o Also, blood from the intestines flows to the
liver, carrying nutrients, vitamins and minerals,
and other products from digestion.
o The liver is like a food-processing factory with
more than 200 different jobs.
o It stores some nutrients, changes them from
one form to another, and releases them into
the blood according to the activities and needs
of the body
o Rectum
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6.10 Chemical Digestion
Rennin / Ca ions
Caseinogen ---> Casein
Curdling of milk proteins
Pepsin
Casein ---> Polypeptides
Maltase
Maltose ---> 2 x Glucose
Sucrase
Sucrose ---> glucose + fructose
Lactase
Lactose ---> glucose + galactose
Fat Digestion
Bile breaks fats into small fat
molecules --> emulsified fats
Lipase --> Increase SA: vol ratio of fats --
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Emulsified fats ---> Fatty acids + > speed up fat digestion
Glycerol
Protein Digestion
Enterokinase
Trypsinogen ---> Trypsin
Trypsin
Proteins ---> Polypeptides
Erepsin
Polypeptides ---> amino acids
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6.12 Absorption Process
Water
& Simple sugars + mineral salts + Fatty acids Glycerol
mineral vitamins + amino acids
salts Pass through villi
Absorbed by
React with bile salts
Large Blood capillaries Form
intestine
Soluble soaps
Other parts of body
In Liver
Simple sugars Amino acids
Excess glucose --> glycogen
Excess amino acids --> urea
Used as building
blocks of enzymes
and hormones
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Fats
Fats
Enter
Lymphatic capillaries
Excess fats Glucose insufficient
Fats + Lymph
Stored in adipose tissues Fats transported to
Form • Fat storage liver --> converted
Chyle • Insulation to oxidizable forms
Transported in Lymph
vessels