Title: Digestion and Nutrition
1Digestion and Nutrition
2Nutrition
- Living organisms need food
- All food contains nutrients
- Nutrients are substances that provide the energy
and materials needed for growth, repair and
maintenance of cells and regulation - Nutrition is the process by which organisms get
food and break it down so it can be used
3- Nutrients include
- Proteins
- CHO (carbohydrates)
- Fats
- Vitamins
- Minerals
- Water
- Water and minerals are inorganic nutrients which
must be obtained from the environment - Minerals are chemical elements that organisms
need for normal functioning
4- Plants absorb minerals from soil
- Animals obtain minerals by eating plants or by
eating other animals that have eaten plants - Organic nutrients include essential organic
compounds (contain C and occur naturally only in
living organisms or in their products)
5- Organisms get needed organic nutrients in 2 basic
ways - 1. Synthesizing or making their own nutrients
from simple inorganic substances - 2. Ingest or take in food containing organic
nutrients form other plants or animals
6- Green plants and algae are examples of autotrophs
(organisms that synthesize their own nutrients) - Most autotrophs are photosynthetic or use energy
from sunlight and CO2 and H2O from the
environment to make their own food - They are called phototrophs
- Chemotrophs are organisms that synthesize their
nutrients through chemical reactions
7- Heterotrophs are the organisms that cannot make
their own organic nutrients - Heterotrophs include all animals and certain
types of microorganisms
8Energy Content of Food
- Energy is provided by the chemical breakdown of
CHO, fats and proteins - The calorie is the unit used to measure energy
content of food - Calorie is defined as the amount of heat needed
to raise the temperature of 1 gram of water 1oC
9- Humans need the 6 basic nutrients
- These nutrients are obtained by eating a healthy
diet from the 4 major food groups - Grains and grain products (G GP)
- Dairy and dairy products (D DP)
- Fruits and vegetables (F V)
- Meats and alternates (M A)
10- Along with the 6 nutrients, humans need fibre
- Fibre is made of cellulose and other indigestible
materials found in the cell walls of fruits,
vegetables and grains - Fibre stimulates the muscles of the digestive
system to keep foods moving through it
11Digestion Absorption
12I love apples
13Digestion and Absorption
- Digestion is the chemical process by which food
molecules are broken down into simpler compounds - Digestions allows for nutrients to be absorbed or
pass through the cell membrane - In many organisms, pieces of food are first cut,
crushed or broken down w/o being changed
chemically
14www.teachnet.ie/farmnet/ images/Digest3.gif
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16The Mouth and the Pharynx
- Food enters the body through the mouth
- Mechanical and chemical digestions occurs here
- Mechanical digestion involves biting food with
teeth and ground into small pieces that can be
swallowed - The tongue moves and shapes the food around the
mouth
17- Chemical digestion involves the incorporation of
saliva from the salivary glands - 2 types of saliva
- Thin, watery secretion wets the food
- Thicker, mucous secretion that acts as a
lubricant and causes the food particles to stick
together to form a bolus (food mass) - Saliva contains a digestive enzyme called
salivary amylase which breaks down starch
(polysaccharide) into a disaccharide
18- Once food is chewed, it is pushed by the tongue
to the back of the throat or pharynx - An automatic swallowing reflex occurs which
forces food into the esophagus (a tube leading to
the stomach) - The epiglottis is flap of tissue that closes off
the larynx and trachea to the lungs
19www.sirinet.net
20The Esophagus
- Food passes from the pharynx to the stomach via a
tube called the esophagus - The movement of food down the digestive tube is
aided by alternate waves of relaxation and
contraction of the muscular walls - This is called peristalsis
- The muscles in the front of the food mass relax,
while those behind the food mass contract,
pushing food forward
21- Food passes down the esophagus and into the
stomach - Where the esophagus and stomach meet is a ring of
muscle called the cardiac sphincter - This muscle ring acts as a valve that controls
the passage of food into the stomach - Peristalsis moves down the esophagus, reaches the
cardiac sphincter and causes it to relax and open
to allow food in
22www.emc.maricopa.edu
23The Stomach
- The stomach is a thick-walled, muscular sac where
food is stored temporarily - The mechanical breakdown of food and partial
digestion of proteins occur here - Food is broken down mechanically by contractions
of the muscular stomach walls - Food is churned and mixed with acidic gastric
juice secreted by glands in the stomach wall
24www.yourdictionary.com/images/ahd/jpg/A4stomac.jpg
25- The lining of the stomach contains 2 types of
glands - Pyloric glands- secrete mucus which covers the
stomach lining and protects it from being
digested - Gastric glands- secrete gastric juice which has a
pH of 1.5 2.5 (due to its high HCl) - HCl kills most of the bacteria swallowed in food
- Gastric juice also contains pepsin, a digestive
enzyme, that breaks down proteins into short
chains of amino acids call polypeptides
26- The salivary amylase, released in the mouth,
continues to digest starches in the stomach - Eventually, the low pH of the acid in the stomach
inactivates the enzyme and starch breakdown stops - When the stomach is empty, there is little
gastric juice present - When food is eaten, the flow of gastric juice
increases
27- The stimulation of the gastric juice involves 3
mechanisms - 1) Thought, sight, smell, or taste of food
- 2) Food touching the lining of the stomach
- 3) Food enters the stomach and stretches the
stomach wall - The stretching stimulates the lining of the
stomach to secrete a hormone called gastrin which
stimulates the gastric glands in the stomach
28- Liquids pass through the stomach in 20 minutes or
less - Solids must be turned into chyme, a thin, soupy
liquid - The chyme passes in small amounts at a time
through the pyloric sphincter, the ring of muscle
that connects the stomach to the small intestine - The stomach will empty 2-6 hours after a meal
- Hunger is felt when an empty stomach is churning
29- Stomach ulcers develop when the thick mucous
layer that protects the stomach wall breaks down - This exposed area will be digested
- Pain will occur when the hydrochloric acid comes
into contact with the exposed stomach wall - Ulcers may be caused by the over secretion of
gastric juices, brought on by stress or
nervousness - Ulcers can be treated through diet, medication or
surgery
30digestive.niddk.nih.gov
31www.gihealth.com
32www.cnn.com
33my.webmd.com/hw/health_ guide_atoz/zm2266.asp
Small intestine                             Â
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34The Small Intestine (S.I.)
- About 6.5 metres long 2.5 cm in diameter
- Food leaves the stomach through the pyloric
sphincter - S.I. consists of 3 parts
- Duodenum (shortest of the 3 sections- 25 cm)
- Jejunum
- Ilium
35- Most chemical digestions takes place in the S.I.
- Following digestion, simple sugars, amino acids,
vitamins, minerals and other substances are
absorbed - Absorption takes place through the wall of the
small intestine into the blood vessels of the
circulatory system - Fatty acids and glycerol are absorbed into the
lacteals, vessels of the lymphatic system - (collects excess fluid from intercellular spaces
in the body and returns them to the blood)
36- Many factors allow the S.I. to be well suited for
absorption - Very long
- Lining has many folds
- Lining is covered with millions of finger-like
projections called villi - Epithelial cells that make up the intestinal
lining have brush borders - Brush borders are the cells face into the
intestinal opening which have miro-villi
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38- Within the centre of each villus is the lacteal,
surrounded by blood vessels - Epithelial cells with microvilli cover each
villus - During absorption, nutrients pass through the
epithelial cells and enter the capillaries or the
lacteal - Absorption involves both diffusion and active
transport
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40- The S.I. is in constant motion when food is
present - These peristaltic movements have four main
effects - They squeeze chyme through the intestine
- They mix the chyme with the digestive enzymes
present in the small intestine - They break down food particles mechanically
- They speed up absorption of digestive end
products by bringing the intestinal contents into
contact with them intestinal wall
41- Fluids in the S.I. are mostly alkaline
- Chyme is mixed with
- pancreatic juice (pancreas)
- bile (liver)
- intestinal juice (from the glands in the wall of
the intestine) - These 3 secretions contain the enzymes and other
substances necessary to complete digestion
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43- Pancreatic Juice
- The hormones secretin and cholecystokinin are
secreted when acid chyme enters the S.I. - The hormones stimulate the pancreas to secrete
pancreatic juice and pancreatic enzymes - Pancreatic juice will pass through the pancreatic
duct to the upper part of the S.I. - Sodium bicarbonate is found in the pancreatic
juice and it neutralizes the acidic chyme and
makes the pH of the S.I. alkaline
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45- Bile
- Cells of the liver produce bile and is stored in
the gallbladder - Bile is released when stimulated by the hormone
cholecystikinin - Bile passes through the bile duct into the upper
part of the small intestine - Bile is alkaline and aids in neutralizing acidic
chyme
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47- Intestinal Juice (I.J.)
- I.J. is secreted from the millions of intestinal
glands located in the wall of the S.I. - I.J. contains enzymes peptidase and maltase
- These complete the digestion of CHO, fats and
proteins - Page 166, Figure 8-17- Secretions of the HDS
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49Large intestine                             Â
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50The Large Intestine (L.I.)
- Undigested and unabsorbed materials pass from the
S.I. through a sphincter into the L.I. - The L.I. is about 1.5 metres long and 6 cm in
diameter - Digestion does not occur here, but most of the
water reabsorption from food mass does
51- Water is mixed with food as it moves through the
digestive system - Normally, ¾ of the water is reabsorbed
- Reabsorption in the L.I. allows the body to
conserve water - Too little water absorbed diarrhea
- Too much water absorbed constipation
52- L.I. also absorbs vitamins produced by intestinal
bacteria living in the L.I. - Intestinal bacteria live on undigested food
- The vitamins are absorbed with the water from the
food mass - Antibiotics can kill the intestinal bacteria
which can lead in vitamin deficiencies
53- The L.I. is important in the removal or
undigested and indigestible material from the
digestive tract - Ex. Cellulose, large quantities of bacteria,
bile, mucus, worn-out cells from the digestive
tract - This material becomes feces or stool
- Poo is stored in the last part of the L.I.,
rectum and passed through the anus