Title: Small Intestine
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3Periodontal/Gum Disease
- Periodontal/gum diseases are serious infections
that, left untreated, can lead to tooth loss - The word periodontal literally means "around the
tooth - Periodontal disease is a chronic bacterial
infection that affects the gums and bones
supporting the teeth - Periodontal disease can affect one tooth or many
teeth. It begins when the bacteria in plaque
causes the gums to become inflamed
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7Do you have gum disease???
- Do you ever have pain in your mouth?
- Do your gums ever bleed when you brush your teeth
or when you eat hard food? - Have you noticed any spaces developing between
your teeth? - Do your gums ever feel swollen or tender?
- Have you noticed that your gums are receding
(pulling back from your teeth) or your teeth
appear longer than before? - Do you have persistent bad breath?
- Have you noticed pus between your teeth and gums?
- Have you noticed any change in the way your teeth
fit together when you bite? - Do you ever develop sores in your mouth?
8How to look after your teeth
9How to Brush
Place your toothbrush next to the teeth so that
it rests on the gums forming a 45-degree angle
against the gums.
Move the toothbrush from the gums towards the
edge of teeth to move the dental plaque away from
the gum line.
After brushing, one by one tooth, all the outer
teeth surfaces do the same for the inner
surfaces.
Brush the chewing surfaces of the teeth with
horizontal moves.
10How to Floss
11Human Torso Model
Please refer to your handout of the human
digestive system
12Human Digestive System
- Alimentary Canal Associated Glands
13Alimentary Canal and Associated Glands
- Mouth
- Pharynx
- Oesophagus
- Stomach
- Small Intestine
- Large Intestine
- Anus
- Salivary Glands
- Gastric Glands
- Pancreas
- Liver
- Intestinal Glands
14Digestion
15Digestion
- Digestion is the process of breaking down large,
complex substances into smaller, simpler
molecules for absorption - Carbohydrates -gt glucose/fructose/galactose
- Proteins -gt amino acids
- Fats -gt fatty acids and glycerol
- Vitamins, minerals and water can be absorbed
directly without digestion
16Mechanical Digestion vs. Chemical Digestion
- Mechanical process
- Chewing of teeth
- Churning of stomach
- Food is changed physically but
not chemically - Increase surface area of food substances
- Chemical process
- Involves action of digestive enzymes secreted
from glands - Different types of enzymes break down different
food types
17Protease
Breaks down protein molecules
A protein molecule is made of many different
amino acids
Amino acids
18Carbohydrase
Breaks down carbohydrate molecules
A starch molecule is made of many glucose
molecules
Glucose
19Lipase
Breaks down fat molecules
Fatty acids
A fat molecule is made up of fatty acids and
glycerol molecules
20Example of Carbohydrase Amylase
- In saliva and pancreatic juice
- Helps break down starch into simple sugars in
mouth and in small intestine
21Example of Protease Pepsin
- In gastric juice
- Helps break down proteins into amino acids in
stomach
22Example Lipase
- In pancreatic juice
- Helps break down oil droplets into fatty acids
and glycerol in small intestine
23Saliva
- The taste, smell and sight of food can stimulate
salivary glands to secrete saliva into the mouth
via salivary ducts - Saliva contains water, mucus and salivary
amylase. Slightly alkaline - Water moistens and softens food
- Mucus lubricate food for swallowing
- Salivary amylase starch -gt maltose
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25Swallowing
- Food is chewed and mixed with saliva
- Tongue rolls the food into a bolus
- Food is swallowed down the oesophagus through
the pharynx - Tongue moves upwards and backwards to prevent
food from entering the trachea/nasal cavity - The soft palate moves up to block the nasal
cavity - The larynx moves upwards to so that the glottis
(the opening to the larynx) is covered by the
epiglottis to prevent food from entering the
trachea
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27Movement of Food Along the Alimentary Canal
- Inner surface of alimentary canal is lined with
one to several layers of cells epithelium - Some epithelial cells produce mucus, which acts
as a lubricant
28Peristalsis
The small intestine has two muscle layers that
work together in peristalsis and segmentation
29Peristalsis
The inner circular muscles contract, tightening
the tube and pushing the food forward in the
intestine
30Peristalsis
When the circular muscles relax, the outer
longitudinal muscles contract, and the intestinal
tube is shortened
31Peristalsis
As the circular and longitudinal muscles tighten
and relax, the food moves forward
32Stomach
- a muscular, elastic, pear-shaped bag, lying
crosswise in the abdominal cavity - food enters the stomach from the esophagus. The
connection between the stomach and the esophagus
is called the cardiac sphincter - The other end of the stomach empties into the
duodenum, the first section of the small
intestine. The pyloric sphincter separates the
stomach from the duodenum
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35Sphincter Opened
Sphincter Closed
36Functions of Stomach
- Storage
- Mechanical digestion turns food into chyme
- Chemical digestion
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38- The lining of the stomach contains deep
collections of cells organized into gastric
glands - The openings of the gastric glands into the
surface of the stomach are called gastric pits - The mucous cells in the gastric pits secrete
mucus - In the deeper part of the gland, the parietal
cells secrete hydrochloric acid - The chief cells secrete pepsinogen (an inactive
form of the protein-digesting enzyme pepsin)
39Rennin
- In young children, the gastric juice also
contains a type of protease called rennin - Rennin coagulates milk allow the proteins to
stay in stomach longer for digestion - Rennin can be used to curdle milk to make
cheese!
40Ulcer/Peptic Ulcer
- A small erosion in the gastrointestinal tract
- A weakening of the mucus coating acid erodes
the wall of the GI tract - Stomach gastric ulcer
- Small intestine duodenal ulcer
- Main cause bacterial infection
- Can be treated with antibiotics
41Small Intestine
- The small intestine is divided into 3
sections - Duodenum
- Jejunum
- Ileum
- In the small intestine, both digestion and
absorption occur
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43Bile
- Bile is a dark green fluid containing
- 1) bile salts
- 2) sodium hydrogen carbonate
- 3) bile pigments
- Bile does NOT contain digestive enzymes
- Made by the liver
- Stored in the gall bladder
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45- The gall bladder contracts to release bile into
the duodenum via the bile duct - Stimulated by the arrival of chyme in the duodenum
46Bile
- 1) Bile salts EMULSIFICATION
- Bile salts break up (emulsify) lipids into small
oil droplets - This allows enzymes to have a larger surface area
to break down the fat molecules - Lipids
Small oil droplets - Bile salts (emulsification)
47Bile
- 2) Sodium Hydrogen Carbonate NEUTRALIZATION
- It neutralizes stomach acid to provide the
necessary alkaline condition (pH 8) for the
pancreatic and intestinal enzymes to work
48The pH Scale
49The Need for Different pH Levels
- The stomach releases hydrochloric acid to provide
an acidic condition (pH1 - 2) for stomach
proteases (e.g. pepsin) to work. Acid also kills
germs - The activity of salivary amylase is stopped in
the stomach since it cannot work in acidic
conditions. Pancreatic amylase also requires an
alkaline condition to work
50The Need for Different pH Levels
- 3) The gall bladder releases bile into the
small intestine to provide an alkaline condition
(pH 8) for the pancreatic and intestinal enzymes
to work
51Bile
- 3) Bile pigments
- Waste products formed from the breakdown of old
red blood cells in the liver
52Investigation 1 Investigating the
effect of bile
salts on oil
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54Pancreas
- A yellowish organ found beneath the stomach and
is connected to the small intestine at the
duodenum - Produces pancreatic juice that flows into the
duodenum through the pancreatic duct
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57Pancreas
- Pancreatic juice contains 3 types of digestive
- enzymes
- Tryptase
- Amylase
- Lipase
- Pancreas also produces the hormones
glucagon - and insulin to regulate the level of blood
glucose
58Intestinal Juice
- Alkaline solution containing digestive enzymes,
hormones, mucus, neutralizing substances, etc. - Secreted by intestinal glands in the wall of the
duodenum - e.g. carbohydrases catalyze the breakdown of
double sugars into simple sugars
59Carbohydrase
- Maltase Maltose -gt Glucose Glucose
- 2) Sucrase Sucrose -gt Glucose Fructose
- 3) Lactase Lactose -gt Glucose Galactose
60Lactose Intolerance
- Inability to digest significant amount of
lactose, the predominant sugar of milk, due to a
shortage of the enzyme lactase - Common symptoms include nausea, cramps, bloating,
gas, and diarrhoea - The undigested lactose will serve as food for
bacteria found in the large intestine
61Digestion in Ileum
- Completion of digestion
- Food is churned by peristaltic movement and is
mixed with digestive juices - Food becomes watery fluid called chyle
- Food is now present in simplest form
62Absorption
63Absorption
- Absorption is the uptake of simple and small food
molecules from the alimentary canal into the
blood stream - Food molecules can be absorbed into blood by
diffusion or active transport - Absorption occurs in the stomach, the small
intestine and the large intestine
64Absorption in Stomach
- Food substances that are absorbed in the
- stomach
- Water
- Minerals
- Alcohol
- Simple sugars
- Water-soluble vitamins
65Absorption in Small Intestine
- Most of the digested food is absorbed in the
small intestine - The inner lining of the small intestine is folded
to provide a large surface area - The inner surface of the small intestine is made
up of a large number of finger-like projections
called villi (singular villus) - Peristalsis in the small intestine allows the
digested food to come into contact with the villi
for absorption
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70Structure of Villi
- Epithelium lining
- Blood capillaries (transportation of simple
sugars, amino acids and minerals) - Lacteal (lymph vessel)
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72Lacteal
- fatty acids and glycerol recombine in the
epithelium of the villus to form fat which then
enters the lacteal as fine fat droplets - the lymphatic system converges with the
circulatory system at a duct located in the neck
area
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77Absorption in Large Intestine
- Much of the remaining water and minerals is
absorbed in the colon - The appendix, which has no known functions, is
joined to the caecum - Appendicitis food materials trapped in the
appendix causing bacterial infection
78Caecum in Herbivores
- Do not have digestive enzymes to break down
cellulose - Rely on bacteria residing in the long caecum to
provide the enzyme cellulase - Cellulose -gt Glucose
79Investigation 2 A Model Gut
80- What does the content inside the dialysis tubing
represent? - What does the dialysis tubing represent?
- What does the water in the beaker/boiling tube
represent?
81Assimilation
82Assimilation
- the process by which absorbed food molecules in
the blood are transported to cells for the use of
growth, tissue repair and other metabolic
activities. The actual destiny of each food
molecule depends not only on its type but also on
the body requirements at that time (e.g. use
immediately or put into storage)
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85Liver
- Largest organ of the body
- Reddish brown in color
- Lies on the right side of the abdominal cavity
beneath the diaphragm - Blood is carried to the liver via two large
vessels called the hepatic artery and the hepatic
portal vein - After processing in the liver, blood leaves the
liver through the hepatic vein
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88Functions of Liver
- Carbohydrate metabolism - the liver converts
excess glucose into glycogen as a temporary way
of storing the glucose. Glycogen can also be
converted back to glucose when needed - Fat metabolism - the liver converts excess
protein and carbohydrate into fat. Excess
glycogen is stored as fat for long term storage
89Functions of Liver
- 3) Protein metabolism the liver can synthesize
new proteins/ amino acids and deaminate excess
amino acids
90Deamination
- Amino group (NH2) removed
- Ammonia (NH3) produced (toxic)
- Ammonia converted to urea excreted in urine
- Carbon skeleton converted to carbohydrates
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92Functions of Liver
- 3) Protein metabolism the liver can synthesize
new proteins/amino acids and deaminate excess
amino acids - 4) Vitamin storage - the liver stores mainly
vitamins A, D and B12 - 5) Iron storage - the liver stores iron which is
obtained from the breakdown of red blood cells.
The iron salts can be used in the formation of
new RBC
93Functions of Liver
- 6) Bile production emulsification and
neutralization - 7) Drug/Alcohol metabolism the liver changes
the drug into an excretable and harmless form
(detoxification) - 8) Disposal of bacteria - The liver filters many
bacteria, viruses, and other microorganisms from
the blood
94Egestion
95Egestion
- Faeces semi-solid, greenish brown mass
containing undigested and unabsorbed food
substances. Also contains bile pigment (hence
the color of faeces), dead RBC, cells from
intestinal wall, bacteria, etc. - Temporarily stored in rectum
- Anal sphincter relaxes to allow a person to
defaecate
96Constipation and Diarrhoea
- Peristalsis too slow
- Too much water absorbed
- Some common causes include lack of fibre in diet,
not enough liquids, lack of exercise, etc. - Lead to dry, hard faeces
- Difficulty in defaecation
- May damage wall of rectum and cause bleeding or
form piles
- Peristalsis too fast
- Too little water absorbed
- Some common causes include bacterial / viral /
parasitic infections, food intolerance, etc. - Lead to loose, watery stools
- More frequent egestion
- May cause dehydration
97Haemorrhoids
- Also referred to as piles
- Haemorrhoids are enlarged veins just under the
surface tissue of the rectum or the anus - Haemorrhoids in the rectum are called internal
haemorrhoids those that occur around the anus
are called external haemorrhoids - May cause bleeding, pain, itching and a sense of
pressure
98Haemorrhoids
- Increased pressure in the veins around the
anus is thought to be the cause of haemorrhoids - straining to pass a bowel motion because of hard,
dry stools (as in constipation) - diarrhoea
- heavy lifting
- being very overweight
- sitting or standing for long periods
- pregnancy
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