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Digestive System

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Title: Digestive System


1
Chapter 24
  • Digestive System

2
Digestive System Anatomy
  • Digestive tract also called alimentary tract or
    canal
  • GI tract technically refers to stomach and
    intestines
  • Accessory organs
  • Primarily glands, secrete fluids into tract
  • Regions
  • Mouth or oral cavity with salivary glands and
    tonsils
  • Pharynx (throat) with tubular mucous glands
  • Esophagus with tubular mucous glands
  • Stomach with many different kinds of glands that
    are tubular
  • Small intestine (duodenum, ileum, jejunum) with
    liver, gallbladder and pancreas as major
    accessory organs
  • Large intestine including cecum, colon, rectum
    and anal canal with mucous glands
  • Anus

3
Functions
  1. Ingestion introduction of food into stomach
  2. Mastication chewing. Chemical digestion requires
    large surface area so breaking down large
    particles mechanically facilitates chemical
    digestion.
  • 3. Propulsion (movement of food-----24-36 hours
    oral end to anal end)
  • Deglutition swallowing (oral cavity -gt
    esophagus) (bolus mass of food or liquid)
  • Peristalsis moves material through digestive
    tract . A wave of circular smooth muscle
    relaxation moves ahead of the bolus of food or
    chyme allowing the digestive tract to expand.
    Then a wave of contraction of the circular smooth
    muscles behind the bolus of food or chyme
    (ingested food stomach secretions) propels it
    through the digestive tract.
  • Mass movements in large intestine (contractions
    that extend for larger parts of digestive tract)

4
4. Mixing Segmental contractions ( mixing
contractions that occur in small intestine.
-Some contractions do not propel food from one
end of digestive tract to the other but, rather,
move it back forth within digestive tract to
mix it with digestive secretions help break it
into smaller pieces)
5
Functions, cont.
  • 5. Secretion lubricate, liquefy, digest
  • Mucus secreted along entire digestive tract,
    lubricates food and lining, coats lining and
    protects from mechanical digestion, from acid and
    from digestive enzymes.
  • Water liquefaction makes food easier to digest
    and absorb
  • Bile emulsifies fats
  • Enzymes chemical digestion
  • 6. Digestion Mechanical and chemical
  • 7. Absorption Movement from tract into
    circulation or lymph
  • 8. Elimination Waste products removed from body
    feces. Defecation

6
Digestive Tract Histology The Tunics
  • Mucosa. Innermost layer, consisting of mucous
    epithelium (stratified squamous in mouth,
    oropharynx, esophagus and anal canal), simple
    columnar epithelium in the rest of the tract.
  • Loose connective tissue lamina propria
  • Muscularis mucosae smooth muscle
  • Submucosa. Thick C.T. layer with nerves, blood
    vessels, small glands. Parasympathetic submucosal
    plexus.

7
Digestive Tract Histology The Tunics
  • Muscularis 2 or 3 layers of smooth muscle, two
    of which are circular and longitudinal.
    Exception esophagus where the upper 1/3 is
    striated stomach. This layer also contains the
    myenteric plexus. The myenteric and submucosal
    plexi together are called the enteric or
    intramural plexus. Important in control of
    movement and secretion
  • Serosa or adventitia Connective tissue. Where
    serosa is present, called visceral peritoneum.
    Where adventitia is present, connective tissue
    blends with connective tissue of surrounding
    structures

8
Digestive System Regulation
  • Nervous regulation
  • Local enteric nervous system
  • Types of neurons sensory, motor, interneurons
  • Coordinates peristalsis and regulates local
    reflexes
  • General coordination with the CNS. May initiate
    reflexes because of sight, smell, or taste of
    food. Parasympathetic primarily (through vagas
    nerve). Sympathetic input inhibits muscle
    contraction, secretion, and decrease of blood
    flow to the digestive tract.
  • Chemical regulation
  • Production of hormones to be discussed later
  • Gastrin, secretin
  • Production of paracrine chemicals like histamine
  • Help local reflexes in ENS control the conditions
    of the internal environment of the digestive
    tract such as pH levels

9
Peritoneum and Mesenteries
  • Peritoneum
  • Visceral Covers organs
  • Parietal Covers interior surface of body wall
  • Retroperitoneal Certain organs covered by
    peritoneum on only one surface and are considered
    behind the peritoneum (lie against abdominal
    wall) e.g., kidneys, pancreas, duodenum
  • Mesenteries two layers of peritoneum with thin
    layer of loose C.T. between
  • Routes by which vessels and nerves pass from body
    wall to organs
  • Greater omentum connects greater curvature of
    the stomach to the transverse colon (extends
    inferiorly from stomach over surface of small
    intestine).
  • Lesser omentum connects lesser curvature of the
    stomach and the proximal part of the duodenum to
    the liver and diaphragm.
  • Transverse mesocolon, sigmoid mesocolon,
    mesoappendix (mesentery refers to serous
    membranes attached to abdominal organs).
  • Ligaments
  • Coronary between liver and diaphragm
  • Falciform between liver and anterior abdominal
    wall

10
Oral Cavity
  • Bounded by lips anteriorly, fauces (opening into
    pharynx) posteriorly
  • Vestibule space between lip/cheeks and alveolar
    processes with teeth
  • Oral cavity proper medial to alveolar processes
  • Lined with moist stratified squamous epithelium

11
Lips and Cheeks
  • Both structures important in mastication and
    speech
  • Lips (labia) orbicularis oris muscle within.
    Keratinized stratified squamous exterior is thin
    and color of blood in dermis gives a red/pink
    color.
  • Labial frenula (mucous folds) extend from
    alveolar processes of maxilla and mandible to the
    upper and lower lips, respectively.
  • Many facial muscles act to move lips
  • Cheeks lateral walls of oral cavity
  • Buccinator muscle
  • Buccal fat pad

12
Palate and Palatine Tonsils
  • Palate
  • Hard palate anterior, supported by maxilla and
    palatine bone
  • Soft palate posterior, consists of skeletal
    muscle and connective tissue
  • Uvula projects from posterior of soft palate
  • Palatine tonsils lateral walls of fauces

13
Tongue
  • Muscular with free anterior surface and attached
    posterior surface. Covered with moist stratified
    squamous epithelium.
  • Intrinsic muscles change shape
  • Extrinsic muscles protrude or retract tongue,
    move side to side
  • Lingual frenulum attaches tongue inferiorly to
    floor of oral cavity
  • Terminal sulcus groove divides tongue into
    anterior 2/3 posterior 1/3
  • Anterior part papillae, some of which have taste
    buds
  • Posterior part no papillae and a few scattered
    taste buds. Lymphoid tissue embedded in posterior
    surface lingual tonsil
  • Moves food in mouth, participates in speech and
    swallowing

14
Teeth
  • Two sets
  • Primary, deciduous, milk Lost during childhood
  • Permanent or secondary Adult (32)
  • Types
  • Incisors, canines, premolars and molars

15
Teeth
  • Involved in mastication and speech
  • Anatomic crown enamel-covered part of tooth
    clinical crown is section of tooth above gum line
  • Neck enameled part of tooth below gum line
  • Enamel outermost layer of anatomical crown.
    Non-living acellular. Protective.
  • Dentin living, cellular, calcified tissue. In
    the root, dentin is covered by cellular bone-like
    structure that helps hold tooth in the socket.
  • Pulp cavity filled with blood vessels, nerves,
    and connective tissue
  • Periodontal ligaments hold tooth in socket.
  • Gingiva dense, fibrous C.T. covered by
    stratified squamous epithelium.

16
Mastication
  • Chewing incisors and canines bite or cut off
    food molar-type teeth grind food
  • Muscles involved masseter, temporalis, medial
    and lateral pterygoids.
  • Elevate mandible (close jaw) temporalis,
    masseter, medial pterygoids
  • Depress mandible (open jaw) lateral pterygoids
  • Protraction (moving in anterior direction) and
    lateral and medial excursion (lateral moves
    mandible to either right or left of
    midline--------medial returns mandible to
    neutral position) pterygoids and masseter
  • Retraction (moves structure back to anatomical
    position)- temporalis
  • Mastication reflex medulla oblongata, but
    descending pathways from cerebrum provide
    conscious control. Controls basic movements
    involved in chewing

17
Salivary Glands
  • Three pairs of multicellular glands
  • Parotid largest. Serous. Just anterior to the
    ear. Parotid duct crosses over masseter,
    penetrates buccinator, and enters the oral cavity
    adjacent to the 2nd upper molar
  • Submandibular mixed, but more serous than
    mucous. Posterior half of inferior border of
    mandible. Duct enters oral cavity on either side
    of lingual frenulum
  • Sublingual smallest. Mixed, but primarily
    mucous. Each has 10-12 ducts that enter the floor
    of the oral cavity.
  • Lingual glands. Small, coiled tubular glands on
    surface of tongue.

18
Saliva
  • Compound alveolar salivary glands. Produce saliva
  • Prevents bacterial infection
  • Lubrication
  • Contains salivary amylase that breaks down starch
    into disaccharides maltose and isomaltose (gives
    starch sweet taste in mouth).
  • Helps to form bolus for swallowing
  • Parasympathetic input causes salivary production

19
Pharynx and Esophagus
  • Pharynx
  • Posterior walls of oropharynx and laryngopharynx
    contains group of muscles called pharyngeal
    constrictors that contribute to swallowing
  • Esophagus
  • Transports food from pharynx to stomach
  • Passes through esophageal hiatus (opening) of
    diaphragm and ends at stomach
  • Hiatal hernia widening of hiatus (causes ulcers,
    acid reflux)
  • Sphincters
  • Upper. Striated
  • Lower. Smooth
  • Mucosa is moist stratified squamous epithelium.
    Produces thick layer of mucus.

20
Swallowing (Deglutition)
  • Three phases
  • Voluntary bolus of food moved by tongue from
    oral cavity to pharynx.
  • Pharyngeal reflex. Controlled by swallowing
    center in medulla oblongata. Soft palate
    elevates, upper esophageal sphincter relaxes,
    elevated pharynx opens the esophagus, food pushed
    into esophagus by pharyngeal constrictors
    successive contraction from superior to inferior.
    Epiglottis is tipped posteriorly due to pressure
    of the bolus, larynx elevated to prevent food
    from passing into larynx.
  • Esophageal reflex. Stretching of esophagus
    causes enteric NS to initiate peristalsis of
    muscles in the esophagus.

21
Three Phases of Swallowing
22
Stomach Anatomy
  • Openings
  • Gastroesophageal (cardiac) to esophagus
  • Pyloric to duodenum
  • Parts
  • Cardiac
  • Fundus
  • Body
  • Pyloric antrum and canal
  • Greater and lesser curvatures attachment sites
    for omenta
  • Sphincters
  • Cardiac (lower esophageal)
  • Pyloric

23
Stomach Histology
  • Layers
  • Serosa or visceral peritoneum
  • Muscularis three layers
  • Outer longitudinal
  • Middle circular
  • Inner oblique (Having a slanting or sloping
    direction)
  • Submucosa
  • Mucosa
  • Rugae folds in stomach when empty. Mucosa and
    submucosa.

24
Stomach Histology
  • Gastric pits openings for gastric glands. Lined
    with simple columnar epithelium
  • Cells of gastric pits
  • Surface mucus mucus that protects stomach lining
    from acid and digestive enzymes
  • Mucous neck mucus
  • Parietal hydrochloric acid and intrinsic factor
  • Chief pepsinogen
  • Endocrine regulatory hormones
  • Enterochromaffin-like cells secretes histamine
    that stimulates acid secretion
  • Gastrin-containing cells secrete gastrin (a
    hormone that stimulates acid secretion)
  • Somatostatin-containing cells secrete
    somatostatin that inhibits gastrin and insulin
    secretion

25
Secretions of the Stomach
  • Chyme ingested food plus stomach secretions
  • Mucus surface and neck mucous cells
  • Viscous and alkaline
  • Protects from acidic chyme and enzyme pepsin
  • Irritation of stomach mucosa causes greater mucus
  • Intrinsic factor parietal cells. Binds with
    vitamin B12 and helps it to be absorbed in the
    ileum. B12 necessary for DNA synthesis and RBC
    production (lack of B12 absorption leads to
    pernicious anemia)
  • HCl parietal cells
  • Kills bacteria (found in ingested food)
  • Stops carbohydrate digestion by inactivating
    salivary amylase
  • Denatures proteins
  • Helps convert pepsinogen to pepsin (optimal
    activity at pH 3 or less)
  • Pepsinogen packaged in zymogen granules released
    by exocytosis. Pepsin catalyzes breaking of
    covalent bonds in proteins (breaks them into
    smaller peptide chains)

26
Hydrochloric Acid Production
27
Cephalic Phase
  • The taste or smell of food, tactile sensations of
    food in the mouth, or even thoughts of food
    stimulate the medulla oblongata.
  • Parasympathetic action potentials are carried by
    the vagus nerves to the stomach, where enteric
    plexusneurons are activated.
  • Postganglionic neurons stimulate secretion by
    parietal and chief cells (HCl and pepsin) and
    stimulate the secretion of the hormone gastrin
    and histamine.
  • Gastrin is carried through the circulation back
    to the stomach where it and histamine stimulate
    further secretion of HCl and pepsin.

28
Gastric Phase
  • Distention of the stomach activates a
    parasympathetic reflex. Action potentials are
    carried by the vagus nerves tothe medulla
    oblongata.
  • Medulla oblongata stimulates further secretions
    of the stomach.
  • Distention also stimulates local reflexes that
    amplify stomach secretions.

29
Intestinal Phase
  1. Chyme in the duodenum with a pH less than 2 or
    containing lipids inhibits gastric secretions by
    three mechanisms
  2. Sensory input to the medulla from the duodenum
    inhibits the motor input from the medulla to the
    stomach. Stops secretion of pepsin and HCl.
  3. Local reflexes inhibit gastric secretion
  4. Secretin, and cholecystokinin produced by the
    duodenum decrease gastric secretions in the
    stomach.

30
Movements in Stomach
  • Combination of mixing waves (80) and peristaltic
    waves (20)
  • Both esophageal and pyloric sphincters are
    closed.

31
Small Intestine
  • Site of greatest amount of digestion and
    absorption of nutrients and water
  • Divisions
  • Duodenum- first 25 cm beyond the pyloric
    sphincter.
  • Jejunum- 2.5 m
  • Ileum- 3.5 m. Peyers patches or lymph nodules

32
Duodenum
  • Curves to the left head of pancreas in the curve
  • Major and minor duodenal papillae openings to
    ducts from liver and/or pancreas.

33
Modifications to Increase Surface Area
  • Increase surface area 600 fold
  • Plicae circulares (circular folds)
  • Villi that contain capillaries and lacteals.
    Folds of the mucosa
  • Microvilli folds of cell membranes of absorptive
    cells

34
Mucosa and Submucosa of the Duodenum
  • Cells and glands of the mucosa
  • Absorptive cells cells with microvilli, produce
    digestive enzymes and absorb digested food
  • Goblet cells produce protective mucus
  • Endocrine cells produce regulatory hormones
    (Secretin, and cholecystokinin)
  • Granular cells (paneth cells) may help protect
    from bacteria (contain lysozymes)
  • Intestinal glands (crypts of Lieberkühn) tubular
    glands in mucosa at bases of villi secrete
    sucrase ,maltase, trypsin, chymotrypsin, and
    pepsin (endopeptidases and exopeptidases)
  • Duodenal glands (Brunners glands) tubular
    mucous glands of the submucosa. Open into
    intestinal glands produce a mucus-rich alkaline
    secretion (containing bicarbonate)

35
Jejunum and Ileum
  • Gradual decrease in diameter, thickness of
    intestinal wall, number of circular fold, and
    number of villi the farther away from the stomach
  • Major site of nutrient absorption
  • Peyers patches lymphatic nodules numerous in
    mucosa and submucosa
  • Ileocecal junction where ileum meets large
    intestine. Ileocecal sphincter (ring of smooth
    muscle) and ileocecal valve (one-way valve)

36
Small Intestine Secretions
  • Fluid primarily composed of water, electrolytes
    and mucus.
  • Mucus
  • Protects against digestive enzymes and stomach
    acids
  • Digestive enzymes bound to the membranes of the
    absorptive cells
  • Disaccharidases Break down disaccharides to
    monosaccharides
  • Peptidases Hydrolyze peptide bonds
  • Nucleases Break down nucleic acids
  • Duodenal glands
  • Stimulated by vagus nerve, secretin, chemical or
    tactile irritation of duodenal mucosa

37
Movement in Small Intestine
  • Mixing and propulsion over short distances
  • Segmental contractions mix
  • Peristalsis propels
  • Ileocecal sphincter remains slightly contracted
    until peristaltic waves reach it it relaxes,
    allowing chyme to move into cecum
  • Cecal distention causes local reflex and
    ileocecal valve constricts
  • Prevents more chyme from entering cecum
  • Increases digestion and absorption in small
    intestine by slowing progress of chyme
  • Prevents backflow

38
Liver
  • Lobes
  • Major Left and right
  • Minor Caudate and quadrate
  • Porta on inferior surface. Vessels, ducts,
    nerves, exit/enter liver
  • Hepatic portal vein, hepatic artery, hepatic
    nerve plexus enter
  • Lymphatic vessels, two hepatic ducts exit
  • Ducts
  • Right and left hepatics (which transport bile out
    of liver) unite to form
  • Common hepatic
  • Cystic from gallbladder
  • Common bile union of cystic duct and common
    hepatic duct (common bile joins the pancreatic
    duct at the hepatopancreatic ampulla------ampulla
    empties into duodenum at major duodenum papilla)

39
Liver, Gallbladder, Pancreas and Ducts
40
Histology of the Liver
  • Connective tissue septa branch from the porta
    into the interior
  • Divides liver into lobules
  • Nerves, vessels and ducts follow the septa
  • Lobules portal triad at each corner
  • Three vessels hepatic portal vein, hepatic
    artery, hepatic duct
  • Central vein in center of lobule
  • Central veins unite to form hepatic veins that
    exit liver and empty into inferior vena cava

41
Liver Histology
  • Hepatic cords radiate out from central vein.
    Composed of hepatocytes
  • Hepatic sinusoids between cords, lined with
    endothelial cells and hepatic phagocytic
    (Kupffer) cells
  • Bile canaliculus between cells within cords
  • Hepatocyte functions
  • Bile production
  • Storage
  • Interconversion of nutrients
  • Detoxification
  • Phagocytosis
  • Synthesis of blood components

42
Functions of the Liver
  • Bile production 600-1000 mL/day. Bile salts,
    bilirubin (bile pigment that results from
    breakdown of hemoglobin), cholesterol, fats,
    fat-soluble hormones, lecithin
  • Neutralizes and dilutes stomach acid (neutralizes
    chyme so that pancreatic enzymes can function)
  • Bile salts emulsify fats. Most are reabsorbed in
    the ileum. (90 bile salts reabsorbed in the
    ileum carried back to liver)
  • Secretin (from the duodenum) stimulates bile
    secretions, increasing water and bicarbonate ion
    content of the bile
  • Storage
  • Glycogen, fat, vitamins (A, B12, D, E, and K),
    copper and iron. Hepatic portal blood comes to
    liver from small intestine (nutrients are stored
    and secreted back into circulation when needed)
  • Synthesis
  • Blood proteins Albumins, fibrinogen, globulins,
    heparin, clotting factors (liver produces its own
    new compounds)

43
Functions of the Liver
  • Nutrient interconversion
  • Amino acids to energy producing compounds (ex
    person on a excessively high protein diet and low
    fat carb diet----------an oversupply of amino
    acids an undersupply of lipids carbs are
    delivered to the liver. The hepatocytes break
    down the amino acids and cycle them through
    metabolic pathways so they can be used to produce
    adenosine triphosphate, lipids, and glucose)
  • Hydroxylation of vitamin D. Vitamin D then
    travels to kidney where it is hydroxylated again
    into its active form
  • Hepatocytes also transform substances that cannot
    be used by most cells into usable sunstances.
    (ex ingested fats combined with choline
    nutrient in B vitamin family phosphorous in
    liver to produce phospholipids, which are imp.
    for cell membranes)
  • Detoxification
  • Hepatocytes remove ammonia (by-product of amino
    acid metabolism) which is toxic not readily
    removed by kidneys. Hepatocytes convert it to
    urea which is less toxic and easily eliminated by
    kidneys.
  • Phagocytosis
  • Kupffer cells phagocytize worn-out and dying red
    and white blood cells, some bacteria

44
Blood and Bile Flow Through the Liver
45
Gallbladder
  • Sac lined with mucosa folded into rugae, inner
    muscularis, outer serosa
  • Bile arrives constantly from liver is stored and
    concentrated
  • Stimulated by cholecystokinin (from the
    intestine) and vagal stimulation
  • Bile exits through cystic duct then into common
    bile duct
  • Gallstones precipitated cholesterol (occurs when
    excess cholesterol in bile due to
    high-cholesterol diet and not enough bile salts
    to keep it in solution)
  • Can block cystic duct
  • If gallstone moves far down the duct, it can
    block pancreatic duct, resulting in pancreatitis.
  • Can occur because of drastic dieting (as the body
    metabolizes fat during prolonged fasting and
    rapid weight losssuch as crash dietsthe liver
    secretes extra cholesterol into bile, which can
    cause gallstones.)

46
Control of Bile Secretion and Release
47
Pancreas
  • Pancreas both endocrine and exocrine
  • Head, body and tail
  • Endocrine pancreatic islets. Produce insulin,
    glucagon, and somatostatin
  • Exocrine groups acini (grape-like cluster) form
    lobules separated by septa.
  • Intercalated ducts lead to intralobular ducts
    lead to interlobular ducts lead to the pancreatic
    duct.
  • Pancreatic duct joins common bile duct and enters
    duodenum at the hepatopancreatic ampulla
    controlled by the hepatopancreatic ampullar
    sphincter

48
Pancreatic Secretions Pancreatic Juice
  • Aqueous. Produced by columnar epithelium lining
    smaller ducts. Na, K, HCO3-, water. Bicarbonate
    lowers pH inhibiting pepsin and providing proper
    pH for enzymes
  • Enzymatic portion (without the enzymes produced
    by pancreas, lipids, proteins, carbs not
    adequately digested)
  • Trypsinogen- active form is trypsin--------proteol
    ytic enzyme
  • Chymotrypsinogen- active form is
    chymotrypsin--------proteolytic enzyme
  • Procarboxypeptidase- active form is
    carboxypeptidase-------proteolytic enzyme
  • Pancreatic amylase- continues digestion of
    starch.
  • Pancreatic lipases- lipid digesting enzyme
  • Deoxyribonucleases and ribonucleases- reduce DNA
    RNA to their nucleotide
  • Interaction of duodenal and pancreatic enzymes
  • Enterokinase is a proteolytic enzyme from the
    duodenal mucosa and it activates trypsinogen to
    trypsin.
  • Trypsin activates chymotrypsinogen to
    chymotrypsin.
  • Trypsin activates procarboxypeptidase to
    carboxypeptidase.

49
Bicarbonate Ion Production in Pancreas
50
Control of Pancreatic Secretion
51
Large Intestine
  • Extends from ileocecal junction to anus
  • Consists of cecum, colon, rectum, anal canal
  • Movements sluggish (18-24 hours) chyme converted
    to feces.
  • Absorption of water and salts, secretion of
    mucus, extensive action of microorganisms are
    involved in the formation of feces.
  • 1500 mL chyme enter the cecum, 90 of volume
    reabsorbed yielding 80-150 mL of feces

52
Anatomy of Large Intestine
  • Cecum
  • Blind sac, vermiform appendix attached. Appendix
    walls contain numerous lymph nodules
  • Colon
  • Ascending, transverse, descending, sigmoid
  • Circular muscle layer complete longitudinal
    incomplete (three bands called teniae coli).
    Contractions of teniae form pouches called
    haustra.Small fat-filled pouches called epiploic
    appendages
  • Mucosa has numerous straight tubular glands
    called crypts. Goblet cells predominate,
    butthere are also absorptive and granular cells
    as in the small intestine

53
Anatomy of Large Intestine
  • Rectum
  • Straight muscular tube, thick muscular tunic
  • Anal canal- superior epithelium is simple
    columnar inferior epithelium is stratified
    squamous
  • Internal anal sphincter (smooth muscle)
  • External anal sphincter (skeletal muscle)
  • Hemorrhoids Vein enlargement or inflammation

54
Secretions of Large Intestine
  • Mucus provides protection
  • Parasympathetic stimulation increases rate of
    goblet cell secretion
  • Pumps bacteria produce acid and the following
    remove acid from the epithelial cells that line
    the large intestine
  • Exchange of bicarbonate ions for chloride ions
  • Exchange of sodium ions for hydrogen ions
  • Bacterial actions produce gases (flatus) from
    particular kinds of carbohydrates found in
    legumes and in artificial sugars like sorbitol
  • Bacteria produce vitamin K which is then absorbed
  • Feces consists of water, undigested food
    (cellulose), microorganisms, sloughed-off
    epithelial cells

55
Movement in Large Intestine
  • Mass movements (strong contractions)
  • Common after meals
  • Integrated by the enteric plexus
  • Local reflexes instigated by the presence of food
    in the stomach and duodenum
  • Gastrocolic initiated by stomach
  • Duodenocolic initiated by duodenum
  • Defecation
  • Defecation reflex distension of the rectal wall
    by feces
  • Parasympathetic stimulation
  • Usually accompanied by voluntary movements to
    expel feces. Abdominal cavity pressure caused by
    inspiration and by contraction of muscles of
    abdominal wall.

56
Digestion, Absorption, Transport
  • Digestion
  • Breakdown of food molecules for absorption into
    circulation
  • Mechanical breaks large food particles to small
  • Chemical breaking of covalent bonds by digestive
    enzymes
  • Absorption and transport
  • Molecules are moved out of digestive tract and
    into circulation for distribution throughout body

57
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58
Carbohydrates Hydrolyzed into Monosaccharides
  • Glucose is transported to cells requiring energy
    insulin influences rate of transport

59
Transport of Lipids Across Intestinal Epithelium
60
Lipids
  • Include triglycerides, phospholipids, steroids,
    fat-soluble vitamins
  • Bile salts surround fatty acid and glycerol to
    form micelles
  • Chylomicrons are 90 triglyceride, 5
    cholesterol, 4 phospholipid, 1 protein.
  • Chylomicrons enter blood stream and travel to
    adipose tissue. In blood, triglycerides converted
    back into fatty acids and glycerol where they are
    transported into the adipose cells, then
    converted back into triglycerides.

61
Lipoproteins
  • All lipids carried in the blood are done so in
    combination with protein to make them soluble in
    plasma.
  • Cholesterol 15 ingested 85 manufactured in
    liver and intestinal mucosa
  • Lipids are lower density than water proteins are
    higher density than water
  • Chylomicrons 99 lipid and 1 protein (extremely
    low density) enter lymph
  • VLDL 92 lipid, 8 protein
  • Form in which lipids leave the liver
  • Triglycerides removed from VLDL and stored in
    adipose cells. VLDL has been converted to LDL.
  • LDL 75 lipid, 25 protein
  • Transports cholesterol to cells
  • Cells have LDL receptors
  • of LDL receptors become less once cells
    lipid/cholesterol needs are met.
  • HDL 55 lipid, 45 protein
  • Transports excess cholesterol from cells to liver

62
Transport of LDL into Cells
63
Amino Acid Transport
64
Proteins
  • Pepsin breaks proteins into smaller polypeptide
    chains
  • Proteolytic enzymes produce small peptide chains
  • Dipeptides, tripeptides, amino acids
  • After absorption, amino acids are carried through
    the hepatic portal vein to the liver.

65
Water and Ions
  • Water can move in either direction across wall
    of small intestine depending on osmotic gradients
  • Ions sodium, potassium, calcium, magnesium,
    phosphate are actively transported

66
Effects of Aging
  • Decrease in mucus layer, connective tissue,
    muscles and secretions
  • Increased susceptibility to infections and toxic
    agents, increase in incidences of ulcerations and
    cancers
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