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Digestion, absorption and transport

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Process by which food is broken down into absorbable units as it travels through ... Food is lubricated as it moves ... Umami (savory, associated with MSG) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Digestion, absorption and transport


1
Chapter 3
  • Digestion, absorption and transport

2
Digestion
  • Process by which food is broken down into
    absorbable units as it travels through a flexible
    muscular tube

3
  • Food is lubricated as it moves through the lumen
    of the system
  • Sphincters ensure passage in one direction
  • Food is mechanically and enzymatically broken
    down into simpler, usable chemicals
  • Nutrients are absorbed along with most of the
    water necessary for the process
  • Waste is eliminated as feces

4
Mouth
  • Teeth bite, chew and mix food with ingested
    fluids and saliva
  • Salivary glands produce lubricating saliva that
    contains salivary amylase and salivary lipase to
    initiate complex carbohydrate and fat digestion
  • Tongue helps to keep food positioned between
    teeth, involved in swallowing and tasting

5
Taste
  • Sweet
  • Salt
  • Sour
  • Bitter
  • Umami (savory, associated with MSG)
  • What you perceive as taste is really mostly
    smell think about how taste diminishes if you
    have a cold.

6
Pharynx
  • Receives swallowed food, now called a bolus
  • Directs food from mouth into esophagus
  • Is a common passageway for food and air

7
Epiglottis
  • Flap-like structure that closes airway during
    swallowing to prevent choking

8
Esophagus
  • Muscular tube that extends from pharynx to
    stomach
  • Passes through opening in diaphragm

9
Esophageal sphincters
  • Upper sphincter opens during swallowing.
  • Lower sphincter opens to allow bolus into
    stomach. It then closes to prevent food from
    passing back into the esophagus.
  • Abnormal opening occurs during
  • Vomiting
  • Acid reflux

10
Stomach
  • Three layers of muscle
  • Churns chyme
  • Mixes food with enzymes and hydrochloric acid
  • Begins protein digestion
  • Absorption of water, asprin
  • Releases chyme into beginning of small intestine
    through small spurts through pyloric sphincter,
    which opens and closes.

11
Small intestine
  • Duodenum digestion continues with addition of
    digestive juices and peristalsis
  • Receives chyme from stomach
  • Receives bile from gallbladder liver and (for fat
    digestion) and digestive juices from pancreas
    (for emulsification of fat, protein, carbohydrate
    and nucleic acids)
  • Contributes its own digestive enzymes
  • Jejunum more intestinal enzymes and peristalsis
  • Ilium more intestinal enzymes and peristalsis

12
  • The small intestine is about twenty feet long
  • Products of digestion and water are absorbed
    throughout the tract
  • Different areas are specialized to absorb
    specific nutrients
  • Chyme passes through the ileocecal valve
    (sphincter) into the beginning of the large
    intestine (colon)

13
Large intestine (colon)
  • Begins with a blind pouch called the cecum on
    lower right of abdomen
  • Veriform appendix is attached to cecum
  • Ascending colon
  • Transverse colon
  • Descending colon
  • Sigmoid colon
  • Rectum
  • Anus

14
  • Water absorption
  • Bacterial action
  • Compaction of waste into feces
  • Elimination through anus, which is guarded by 2
    sets of sphincters.

15
Muscular action of digestion mouth
  • Muscles of mastication move lower jaw
  • Tongue of muscles of face keep food between teeth
  • Tongue and other muscles voluntarily initiate
    swallowing

16
Muscular action of digestion beyond the mouth
  • The gastrointestinal tract is lined with layers
    of smooth muscle
  • An inner circular layer
  • An outer longitudinal layer
  • The stomach has an extra innermost oblique layer

17
Stomach muscles
  • Thickest wall of tract with 3 muscle layers
  • Churns and grinds food
  • Mixes food with enzymes and hydrochloric acid
  • The pyloric sphincter opens briefly
    3times/minute only when chyme is completely
    liquefied to allow small amounts to pass into the
    small intestine

18
Peristalsis
  • Movement that occurs in GI tract when circular
    rings of muscle contract and long muscles relax,
    then the long muscles tighten and the circular
    ones relax

19
  • Ripples occur at varying rates of speed and
    intensity in GI tract
  • Quiet with periodic bursts when tract is empty
  • Slow continuous waves up when food is present
  • Works with sphincter muscles to keep chyme going
    in the right direction

20
Segmentation
  • Periodic squeezing or partitioning of the
    intestine along its length by circular muscle.
  • Helps promote good mixing of chyme with digestive
    juices

21
Sphincters
  • Periodically open
  • Upper esophageal
  • Lower esophageal-prevents reflux
  • Pyloric sphincter
  • Ileocecal valve
  • Internal and external anal sphincters work with
    tight rectal muscles to control defecation

22
Secretions of digestion
  • Digestive enzymes names end is ase
  • Are catalysts
  • Facilitate hydrolysis of food
  • Produced by salivary gland, stomach, pancreas,
    small intestine

23
  • Hydrochloric acid
  • Aids in protein digestion
  • Produced only in stomach
  • Low pH
  • Bicarbonate ion, a base
  • Produced by pancreas and released along with its
    enzymes
  • Neutralizes HCL that enters the small intestine
  • Higher pH

Look at the pH scale on p.77
24
  • Bile
  • Produced by liver and stored by the gallbladder
  • Emulsifies fat so droplets can be suspended in
    water component of chyme

25
  • Mucous
  • released in all parts of tract
  • Protects lining of tract
  • Hormones
  • Chemical messengers released by stomach and small
    intestine
  • Slow or speed up activity as needed in many parts
    of the system

26
The final stages of digestion
  • Products of digestion, vitamins and minerals are
    absorbed by cells lining the lumen of the small
    intestine
  • The large intestine receives undigested
    residue,including fiber, water

27
  • Bacteria ferment fibers and small fats (also
    lactose and a few other substances) and produce
    gas
  • Friendly bacteria manufacture vitamins that are
    absorbed and discourage growth of pathogens

28
  • The large intestine absorbs most of the water
    present in the chyme and compacts the residue
    into stool
  • Stool contains water, fiber, bile acids, some
    minerals, some fat food additives and
    contaminants

29
Role of fiber
  • Some fibers of seeds, whole wheat, peanuts and
    bananas are partially digested by bacteria of the
    colon and these products are absorbed by the
    large intestine

30
  • Most fibers are excreted as part of feces
  • These fibers help to retain water and prevent
    constipation
  • They also bind to fat, cholesterol from bile and
    minerals and thus cause their excretion

31
Absorption
  • Within 3-4 hours after eating the small intestine
    must finish the process of digestion and absorb
    the molecular products of digestion into the
    blood of lymph.

32
Methods of absorption
  • 1. Simple diffusion freely cross membrane of
    intestinal cells
  • Water
  • Small lipids
  • 2. Facilitated diffusion require a carrier
    protein located in membrane or changes in cell
    membrane of intestinal cells
  • Water soluble vitamins

33
  • 3. Active transport require energy in the form
    of ATP, because substances travel against their
    gradient
  • Glucose
  • Amino acids

34
Anatomy of small intestine
  • 10 feet or more
  • Surface area of a tennis court
  • Plicae visible folds of intestinal lining

35
Microscopic Anatomy villi
  • Villi made of many cells have layer of muscle
    for constant motion
  • Microvilli ( brush border located on membrane of
    cells on the outer surface of the villi enzymes
    and absorption
  • Crypts intestinal glands that produce new cells
    of the villi
  • Goblet cells scattered among cells of villi
    mucus
  • Capillaries and lacteals
  • Brunners glands below villi add more mucus

36
Specialization
  • Products of digestion are ready for at different
    times
  • Regions of the small intestine are specialized to
    absorb certain nutrients

37
Food combining myth
  • Because of specialization, foods can be eaten
    together
  • Sometimes food combinations actually enhance, not
    inhibit, absorption e.g., vitamin C and iron

38
Preparation of nutrients for transport
  • Water soluble products- carbohydrates, amino
    acids, nucleic acids- and small products of fat
    digestion enter capillaries in the villus
  • The blood then goes to the liver

39
  • Larger products of fat digestion and fat soluble
    vitamins are coated with cholesterol and proteins
    and are called chylomicrons
  • Chylomicrons enter lacteals, lymphatic vessels
  • Lymph enters the blood stream near the heart

40
Transportation Vascular system
  • Water soluble products of digestion and small
    products of fat digestion enter blood contained
    in the vascular system
  • Nutrients are collected from the small intestine,
    and the blood is carried through the hepatic
    portal vein first to the liver, where some are
    processed for use by the rest of the body
  • Nutrients are then released into the general
    blood stream

41
The vascular system
  • Arteries carry blood away from the heart
  • Tiny branches give rise to microscopic
    capillaries
  • Capillaries are very thin and allow exchange of
    chemicals,including nutrients, gases, and fluids
  • Capillaries merge together and the blood flows
    into veins
  • Veins carry blood back to the heart

42
The heart
  • Blood that enters the right side of the heart is
    pumped through arteries to the lungs for oxygen
  • The oxygenated blood from the lungs is carried
    through veins to the left side of the heart
  • The left side of the heart pumps blood through
    arteries to the rest of body

43
Nutrient routes
  • Capillaries in villi
  • Hepatic portal vein Capillary beds in liver
  • Prepares absorbed nutrients for use in the body
  • Removes impurites and toxins and is subject to
    damage
  • Hepatic vein
  • Inferior vena cava
  • Right heart
  • Arteries to lungs
  • Veins to left heart
  • Arteries to body
  • Capillaries deliver oxygen and nutrient rich
    blood to tissues
  • Veins carry blood back to right heart

44
Transportation lymphatics
  • Lymph vessels carry lymph, which is basically
    blood plasma minus some proteins

45
  • Larger coated products of fat digestion enter
    lacteals located in the center of the villi
  • The many small vessels merge into larger and
    larger ones and eventually flow into the thoracic
    duct
  • The thoracic duct empties into the left
    subclavian vein, which is near the heart
  • Lymph then becomes part of blood plasma and
    general circulation
  • These products of digestion bypass the liver

46
GI bacteria
  • 10 trillion
  • Found mainly in small and large intestines where
    conditions are not acidic
  • Most not harmful
  • Often beneficial
  • Normal microflora helps prevent establishment of
    harmful bacteria

47
Probiotics
  • Helpful bacteria found in food, like yogurt, are
    called probiotics
  • Change conditions and native bacterial colonies
    in a beneficial way
  • Help alleviate diarrhea, constipation,
    inflammatory bowel disease, ulcers, lactose
    intolerance
  • Enhance immune function
  • Protect against colon cancer

48
Helpful bacterial products
  • Digest fibers and complex carbohydrates for their
    own use, which results in production of short
    fragments of fat that colon cells can use for
    energy
  • Produce 1/2 needed vitamin K-clotting factor
  • Produce biotin, folate, B6, B12

49
Homeostasis
  • Maintenance of the bodys internal conditions by
    the bodys control systems
  • Hormones
  • Nerves

50
Homeostasis and GI tract
  • The activity of the GI tract is always changing
    to meet current needs
  • Signals provided by hormones (chemicals) and
    nerves keep function within homeostasisnormal
    limits
  • Hormones and nerves work through feedback systems

51
Hormones
  • Gastrin-produced by stomach
  • stimulates stomach to produce hydrochloric acid
  • Secretin-produced by small intestine
  • causes pancreas to release bicarbonate to
    neutralize hydrochloric acid in small intestine

52
  • Cholecystekinin (CCK)-produced by small intestine
  • targets gall bladder, which releases bile for
    fat digestion
  • Slows motility beneficial because fat takes
    longer time to digest
  • Targets pancreas, which releases juices rich in
    enzymes and bicarbonate

53
Common digestive disorders
  • Choking
  • Vomiting
  • Diarrhea
  • Constipation
  • Belching and gas
  • Heartburn and acid indigestion
  • Ulcers

54
  • http//east.instructor.ilrn.com/ilrn/books/wrun11l
    /animations/03/0308.html
  • Follow the fate of a sandwich

55
The end
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