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Digestive Systems

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Digestive Systems Chris Ellason Rumen Large compartment extends from diaphragm to pelvis papillae Fermentation chamber Majority of absorption of byproducts and ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Digestive Systems


1
Digestive Systems
  • Chris Ellason

2
Digestion and Absorption
  • The process of digestion includes
  • The prehension of food or feed
  • The mechanical chewing and grinding
  • Mixing with digestive acids and enzymes to
    chemically break down feedstuffs
  • The process of absorption includes
  • Transport of the digested foods across the
    intestinal mucosa to the blood or lymph system

3
General Terms
  • Prehension to take into the mouth
  • Mastication chewing
  • Deglutition swallowing
  • Regurgitation the backward flow of food through
    the esophagus

4
Three Major Categories
  • Carnivore consume flesh of other animals,
    examples are dogs and cats
  • Omnivore consume both plants and flesh, examples
    are primates
  • Herbivore consume plant material, examples are
    horses and cattle

5
Carnivore
  • Very Well developed stomach
  • Uncomplicated intestine
  • Limited fiber digestion

6
Omnivore
  • Combination of carnivores/herbivores
  • More complicated GIT than carnivores
  • Colonic digesters
  • Pigs, humans
  • Cecal digesters
  • rat

7
Herbivore
  • Cow, horse, rabbit
  • Each has a different type of GIT
  • Cow- ruminant
  • Horse- simple stomach, large cecum, large
    sacculated LI
  • Rabbit- larger stomach, very large sacculated
    cecum, unsacculated LI

8
Salivary Glands
  • 3 pair
  • Parotid
  • Mandibular
  • Sublingual
  • Water - moistens food aids in swallowing
  • Mucin - lubrication for swallowing
  • Bicarbonate salts
  • Enzymes

9
Salivary Glands
10
Salivary glands
11
Different Digestive Tracts
  • Farm animals have a variety of digestive systems
  • Ruminants have 4 different compartments to the
    stomach
  • Examples include cattle, sheep, goats
  • Nonruminants (also known as monogastrics)
  • Hogs, dogs, and cats have a single, simple
    stomach
  • Poultry have a two part stomach
  • Horses have a large, functional cecum

12
Pregastric vs Postgastric
  • Pregastric Fermentation that occurs in the rumen
    of ruminant animals. It occurs before food passes
    into the portion of the digestive tract in which
    digestion actually occurs.
  • Postgastric The fermentation of feed occurs in
    the cecum, behind the area where digestion has
    occurred.

13
Pregastric vs Postgastric
  • Ruminants
  • More efficient
  • Less intake
  • Non- ruminant herbivores
  • Only postgastric
  • Less efficient
  • Greater intake

14
Monogastric Systems
  • Mouth prehension and chewing of food some
    carbohydrate enzyme activity
  • Esophagus
  • Stomach
  • Storage
  • Muscular movements (break down food)
  • Secretes Digestive Juices (hydrochloric acid)
  • pH about 2

15
Monogastric Systems
16
Small Intestine
  • Duodenum
  • Active Digestion Site
  • Produce enzymes
  • Pancreas
  • Helps to neutralize ingesta entering the SI
  • Liver
  • Produces bile breaks down fats
  • Intestinal Walls

17
Small Intestine
  • Jejunum
  • Active in nutrient absorption
  • Ileum
  • Active in nutrient absorption
  • Villi
  • pH 6 to 7

18
Large Intestine
  • 3 Sections
  • cecum
  • colon
  • rectum
  • Active in water resorption
  • Secretion of some minerals
  • Bacterial Fermentation

19
Horses are Different
  • Saliva
  • contains no enzymes
  • may secrete up to 10 gallons/day
  • stimulated by scratching
  • Esophagus
  • only one way peristaltic movement
  • Impossible for regurgitation

20
Horses are Different
  • Stomach
  • much smaller in comparison to other species
  • not very extensive muscular contraction
  • So how should we feed differently?
  • Small Intestine
  • same as pig but no gall bladder
  • Cant handle a high fat diet

21
Horses are Different
  • Large Intestine
  • over 60 of GIT
  • 4 parts
  • cecum
  • large colon
  • small colon
  • rectum

22
Cecum and Large Colon
  • Similar to Rumen
  • bacterial cellulose breakdown
  • bacterial protein breakdown
  • VFA production
  • Water Soluble Vitamin production

23
Small Colon and Rectum
  • Primary site for water resorption
  • Can become impacted with feed

24
Horse GI Tract
25
Avian Species
  • Beak
  • no teeth
  • can be used to reduce particle size
  • Esophagus
  • ingesta holding and moistening
  • Salivary Amylase
  • Fermentation in some species

26
Avian Species
  • Proventriculus
  • Gastric juice production
  • pH 4
  • Rapid pass through of food

27
Avian Species
  • Gizzard (ventriculus)
  • thick muscular wall
  • particle size reduction (similar to mastication)
  • nonglandular
  • normally contains grit
  • no enzymatic secretion

28
Avian Small Intestine
  • Functions in digestion and absorption of feed and
    nutrients just as in other monogastrics
  • pH is slightly acidic
  • Most enzymes found in mammals except?

29
Avian Large Intestine
  • Contains 2 blind pouches instead of ?
  • Mostly water absorption
  • Some bacterial activity but less than in most
    mammals
  • very short in comparison

30
Avian Species
31
Ruminant Digestive System
  • Mouth
  • what is unique about the teeth?
  • Can only chew on one side of mouth at a time
  • Saliva production is continuous
  • Production about 12 gallons/d

32
Rumen Stomach
  • 4 PARTS
  • reticulum
  • rumen
  • omasum
  • abomasum

33
Reticulum
  • Honeycomb
  • most cranial
  • not truly separated from rumen
  • no enzymatic secretion
  • walls are tough, tend to catch heavy objects

34
Rumen
  • Large compartment extends from diaphragm to
    pelvis
  • papillae
  • Fermentation chamber
  • Majority of absorption of byproducts and
    conversion to volatile fatty acids

35
Rumen Digestion
  • Reticulorumen provides a favorable environment
    for bacterial fermentation
  • Continuous turnover of digesta and removal of
    fermented digesta
  • Anaerobic fermentation

36
Omasum
  • Manyplies (Stockmans Bible)
  • short blunt papillae
  • very muscular
  • no enzymatic secretion
  • reduction of particle size
  • water resorption

37
Abomasum
  • True Stomach
  • First Glandular portion of the tract
  • Very similar in structure and function to
    nonruminant stomach

38
Other Unique Points
  • Esophageal Groove
  • cardia to omasum
  • milk bypass
  • Rumination The process where rumen contents are
    regurgitated, remasticated, and reswallowed for
    further digestion
  • Eructation expulsion of accumulated fermentation
    gases from rumen via esophagus

39
Ruminant GI Tract
40
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41
Rumination
  • Regurgitation of ingesta with mastication
  • reticular contraction that concentrates ingesta
    at the cardia
  • increased inhalation of air at same time
  • contraction of diaphragm
  • ballooning of esophageal walls
  • ingesta sucked into esophagus
  • returned to mouth by reverse peristalsis

42
Rumination
  • Excess liquids are swallowed
  • Mastication commences
  • More time spent masticating here than initial
    intake
  • Amount of time ruminating is a function of diet
    composition

43
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44
Rumen Contents and Motility
  • Rumen contents are not uniform
  • Occur in stratified layers
  • Change from ventral to dorsal
  • Rumen mat
  • high concentrate diets eliminate mat
  • more viscous fluid in high grain diets
  • lowest dry matter in high forage diets

45
Rumen Contents and Motility
  • Motility of rumen mixes contents
  • Divided into
  • primary contractions
  • secondary contractions
  • Contractions require up to 50 seconds to complete

46
Rumen Contents and Motility
  • Contractions begin with reticulum
  • Progress dorsally
  • Finish with ventral blind sac and ventral pillars

47
Rumen and Acute Acidosis
  • Optimal rumen pH is 6.7
  • Variation in pH is normally /- 0.5
  • Introduction of high grains result in
  • breakdown of rumen mat
  • proliferation of facultative anaerobes
  • these produce high levels of lactic acid

48
Rumen and Acute Acidosis
  • Lactate is a much stronger acid that other VFAs
  • In severe cases lactate can make-up well over 50
    of total rumen acids
  • Succinate and Formate can also appear in high
    quantities

49
Rumen and Acute Acidosis
  • Increased acids can reduce pH as far as 4.0
  • Severe rumenitis occurs at these pH levels
  • Absorption of lactic acid results in systemic
    acidosis
  • All chronic acidosis results in rumen
    parakeratosis

50
Factors Affecting Digestibility
  • Rate of passage increased rate of passage of
    digesta through the tract reduces digestibility
  • Factors increasing rate of passage include
  • Increased level of feeding/intake (ruminants)
  • Finer processing (such as grinding) of feed
  • Note grinding grain usually increases
    digestibility but grinding hay decreases
    digestibility
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