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Title: By: Jocelyn Pearce


1
The digestive system
  • By Jocelyn Pearce

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The Mouth
  • Inside the mouth, food is mixed with saliva.
    Humans have three pairs of salivary glands that
    do this. The parotid, submandibular, and
    sublingual glands.
  • The nervous system controls the secretions
  • Although our mouth is constantly secreting
    saliva, it increases when food enters the mouth
  • When food is ready to be swallowed, the tongue
    pushes it to the back of the mouth

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The mouth cont.
  • Swallowing occurs when the soft palate moves up
    and pushes against the pharynx
  • Pressure on the pharynx stimulates a reflex,
    where the larynx is raised, pushing the glottis
    against the epiglottis.
  • All of this directs the food into the esophagus,
    making sure it does not enter the nasal passage
    or respiratory tract

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The esophagus
  • After being swallowed, food enters the esophagus,
    a muscular tube connecting the pharynx to the
    stomach
  • Food is moved down the esophagus by rhythmic
    waves of muscle contractions called peristalsis
  • Sphincters in the stomach let food in but
    prevents it from exiting

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The stomach
  • It is like a sack that can fold up when empty and
    expand when filled
  • Contains an extra layer of smooth muscle that
    mixes food with gastric juices (an acidic
    substance secreted by the walls of the stomach)
  • Two kinds of secretory glands, parietal and chief
    cells
  • Parietal cells secrete hydrochloric acid
  • Chief cells secrete pepsinogen

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The Stomach cont.
  • The pepsinogen a weak protein-digesting enzyme
    that is activated by the HCLs low pH
  • When activated they cleave each other producing a
    more active protein- digesting enzyme called
    pepsin
  • This prevents the chief cells from eating
    themselves
  • Pepsin makes food proteins into shorter
    polypeptides that are digested in the small
    intestines
  • The parietal cells also secrete intrinsic factor,
    a polypeptide needed for the intestines to absorb
    vitamin B12

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The Stomach Cont.
  • The mixture of food and gastric juice is called
    chyme
  • The acidic solution on the stomach kill most of
    the bacteria that we ingest in food
  • The bacteria not killed grows and multiplies in
    the intestines
  • Chyme leaves through the pyloric sphincter to
    travel to the small intestine

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The Small Intestine
  • Neural and hormonal signals are used as
    communications between the stomach and the small
    intestines
  • Limited room in the intestines and the digestion
    takes a long time
  • Approx. 4.5 meters long in living person
  • The first 25 cm is the duodenum
  • The rest is divided into the jejunum and the
    ileum

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The Small Intestine cont.
  • The duodenum receives chyme from the stomach
  • It also takes in digestive enzymes and
    bicarbonate from the pancreas, and bile from the
    liver and gallbladder
  • These juices help to digest food into smaller
    molecules
  • This happens primarily in the duodenum and jejunum

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The small intestine cont.
  • The inner wall of the small intestine is covered
    with villi
  • The villi are covered in microvilli
  • The villi and microvilli increase the surface
    area of the intestine
  • They also contain digestive enzymes which help
    with digestion of disaccharides like lactose and
    sucrose

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Absorption in the small intestines
  • When we digest proteins and carbohydrates, amino
    acids and monosaccharides are left
  • They are transported across the microvilli and
    then across the membrane, into the blood
    capillaries within the villi
  • These products are then taken into the liver by
    way of the hepatic portal vein
  • Fats are absorbed in a different way
  • Fats are broken down into fatty acids which are
    absorbed into the epithelial cells and then are
    reassembled into fats. The fats then combine
    with proteins called chylomicrons and then
    absorbed into the lymphatic capillaries

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The Pancreas
  • A large gland near the connection of the stomach
    and small intestine
  • Pancreatic fluid is secreted into the duodenum
    through the pancreatic duct
  • This fluid contains many enzymes that digest
    proteins, starches, etc.
  • Enter duodenum as inactive zymogens and activate
    when they come in contact with the microvilli

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The Pancreas cont.
  • Pancreatic fluid contains bicarbonate
    neutralizing the HCL from the stomach. Produced
    from acini
  • The pancreas also secretes hormones into the the
    blood that control the levels of glucose and
    other nutrients

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The Liver
  • Secretes bile made up of bile pigments and bile
    salts that are delivered to the duodenum during
    digestion
  • Bile pigments do not help in digestion! They are
    just waste products and in the end are eliminated
    with feces
  • Bile salts help digest fat by making fat into
    smaller droplets
  • After bile is produced in the liver it is stored
    in the gallbladder

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The Gallbladder
  • When fatty foods arrive, in the duodenum, they
    trigger trigger neural reflexes
  • The reflexes cause the gallbladder to contract,
    injecting bile into the duodenum

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The large intestine
  • Called large because of its larger diameter, not
    length (which is shorter than the small
    intestine)
  • Makes up the last meter of the digestive tract
  • No digestion occurs here
  • Primary function is to concentrate waste
    materials, although it does absorb some water,
    sodium, and vitamin K

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The large intestine cont.
  • Undigested material is compacted and stored here
  • Many bacteria live and reproduce here and are
    incorporated into feces
  • Compacted feces pass from the large intestines
    into the rectum, driven by peristaltic
    contractions
  • From the rectum, the feces then exit through the
    anus

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Why is it necessary?
  • This system is necessary because it is our way of
    breaking down foods and getting the nutrients out
    of them. If we didnt have the digestive system
    then we would be in trouble. There would be no
    way to really eat, therefore we would starve and
    also die from the lack of nutrients. We would
    have to inject ourselves with nutrients or
    something like that.

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Interdependency
  • Many parts of this system are controlled by
    neural and hormonal signals, for example the
    movement of fluids from the stomach to the small
    intestine
  • Also, the secretions by the salivary glands are
    controlled by the nervous system
  • Works with the endocrine and nervous systems

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Evolutionary development
  • Single-celled organisms digest their food
    intracellularly while other organisms digest
    their food extracellularly in digestive
    cavities
  • The most primitive digestive tract is in
    nematodes, a tubular gut lined with epithelial
    membrane.
  • Earthworms have specialized systems for the
    ingestion, storage, fragmentation, digestion, and
    absorption of foods
  • Vertebrates have similar specialization, more
    complex

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Diseases/Disorders
  • Gastric Ulcers- overproduction of gastric acid.
    The acid eats a hole through the lining of the
    stomach
  • Gallstones- formed from a hardened precipitate of
    cholesterol. These block the bile duct.
  • Herpes esophagitis is a viral infection of the
    esophagus, caused by the herpes simplex virus
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