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Digestive System

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Mechanical Digestion chewing, swallowing, peristalsis and other ... Swallowing - Deglutition. Tongue pushes bolus of food from oral cavity into oropharynx ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Digestive System


1
Digestive System
  • Anatomy and Physiology of the Digestive Tract

2
Digestive Anatomy Overview
  • Mouth and tongue
  • Salivary Glands
  • Pharynx
  • Esophagus
  • Stomach
  • Liver
  • Pancreas
  • Small intestine
  • Large intestine

3
Functions of the Digestive Tract
  • Ingestion intake of food (eating)
  • Mechanical Digestion chewing, swallowing,
    peristalsis and other muscular actions of GI
    tract
  • Chemical Digestion chemical break-down of food
    molecules by digestive enzymes
  • Secretion release of useful chemicals such as
    enzymes and mucus by cells and glands
  • Absorption uptake of substances, such as
    nutrients, into circulation
  • Excretion elimination of digestive wastes

4
Digestive Enzymes
  • Enzymes are protein catalysts
  • Enzymes are not altered themselves
  • Enzymes speed up chemical reactions, and chemical
    digestion involves a series of chemical reactions

5
Digestive Enzymes Continued
  • Digestive enzymes are called hydrolytic enzymes.
  • Water is used to split food molecules

6
Digestive Enzymes Continued
  • Enzymes are sensitive to such things as
    temperature and pH
  • The names of enzymes usually end in ase For
    example, sucrase is the enzyme that catalyzes the
    hydrolysis of the sugar sucrose

7
Digestion in Mouth
  • Mastication
  • Another name for chewing
  • Breaks-up and lubricates food
  • Swallowing
  • Increases surface area of food so enzymes can
    work more efficiently

8
Digestion in Mouth Continued
  • Salivary amylase, secreted by salivary glands,
    digests starch into smaller molecules, the
    smallest being the disaccharide sugar maltose

amylase
Starch
Maltose
9
Swallowing - Deglutition
Tongue pushes bolus of food from oral cavity into
oropharynx
10
Swallowing Continued
Soft palate closes nasopharynx and epiglottis
closes glottis
11
Swallowing Continued
Peristalsis propels bolus down esophagus toward
stomach
12
Swallowing Continued
Cardiac (lower esophageal) sphincter opens and
bolus enters stomach
http//hopkins-gi.org/multimedia/database/intro_25
0_Swallow.swf
13
Stomach Histology section of stomach lining
Stomach Lumen
Rugae---------------------
Mucosa
Gastric Pit-----------------
Gastric Gland------------
Submucosa
Muscularis 3 layers
------------Serosa
14
Gastric Glands
  • Gastric glands
  • Mucous neck cells secrete protective mucus
  • Chief cells secrete pepsinogen
  • Parietal cells secrete hydrochloric acid
  • G cells secrete hormone gastrin which stimulates
    gastric secretions

Mucous Neck cells-----------
Parietal cell-------------------
Chief cell----------------------
G cell----------------------------
15
Functions of the Stomach
  • Storage-can eat lots of food at one sitting
  • Chemical digestion
  • Protein digestion begins, but not completed
  • Inactive enzyme pepsinogen secreted by chief
    cells of gastric glands. Why must it be inactive
    when secreted?

16
Digestion in the Stomach Continued
  • Pepsinogen is converted to active enzyme pepsin
    in stomach lumen (cavity) by pepsin and
    hydrochloric acid (HCl)
  • Pepsin digests proteins to smaller chains of
    amino acids called peptides

HCl pepsin
Pepsinogen
Pepsin
Pepsin
Protein
Peptides
17
Functions of Stomach Continued
  • Mechanical Digestion in Stomach
  • Mixing waves every 15-20 seconds
  • Reduce food to liquid acid chyme
  • Force small amounts of chyme from stomach into
    the small intestine

18
Functions of the Stomach Continued
  • Limited absorption in stomach
  • Aspirin and some other drugs
  • Alcohol
  • Some water
  • Electrolytes

19
Small Intestine Histology
  • Lined with about 4.5 million villi (villus)
  • Small finger like extensions
  • Covered with a simple columnar mucous membrane
  • Blood capillaries inside for absorbing most
    substances
  • Single lymph capillary called a lacteal for
    absorbing most fat

20
Small Intestine Histology - Villus
---------Absorptive Cell
Simple Columnar Cells-------
---------Goblet Cell
Blood Capillaries-------------
Lacteal--------------------------
---------Endocrine Cell
Intestinal crypt--------
-----------Paneth Cell of intestinal crypt
21
Small Intestine Physiology
  • Responsible for most chemical digestion
  • Enzymes from pancreas and small intestine
    complete digestion of protein, starch,
    disaccharide sugars and fat
  • Gallbladder empties bile into small intestine to
    aid in fat digestion
  • Absorbs most substances

22
Small Intestine Physiology Continued
  • Mechanical digestion
  • Peristalsis propels chyme along intestine
  • Segmentation moves chyme back and forth to mix it
    thoroughly

23
Pancreas
  • Head, neck ,body and tail
  • Head into duodenum
  • Tail to spleen
  • Pancreatic duct joins bile duct and connects to
    duodenum

24
Histology of Pancreas
  • Acini are exocrine cells that secrete digestive
    enzymes into ducts
  • Ducts secrete bicarbonate to buffer acid chyme
    from stomach and help to raise its pH from 2-3 to
    7-8

25
Secretion of Pancreatic Juices
  • Secreted by acini and ducts
  • About 1 liter secreted per day
  • Contains enzymes to digest protein, starch fat
    and nucleic acids (DNA, RNA)

26
Digestion by Pancreatic Enzymes
  • Protein Digestion
  • Four proteolytic enzymes secreted as inactive
    proenzymes
  • Proenzymes sequentially activated in duodenum
    (first part of small intestine)
  • These enzymes digest protein and polypeptides to
    smaller peptides and amino acids

27
Pancreatic Digestion Continued
  • Starch digestion
  • Starch not digested by salivary amylase in the
    mouth and stomach is digested in intestine by
    pancreatic amylase
  • Digestion same as in mouth

28
Pancreatic Digestion Continued
  • Fat digestion
  • Triglycerides (fat molecules made of glycerol and
    three fatty acids) digested in small intestine by
    pancreatic lipase
  • Digestion of each triglyceride yields a
    monoglyceride molecule and two fatty acid
    molecules

lipase
Monoglyceride
Triglyceride

Two fatty acids
29
Pancreatic Digestion Continued
  • Bile from the gallbladder required for lipase to
    digest fat
  • When secreted, bile flows down bile duct into
    duodenum to mix with and emulsify the fat
  • What does emulsify mean?

30
Digestion by Intestinal Enzymes
  • Called brush-border enzymes
  • Located in microvilli of intestinal absorptive
    cells
  • Peptidases digest peptides to amino acids

31
Intestinal Enzymes Continued
  • Disaccharidases digest disaccharides to
    monosaccharides

sucrase
Sucrose
Glucose Fructose
maltase
Maltose
Glucose Glucose
lactase
Lactose
Glucose Galactose
32
Absorption in the Small Intestine
  • Absorption is the uptake of substances into
    absorptive cells then into blood and lymph
  • Villi and microvilli of absorptive cells provide
    large surface area for absorption
  • Most digested foods, water, electrolytes,
    vitamins and other substances absorbed in small
    intestine

33
Absorption Continued
  • Absorption into blood
  • Monosaccharides
  • Amino acids
  • Water
  • Electrolytes such as sodium, potassium.
  • Water soluble vitamins such as vitamin C and the
    B vitamins

34
Absorption Continued
  • Into lacteals (lymph capillaries in villi)
  • Fat soluble vitamins
  • Large fatty acids and monoglycerides
  • Bile salts help with absorption into intestinal
    cells
  • Triglycerides (fat) reformed in intestinal cells
  • Triglycerides (fat) transported in lymph and
    blood by combining with protein

35
Summary of Intestinal Absorption
36
Functions of Large Intestine
  • Feces formation by bacterial action
  • Limited digestion of undigested food by bacteria
  • Formation of vitamin K and some B vitamins by
    bacteria
  • Absorption of some water, electrolytes, vitamins
    and bile salts

37
Functions of the Liver
  • Carbohydrate, lipid and amino acid metabolism
  • Removal of waste products
  • Storage of glycogen, vitamins and iron
  • Phagocytosis by Kupffer cells
  • Bile secretion
  • Plasma protein synthesis
  • Detoxification

38
Bile
  • One-half liter to a liter of bile each day
  • Functions of bile
  • Emulsification of fat in small intestine
  • Excretion of bilirubin and cholesterol
  • Micelles for fat absorption

39
Clinical Terms
  • Gingivitis-inflammation of gums
  • Periodontal disease plaque causes destruction
    of periodontal membrane and jaw bone with
    possible loss of teeth
  • Stomatitis inflammation of mouth
  • Dental caries - cavities

40
Clinical Terms Continued
  • Esophagitis and GERDS acid reflux from stomach
    into esophagus
  • Gastritis inflammation of stomach
  • GI neoplasms cancers of GI tract
  • Hepatitis inflammation of liver, several types
  • Peptic ulcer erosion of stomach/duodenal
    lining, usually caused by a bacterium

41
Acid Blocking Drugs
  • Histamine (H2) blockers
  • Tagamet
  • Zantac
  • Pepcid AC
  • Proton pump blockers
  • Prilosec
  • Nexium
  • Prevacid
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