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Digestive System

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Title: Digestive System


1
Digestive System
  • Dr. Philip L. Pokorski
  • University of MichiganDearborn
  • Department of Biology

2
Digestive system
3
The Mouth
  • Lips and cheeks enclose the mouth.
  • Taste buds on the tongue provide the sense of
    taste skeletal muscle in the tongue allows it to
    move.
  • The roof of the mouth is formed by the hard and
    soft palates that separate it from the nasal
    cavities.
  • The soft palate ends in a finger-shaped
    projection called the uvula.

4
  • Tonsils at the back sides of the mouth protect
    against infections.
  • Tonsillitis results when the tonsils become
    inflamed the infection can spread to the middle
    ears.
  • Three pairs of salivary glands send saliva
    (containing salivary amylase for digestion of
    starch to maltose) into the mouth.

5
The Teeth
  • Twenty deciduous (baby) teeth are replaced by 32
    adult teeth.
  • Each tooth has a crown and a root.
  • The crown has a layer of enamel, dentin, and an
    inner pulp with nerves and blood vessels that
    extend into the root.
  • The tongue mixes the chewed food with saliva and
    then forms the mixture into a mass called a bolus
    in preparation for swallowing.

6
Adult mouth
7
Longitudinal section of a tooth
8
The Pharynx
  • The air passage and food passage cross in the
    pharynx because the trachea is ventral to the
    esophagus.
  • Swallowing occurs in the pharynx and is a reflex
    action.
  • During swallowing, the air passage is usually
    blocked off by the soft palate and uvula, and the
    trachea moves under the epiglottis to cover the
    glottis opening to the windpipe.

9
Swallowing
10
The Esophagus
  • The esophagus is a muscular tube that conducts
    food through the thoracic cavity and diaphragm
    into the stomach.
  • Peristalsis begins in the esophagus this
    collapsed tube moves the bolus of food downward
    after swallowing occurs.
  • Heartburn is a burning pain when acidic stomach
    contents enter the esophagus.

11
  • No chemical digestion occurs in the esophagus.
  • The entrance of the esophagus to the stomach is
    marked by a constriction, called a sphincter the
    sphincter must relax in order for food to enter
    the stomach.
  • The sphincter prevents food from backing up into
    the esophagus.

12
The Wall of the Digestive Tract
  • The digestive tract wall has four layers
  • Mucosa (mucous membrane secretes digestive
    enzymes and mucus),
  • Submucosa (loose connective tissue houses blood
    and lymph vessels),
  • Muscularis (two layers of smooth muscle - for
    peristalsis), and
  • Serosa (serous membrane secretes serous fluid
    to prevent sticking).

13
Wall of the digestive tract
14
The Stomach
  • The stomach expands to store food.
  • Food in the stomach is churned, mixing the food
    with gastric juices containing hydrochloric acid
    and pepsin for the digestion of protein to
    peptides.
  • Alcohol, but not food, is absorbed here.
  • In 26 hours, the soupy chyme leaves the stomach.
  • Ulcers are usually caused by a bacterial
    infection.

15
Anatomy and histology of the stomach
16
Ulcer
17
The Small Intestine
  • The small intestine, averaging about 6 meters in
    length, is small in diameter.
  • The first 25 cm is the duodenum that receives
    bile from the gallbladder and pancreatic juice
    containing pancreatic lipase and trypsin for
    digestion of protein to peptides, as well as
    lipase for digestion of fat to glycerol and fatty
    acids.
  • Pancreatic juice contains NaHCO3 that is basic
    and neutralizes the acidic chyme.

18
  • Enzymes that finish the process of digestion are
    produced by the intestinal wall.
  • Walls of the small intestine have finger-like
    projections called villi where nutrient molecules
    are absorbed into the cardiovascular and
    lymphatic systems.
  • Villi have microvilli that increase the surface
    area available for absorption.
  • The small lymphatic capillary in a villus is
    called a lacteal.

19
Anatomy of the small intestine
20
Regulation of Gastric Secretions
  • Both the nervous system and chemicals called
    hormones regulate digestive juice secretion.
  • In response to eating protein foods, the hormone
    gastrin is produced by the lower part of the
    stomach and flows through the bloodstream to
    stimulate the stomach to produce digestive juice.

21
  • The duodenal wall produces gastric inhibitory
    peptide (GIP) to inhibit gastric gland secretion.
  • The hormones secretin and cholecystokinin (CCK)
    are produced by the duodenal wall and stimulate
    the pancreas to secrete digestive juice and the
    gallbladder to release bile.
  • Acidic chyme stimulates the secretion of
    secretin, while fatty chyme with protein triggers
    CCK release.

22
Hormonal control of digestive gland secretions
23
The Large Intestine
  • The large intestine consists of the cecum, colon,
    rectum and anal canal.
  • The large intestine does not produce digestive
    enzymes but does absorb water, salts, and some
    vitamins.
  • The colon includes the ascending colon, the
    transverse colon, the descending colon, and the
    sigmoid colon.

24
  • The appendix is an extension of the cecum.
  • Indigestible material is stored in the rectum
    until the anus allows defecation.
  • Anaerobic bacteria in the feces break down
    indigestible material and produce some vitamins.
  • Water tests that show the presence of the
    bacterium Escherichia coli indicate water is
    contaminated.

25
  • Polyps are small growths arising from the
    epithelial lining that may be benign or
    cancerous.
  • Diarrhea and constipation are two common
    complaints of the large intestine.
  • Causes of diarrhea include infection of the lower
    tract and nervous stimulation, both moving feces
    more rapidly than normal, but also causing
    dehydration if prolonged.

26
  • Water and fiber in the diet can prevent
    constipation where the feces become too dry and
    hard.
  • Hemorrhoids are enlarged and inflamed blood
    vessels at the anus this condition is associated
    with chronic constipation.
  • Regular elimination reduces the time the colon
    wall is exposed to cancer-promoting agents in the
    feces and may help prevent cancer.

27
The Pancreas
  • The pancreas produces pancreatic juice, which
    contains digestive enzymes for carbohydrate
    (pancreatic amylase), protein (trypsin), and fat
    (lipase), along with sodium bicarbonate (NaHCO3)
    to neutralize acid in chyme.
  • The pancreas is also an endocrine gland that
    secretes insulin and glucagon, hormones that keep
    blood glucose within normal limits.

28
The Liver
  • The liver produces bile, which is stored in the
    gallbladder.
  • Bile emulsifies fats it is a yellowish-green
    substance containing bilirubin from hemoglobin
    breakdown and bile salts derived from
    cholesterol.
  • The liver acts as gatekeeper to the blood and
    receives blood from the small intestine by way of
    the hepatic portal vein.

29
Hepatic lobules
30
  • The functions of the liver are many
  • detoxifies blood,
  • stores iron and vitamins,
  • makes plasma proteins,
  • stores glucose as glycogen,
  • produces urea from amino acids,
  • removes bilirubin after dismantling blood cells,
    and
  • regulates blood cholesterol level when producing
    bile salts.

31
Hepatic portal system
32
Liver Disorders
  • When a person has a liver disorder, jaundice may
    occur.
  • Jaundice is a yellowish tint to eyes and skin,
    indicating abnormal levels of blood bilirubin.
  • Hepatitis is inflammation of the liver different
    strains of virus cause hepatitis A, B, etc.
  • Cirrhosis is scar tissue that can form when the
    liver is diseased or killed by exposure to
    alcohol.

33
The Gallbladder
  • The gallbladder is a pear-shaped muscular organ
    that stores bile until it is sent to the
    duodenum.
  • Water is reabsorbed in the gallbladder making
    the bile thick and mucus-like.
  • Bile enters the duodenum via the common bile
    duct.
  • Gallstones are crystals of cholesterol.

34
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35
Vitamins
  • Vitamins are organic compounds that the body
    cannot produce but needs for metabolic purposes
    some are portions of coenzymes.
  • Vitamins A, E, and C are antioxidants that
    protect cell contents from damage due to free
    radicals.
  • Free radicals donate an electron to DNA,
    proteins, enzymes, membranes, etc. and can damage
    cell structures or cause cancer.

36
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38
  • Vitamin D
  • A precursor molecule in skin is converted to
    vitamin D after exposure to ultraviolet (UV)
    light.
  • Vitamin D is modified first in the kidneys and
    then the liver until it becomes calcitriol, which
    is needed for calcium absorption in intestines.
  • In the U.S., milk is often fortified by vitamin
    D.
  • Vitamin D is a fat-soluble vitamin.

39
Minerals
  • The body contains more than 5 grams of each major
    minerals and less than 5 grams of each trace
    minerals.
  • Calcium and phosphorus are in bones and teeth.
  • Potassium and sodium are involved in nerve
    conduction.
  • Trace minerals are critical in various enzymes
    and hormones.

40
  • Calcium
  • Calcium is needed to have strong bones.
  • Older women in particular are at risk for
    osteoporosis, a degenerative bone disease due to
    insufficient intake of calcium because bone cells
    are constantly building and eroding bone tissue.
  • Calcium supplement with vitamin D (and also
    estrogen for women) can help prevent this bone
    loss.

41
  • Sodium
  • Most Americans have too much salt in their diet.
  • High sodium intake is linked to hypertension in
    some persons.
  • About one-third of the sodium we consume occurs
    naturally in foods another one-third is added
    during commercial processing and the final
    one-third is added during cooking or at the table
    in the form of table salt.

42
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