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The Human Digestive System

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Title: The Human Digestive System


1
The Human Digestive System
2
What is digestion?
  • The process of breaking down foods into molecules
    the cells of the body can use.
  • Where does digestion occur?

The gastrointestinal tract
(AKA- alimentary canal) Muscular tube approx. 9
meters long!
3
Organs of the Alimentary Canal and their
accessory organs
4
Mechanical vs. Chemical Digestion
  • Mechanical Digestion The physical breakdown of
    food into smaller pieces
  • Chemical Digestion Breaking the bonds in food to
    change the chemical nature of it

5
Mouth (Buccal Cavity)
  • Mechanical Digestion (mastication)
  • - Teeth break down food
  • - Tongue manipulates food against the hard
    palate (bony roof of mouth) and contains bumps
    (papillae) that provide friction for moving food
    around.
  • - The frenulum connects the tongue to the floor
    of the mouth.

6
Mouth cont.
  • Chemical Digestion
  • - Salivary glands that line the mouth produce
    saliva.
  • - Saliva moistens food particles, binds them
    together, allows tasting, helps to cleanse the
    mouth and teeth, and begins carbohydrate
    digestion.
  • - Saliva is a mixture of water, mucus and an
    enzyme called amylase (breaks down carbs).
  • - The mucus lubricates and holds the food
    together forming a ball called a bolus.
  • INTERESTING FACT
  • Halitosis results when food particles accumulate
    in the mouth and bacteria flourish. Saliva helps
    wash away these food particles.

7
Three pairs of Salivary Glands
1-1.5 L / day for digestion lubrication
(swallowing) moistening (tasting)
  • Parotid lateral side of face, anterior to ear
    watery saliva
  • Submandibular floor of mouth Sublingual
    inferior to tongue thick saliva

8
Pharynx
  • The pharynx connects the nasal and oral cavities
    with the larynx and esophagus and is divided into
    a nasopharynx (top portion), oropharynx (middle
    portion), and largyngopharynx (bottom portion).
  • Sensory receptors in the pharynx sense food,
    which triggers swallowing reflexes.

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Esophagus
  • When food is swallowed it passes the pharynx and
    into the esophagus.
  • The esophagus is a muscular tube approx. 10
    inches long.
  • What type of muscle lines the esophagus?
  • Contractions and relaxations of these muscles
    move the bolus down the esophagus. This process
    is called- PERISTALSIS
  • Peristalsis is very effective Can drink upside
    down

Peristalsis
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Cardiac Sphincter
  • Circular muscle that opens to allow food to pass
    from the esophagus into the stomach.
  • What if the cardiac sphincter doesnt work
    properly?
  • Gastroesophageal reflux disease- GERD
  • A condition in which the liquid content of the
    stomach regurgitates (backs up or refluxes) into
    the esophagus. The liquid can inflame and damage
    the lining of the esophagus. The regurgitated
    liquid usually contains acid and pepsin that are
    produced by the stomach.

13
Achalasia
  • The term achalasia means "failure to relax" and
    refers to the inability of the cardiac sphincter
    to open and let food pass into the stomach. Also,
    the muscle that lines the esophagus does not
    contract properly. As a result, patients with
    achalasia have difficulty in swallowing food.

14
StomachThe stomach is divided into the cardiac,
fundus, body, and pylorus regions.
E
CS
F
C
SI
PS
B
P
15
Stomach
  • Mechanical Digestion in Stomach
  • - The stomach is lined with smooth muscle.
    This lining is folded and the folds are called
    rugae. Smooth muscle of the stomach twists and
    turns the stomach, physically breaking down food.
  • - If the stomach is empty, then it growls. This
    is due to the sounds made by the contractions of
    the muscles.

16
A Real Stomach!!!
17
Stomach cont.
  • Chemical Digestion
  • - Innermost lining of the stomach is a mucous
    membrane that has openings called gastric pits.
  • - Gastric pits are the openings through which
    secretions are released into the stomach.
  • - These secretions (called gastric fluid)
    include mucus, pepsinogen (breaks down
    proteins), and hydrochloric acid.
  • - The mucous coating of the stomach protects it
    from the acid. If it breaks down ULCER!
  • - Food usually stays in the stomach for 3-4
    hours.
  • - The mixture produced from mechanical/chemical
    digestion is called chyme (fats, sugars,
    vitamins, minerals, and proteins).

18
Small Intestine
  • Pyloric sphincter Circular muscle that opens to
    allow chyme into the small intestine from the
    stomach. It allows approx. 5-15 ml in at a time.
  • The lengthy small intestine receives secretions
    from the pancreas and liver. The small intestine
    functions to complete digestion of the nutrients
    in chyme, absorb the products of digestion, and
    transport the remaining residues to the large
    intestine.
  • If stretched out, the small intestine is 21 feet
    long! It is held together by a thin tissue layer
    called mesentery.
  • The 3 parts of the small intestine include
  • 1st Duodenum (10 inches)
  • 2nd Jejunum (8 feet)
  • 3rd IIleum (13 feet)

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Mesentery of Small Intestine
21
Liver and Gall Bladder
  • Liver
  • - Large brownnish-red organ to the right of the
    stomach
  • - Makes bile (important in fat digestion)
  • Gall bladder
  • - Stores the bile made by the liver
  • - Bile travels from the liver to the gall
    bladder through the common hepatic duct and
    cystic duct.
  • - When chyme is present in the small intestine
    (duodenum), the gall bladder releases bile
    through the cystic duct to the common bile duct
    which dumps into the small intestine at the
    duodenum.

22
Human Digestion Small Intestine
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Gall Bladder Removal
  • Why?
  • Quick video of a removal

25
Pancreas
  • The pancreas secretes pancreatic fluid into the
    small intestine (duodenum). This helps breakdown
    the chyme.
  • Pancreatic fluid leaves the pancreas through the
    pancreatic duct. The pancreatic duct joins the
    common bile duct just before it enters the small
    intestine.

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Absorption in the Small Intestine
  • Digestion products are absorbed into the
    circulatory system through blood and lymph
    vessels.
  • The lining of the jejunum and illeum has
    extensions called villi that increase surface
    area.
  • Inside the villi are capillaries and lacteal
    (lymph vessels).
  • Fatty acids enter lacteals
  • Other substances diffuse into capillaries and
    carried to cells of the body

29
Celiac Disease
  • Celiac disease is when the small intestine lining
    (villi) is damaged and absorption of nutrients is
    hindered.
  • The damage is due to a reaction to eating gluten,
    which is found in wheat, barley, rye, and
    possibly oats.
  • The immune system incorrectly attacks villi
    because of the gluten they are absorbing.

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Large Intestine
  • Once the remaining food enters the large
    intestine, it moves toward the anus by
    contractions of the smooth muscle in the lining
    of the large intestine.
  • The large intestine consists of the cecum (pouch
    at the beginning of the large intestine), colon
    (ascending, transverse, descending, and sigmoid
    regions), the rectum, and the anal canal.
  • As the matter moves through the large intestine,
    water is absorbed into the capillaries in the
    lining. This makes the matter more solid.
  • The solid material is called feces.

32
Large Intestine
33
What is Feces??
  • Feces is composed of undigested material, water,
    electrolytes, mucus, and bacteria.
  • The color of feces is due to the action of
    bacteria on bile pigments.
  • The odor of feces is due to the action of
    bacteria.
  • What can we learn from our poop? Color, smell,
    consistency, curvature?

34
What goes in must come out!
35
Diverticulitis
  • Diverticulosis happens when pouches (diverticula
    ) form in the wall of the colon . If these
    pouches get inflamed or infected (with feces), it
    is called diverticulitis. Diverticulitis can be
    very painful.
  • Doctors aren't sure what causes diverticula in
    the colon. They think that a low-fiber diet may
    play a role. Without fiber to add bulk to the
    stool, the colon has to work harder than normal
    to push the stool forward. The pressure from this
    may cause pouches to form in weak spots along the
    colon.
  • Diverticulitis happens when feces get trapped in
    the pouches (diverticula). This allows bacteria
    to grow in the pouches. This can lead to
    inflammation or infection.

36
Facts at a Glance
  • The average person eats 3 pounds of food a day.
    That's 1,095 pounds a year!
  • An adult stomach holds 5 cups.
  • 35 million glands produce acid in the stomach.
    The acid can dissolve a razor blade in one week!
  • The body uses energy efficiently. (900 miles to
    the gallon!)

37
Our own food breakdown factory!

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Why do we need our urinary system?
  • To remove (excrete) metabolic waste from the
    bloodstream and carry it out of the body in the
    form of urine
  • Metabolism Cells breaking down compounds for
    energy
  • To regulate the water content in the body

43
Functions of the organs of the human urinary
system
  • Kidneys- Where blood is filtered and urine is
    produced
  • Ureter- Narrow tube connected to each kidney that
    carries urine to the urinary bladder
  • Urinary bladder- A muscular sac that stores urine
    and contracts to release urine
  • Urethra- The tube that carries urine from the
    bladder out of the body

44
Organs of the human urinary system
Kidney
Renal artery
Renal vein
Ureter
Urinary bladder
Urethra
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