01 Digestive System
01 Digestive System
SYSTEMS
The Digestive System
THE
ORGANIZATIO
N
OF
THE
HUMAN
BODY
ORGAN
SYSTEMS
SYSTEMS OF THE HUMAN
BODY
1. Digestive
2. Respiratory
3. Circulatory
WHAT IS THE DIGESTIVE
SYSTEM?
a muscular tube that starts at the mouth
and ends at the anus
also called:
- gastrointestinal tract
- alimentary canal
performs 4 important functions
FUNCTIONS OF THE DIGESTIVE
SYSTEM – STAGES OF FOOD
PROCESSING
Ingestion
- taking in food
Digestion
- breakdown of food (mechanically and
chemically)
Absorption
– transport of products from digestive
system into circulatory system into the
body
Elimination
– removal of undigested waste from the
DIGESTION
the food you eat is in a form that is
unsuitable for use by the body cells
prepares the food for absorption by the
body
food must be transformed into smaller
and simpler units that can pass through
the wall of the small intestine
MACRONUTRIENTS
very large molecule that are made up of
smaller molecules that are linked
together
Provide our bodies with needed energy
to perform life functions
Four Main Categories:
1. Carbohydrates
2. Lipids
3. Proteins Essential
Nutrients
4. Nucleic Acids
CARBOHYDRATES
macromolecules that always have
carbon, hydrogen and oxygen
short and long term energy storage
2 Types:
Chemical Mechanical
Digestion Digestion
- saliva is made of - teeth physically
• Amylase break down food
- enzyme that
begins chemical
digestion of
carbs
• Mucus
mechanical and chemical digestion
- lubricates food
result in a moistened ball-like mass
called bolus
SWALLOWING FOOD
epiglottis closes off the entry way to the
trachea (leads to the lungs) so food can
move into the esophagus
ESOPHAGUS
muscular tube ( 2 cm diameter)
connects pharynx to stomach
a sphincter (ring of smooth muscle
which closes a tube) connects the
esophagus to the stomach
cardiac sphincter or lower esophageal
sphincter
ESOPHAGUS
constriction of the cardiac sphincter prevent
reflux of food from stomach to esophagus
peristalsis pushes food along the esophagus
towards the stomach
Peristalsis
- series of coordinated muscle contractions
that move food along the entire digestive
tract
- bolus of food stretches segments of the
esophagus
- smooth muscle behind contracts
- smooth muscle in front relaxes
PERISTALSIS
STOMACH
Structure:
J-shaped stretchable organ
can hold ~1.5 L of food
Function:
reservoir to receive food all at once
where mechanical and chemical
digestion take place
STOMACH – FUNCTION
cells lining the stomach produce gastric
juices
- hydrochloric acid
- salts
- enzymes
- water
- mucous (protects stomach wall from
HCl)
STOMACH- FUNCTION
Food is kept in by 2 sphincter muscles
Cardiac (top)
- constricts to keep food in
- relaxes to allow food out
Pyloric (bottom)
- constricts to keep food in
- relaxes to allow food out
STOMACH- FUNCTION
mucus lines the stomach and forms a
protective coating against hydrochloric
acid
STOMACH- FUNCTION
Mechanical Digestion
- stomach has muscular walls that churn
and squeeze bolus
- stomach is able to expand due to the
many folds called “rugae”
RUGAE OF THE STOMACH
STOMACH FUNCTION
Chemical Digestion
- special cells lining the stomach secrete hydrochloric
acid and pepsinogen
Hydrochloric Acid:
- breaks up connective tissue in the bolus
- sterilizes the upper digestive tract and destroys
bacteria that may be ingested with food
Pespsinogen:
- inactive enzyme which gets converted to pepsin by
hydrochloric acid
Pepsin:
- enzyme that breaks down protein into short peptides
- first step in protein digestion
Sodium bicarbonate
- helps enzymes function by altering pH of
chyme from strongly acidic (pH =1) to
weakly basic (pH = 8)
SMALL INTESTINE
acidic chyme leaves to stomach
it can be damaging to the small intestine,
so it must be neutralized
once HCl enters the duodenum ….
- hormone called secretin is released from
cells in the duodenal wall
- hormone goes into the blood and is
carried to the pancreas
- causes pancreas to release sodium
bicarbonate and enzymes into the
pancreatic duct which takes these
chemicals to the duodenum pH = 8
SMALL INTESTINE
stomach pepsin stops working as it only
functions in acidic environments
(inactive in the duodenum)
lipases begin to break down lipids after
bile has acted on them
carbohydrases begin to break down
polysaccharides and disaccharides
proteases continue protein break down
(since pepsin is now inactive in a basic
environment)
SMALL INTESTINE –
JEJUNUM
where absorption of nutrients takes
place
remaining proteins and carbohydrates
are broken down
mucosa contains many microscopic
projections called “villi”
- increase surface area for greater
absorption
- covered by brush like microvillli which
increase surface area
SMALL INTESTINE – VILLI
Each Villi Contains:
- Blood vessels
- Lacteal (lymphatic system)
ABSORPTION IN
MICROVILLI
amino-acids cross epithelial cell layer
into blood vessels
simple sugars cross epithelial cell layer
into the blood vessels
fatty acids and glycerol cross epithelial
cell layer into lacteal
SMALL INTESTINE –
ILLIUM
same as jejunum (few and smaller villi)
final absorption of nutrients
no further digestion occurs
pushes food into the large intestine
LARGE INTESTINE
shorter and wider than small intestine
consists of several sections:
- cecum
- colon
- rectum
- anus
LARGE INTESTINE
removes water from material leaving
small intestine
hold and compact unabsorbed material
from the small intestine
LARGE INTESTINE -
PROCESS
unabsorbed material passes from the small
intestine (ileum) into the large intestine
passage into the cecum is regulated by the
ileocecal valve
cecum collects chyme from ileum
unabsorbed material moves slowly through
the colon and are reabsorbed
- water
- salts
- some vitamins
waste products of digestion are
accumulated and prepared for excretion
LARGE INTESTINE -
PROCESS
solid waste (feces/stool) passes through
the rectum (temporary storage) and exits
body through the anus
feces contains:
- 75% water
- 25% solid matter
- 30% bacteria
- 30% undigested roughage
- 20% fat
- 15% inorganic matter
- 3% protein