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Digestive System

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Digestive System By the end of this class you should understand: The processes of physical and chemical digestion The route of food, nutrients and waste through the ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Digestive System


1
Digestive System
2
By the end of this class you should understand
  • The processes of physical and chemical digestion
  • The route of food, nutrients and waste through
    the body
  • The major nutrients the body requires for life
  • The major risks associated with excess and
    deficiencies of food

3
Digestive Organs
  • The digestive system is divided into two types of
    organs
  • The alimentary organs that make up the alimentary
    canal
  • Accessory organs that do not make up the
    alimentary canal
  • The alimentary canal is the tube running through
    your body

4
Alimentary Organs
  • Mouth
  • Pharynx (throat)
  • Esophagus
  • Stomach
  • Small intestine
  • Large intestine
  • Anus

5
Movement
  • Organs are moved from one to the next through a
    process called peristalsis (the pushing of food
    through the alimentary canal by smooth muscle)
  • In the esophagus, swallowing is initiated by
    skeletal muscle but completed by smooth muscle
    and qualifies as peristalsis
  • The stomach, small and large intestine all have
    peristalsis but it is much slower

6
Digestive Function
  • The digestive system has one goal only to put
    nutrients into the bloodstream so that all our
    cells can access those nutrients
  • Many excess nutrients can be stored
  • The digestive system has many preparation steps
    to prepare food for this process

7
The Most Vital Organ
  • Only one organ performs almost all the absorption
    of nutrients (excepting water) the small
    intestine
  • So called because it has a small diameter, though
    it is several meters long
  • If we drank liquids containing only single
    molecules of nutrients, we would need no other
    digestive organ!
  • This is what they inject into your blood when
    youre in a coma

8
Two Types of Digestion
  • Digestion is the process of breaking down
    nutrients so they can be absorbed
  • Undigested nutrients cannot be absorbed and pass
    through the small intestine to the large
    intestine
  • For more information, ask someone who is
    lactose-intolerant about drinking milk
  • Mechanical (physical) digestion is the chewing
    and churning of food
  • Chemical digestion is the breaking of chemical
    bonds in food

9
Mechanical Digestion
  • The mouth (chewing) and stomach (churning)
    perform mechanical digestion of food
  • The mouth accomplishes this with hard calcium
    structures called teeth and heavy muscles
    attached to the mandible chewing
  • The stomach has layers of smooth muscles that
    churn the food before it moves to the small
    intestine

10
Chemical Digestion
  • The mouth and stomach also initiate the process
    of chemical digestion
  • The mouth has salivary glands that produce
    saliva, which begins chemical digestion
  • The stomach has pepsin, an enzyme that denatures
    and breaks down protein
  • Note chemical digestion of fats does not begin
    until the small intestine

11
The Stomach
  • The stomach produces gastric juice, which
    contains pepsin as well as other chemicals
  • This includes hydrochloric acid, which makes the
    stomach environment very acid
  • The acid itself is not for digesting the food
  • Kills bacteria
  • Enables pepsin to work

12
Stomach Ulcers
  • Stomach ulcers were once thought to be caused by
    stress but are now known to be a bacterial
    infection (but stress does block the immune
    system)
  • The scientist who discovered the bacterium that
    causes ulcers was eventually awarded the Nobel
    Prize
  • No one had believed him initially so he drank a
    flask of the bacterium to gain ulcers

13
Gastric Juice
  • Gastric juice is the secretion of the stomach
  • Gastric juice is very acidic and can damage
    tissues other than the stomach lining
  • Repeated vomiting can cause gastric juice to
    erode the enamel of the teeth
  • If gastric juice is produced in excess it can
    overflow into the esophagus, causing heartburn
  • Once gastric juice mixes with and digests food it
    is called chyme

14
Processing of Chyme
  • Chyme is the partially digested food of the
    stomach mixed with acid
  • Chyme is delivered into the small intestine very
    slowly
  • Excess acid could damage the small intestine
  • Helps the intestine absorb all the nutrients
  • The small intestine has many digestive enzymes of
    its own that complete digestion

15
Accessory Organs
  • The small intestine has enzymes on its absorptive
    cells but also receives digestive juices from two
    accessory organs
  • The pancreas produces a massive battery of
    digestive enzymes to finish all digestion of food
  • Most prominent enzyme is trypsin, a protease that
    breaks down protein into amino acids
  • The liver produces bile, which is stored in the
    gallbladder until chyme enters the small
    intestine

16
Bile
  • Bile does not contain digestive enzymes and does
    not directly perform chemical digestion
  • Bile is instead an emulsifying agent, much like a
    detergent
  • To emulsify is to allow oil and water to mix
  • Bile is therefore vital for digesting and
    absorbing fats from food

17
Small Intestine Absorption
  • Since nutrients can only be absorbed through cell
    membrane, the small intestine epithelial tissue
    has adaptations for increasing surface area
  • The tissue is arranged into fingerlike villi
    (singular villus) which create more surface area
  • The individual cells have a brush border, or
    microvilli (singular microvillus)
  • These cells expend ATP to actively transport
    nutrients into the blood

18
Liver Function
  • Blood flows directly from the small intestine to
    the liver
  • This is called hepatic portal circulation
  • Protects the rest of the body from whatever you
    just ate
  • The liver has metabolic enzymes to process many
    nutrients after they are absorbed
  • Production of fat and glycogen
  • Storage of vitamins
  • Breakdown of toxins such as alcohol

19
Large Intestine
  • Once all nutrients are absorbed into the small
    intestine, the large intestine (which is mostly
    composed of a tube called the colon) carries
    remaining indigestible materials to the anus
  • The large intestine is filled with colonies of
    bacteria that feast on our leftovers (often
    producing gas as a waste product)
  • The large intestine is capable of absorbing water
    and vitamins, including those produced by bacteria

20
Vital Nutrients
  • The small intestine absorbs all the nutrients
    required for life
  • Some nutrients are required for energy and for
    building blocks for more cells and cell parts
  • Carbohydrates
  • Proteins
  • Lipids
  • Other nutrients are required for homeostasis but
    not energy
  • Water
  • Vitamins
  • Minerals

21
Carbohydrates
  • A single carbohydrate molecule is called a simple
    carbohydrate (such as glucose)
  • Starches are made of many bound together and are
    called complex carbohydrates
  • Some are more complex than others, and the more
    complex the branching, the longer the digestion
    takes
  • White starches such as white rice and pasta
    contain simpler chains
  • Complex carbs, since they break down more slowly,
    are less likely to cause blood sugar to spike

22
Proteins
  • Proteins must be broken down to the individual
    amino acids
  • The human body can synthesize many of the amino
    acids from other amino acids (so they are
    nonessential), but there are certain ones that
    cannot be synthesized
  • These are called essential amino acids
  • If even one of the essential amino acids is
    missing, the diet is incomplete and no new
    protein can be made

23
Lipids
  • There are many classes of lipids
  • Some vitamins and cholesterol are both lipids,
    but cannot be burned for energy
  • The energy-storing lipids are fatty acids, and
    these fats can be saturated or unsaturated
  • Saturated fats have no double bonds and so pack
    together more tightly than unsaturated fats
  • Treating unsaturated fats with hydrogenation can
    create trans fats, which are very difficult to
    metabolize and therefore very unhealthy

24
Vitamins and Minerals
  • Vitamins are organic compounds that serve key
    purposes in cell mechanisms but only in small
    amounts
  • Example vitamin A used to make retinal
  • Minerals are inorganic elements and compounds,
    such as sodium, potassium, calcium, iron, and
    iodine
  • Also necessary for life

25
Hopefully that wasnt too much to digest
  • Enjoy your Thanksgiving weekend!
  • See you next week for the last week of new
    lessons!
  • Tuesday Urinary system
  • Thursday Reproductive system
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