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Accessory Organs

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Accessory Organs Pancreas, Liver and Gallbladder – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Accessory Organs


1
Accessory Organs
  • Pancreas, Liver and Gallbladder

2
Pancreas
  • Secretes pancreatic juice into pancreatic duct
    then to the duodenum
  • Function contains 4 classes of enzymes to break
    down substances.
  • Location posterior to stomach left side

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Pancreatic Juice
  • Pancreatic amylase
  • splits starch and glycogen into disaccharides
  • Pancreatic lipase
  • splits triglycerides into fatty acids and
    monoglycerides
  • Proteinases (Trypsin, chymotrypsin,
    carboxypeptidase)
  • Breaks up peptide bonds
  • Nucleases
  • split nucleic acid molecules

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Pancreatic Juice
  • Bicarbonate ions make pancreatic juice alkaline
    to neutralize acidic chyme

8
Pancreatic Secretion Regulation
  • During cephalic and gastric digestive phases
    parasympathetic impulses stimulate pancreatic
    secretion.
  • Secretin hormone
  • causes release of pancreatic juice into duodenum
  • stimulates a bicarbonate-rich fluid.
  • Activated by the duodenum filling up with chyme

9
Figure 17.25
10
Pancreatitis
  • Inflammation of pancreas
  • Caused by activation of enzymes in the pancreas
    gland
  • Trypsinogen------trypson

11
Liver
  • Largest internal organ
  • 2 lobed structure
  • Large right and small left
  • Each lobe is made up of Hepatic lobules function
    unit of the liver

Figure 17.28
12
Liver
  • Lobes are divided into hepatic lobules
  • hepatic cells around a central vein
  • hepatic sinusoids lead to the hepatic portal vein
  • Kupffer cells remove bacteria by phagocytosis
  • bile canals lead to hepatic ducts which merge at
    the common bile duct

Figure 17.29
13
Liver Functions
  • 1. Metabolism
  • Carbohydrate metabolism
  • stores glycogen, regulates blood glucose levels
  • Lipid metabolism
  • synthesizes lipoproteins, regulates lipid
    metabolism
  • Protein metabolism
  • deamination of amino acids, forming urea
  • transamination of amino acids
  • synthesis of plasma proteins
  • (clotting proteins)

14
Liver Functions
  • 2. Stores minerals and vitamins
  • iron is stored as ferritin, Vit A, B 12 and
    glycogen
  • 3. Detoxification of substances, including
    alcohol
  • 4. Destruction of damaged red blood cells
  • 5. Phagocytosis of foreign antigens
  • Contain Kupffers cells
  • Remove and destroy microbes, foreign matter and
    worm platelets and erythrocytes
  • 6. Serves as a bile reservoir and Secretion of
    bile
  • 7. Blood reservoir

15
Bile Composition
  • Yellowish-green fluid secreted by hepatic cells
  • Contains water (90), cholesterol, and
    electrolytes
  • Contains bile salts
  • Emulsify (break down) fats
  • Makes cholesterol
  • Contains bile pigments
  • bilirubin, biliverdin
  • breakdown products of hemoglobin

16
Figure 17.30
17
Jaundice
  • Abnormal Skin pigmentation
  • Excess bilirubin in the blood. (Bilirubin is
    produced by the normal breakdown of red blood
    cells. Normally bilirubin passes through the
    liver and is excreted as bile through the
    intestines)i
  • Jaundice occurs when bilirubin builds up faster
    than the liver can break it down and pass it from
    the body.

18
Liver Diseases
  • Cirrhosis
  • Jaundice

19
Gallbladder
  • Bile is produced by the liver and concentrated in
    the gall bladder.
  • Stores bile between meals

Figure 17.32
20
Gallbladder
  • Cholecystokinin CCK released in response to
    proteins and fats in the small intestine,
    stimulates gall bladder contraction.
  • Bile leaves through the cystic duct to the common
    bile duct and is squirted into the duodenum of
    the small intestine.

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Function of Bile Salts
  • Bile salts enhance absorption of fatty acids and
    fat-soluble vitamins.
  • Bile salts reduce surface tension and break fat
    into small droplets (emulsification).
  • Emulsification increases surface area so lipases
    can more easily digest fats.
  • The intestinal mucosa reabsorbs nearly all of the
    bile salts.

23
Blocked cystict duct
24
cholecystitis
25
Small Intestine
  • Extends from the pyloric sphincter to the large
    intestine
  • Three portions duodenum, jejunum, ileum
  • Receives secretions from the pancreas and the
    liver
  • Complete digestion of nutrients in chyme, absorbs
    products of digestion, transports residue to the
    large intestine

Figure 17.33
26
Figure 17.33
27
Small Intestine
  • Double-layered folds of peritoneum
  • mesentery supports intestinal nerves, blood and
    lymphatic vessels
  • greater omentum drapes over the intestine
  • Inner intestinal wall has many tiny projections,
    the intestinal villi. Each contains blood
    vessels, nerves and a lacteal
  • Intestinal glands extend into the mucosa
  • Circular folds of the mucosa, plicae circulares,
    increase surface area

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Figure 17.35
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Figure 17.36
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Figure 17.37
31
Small Intestine Secretions
  • Mucus is secreted by goblet cells and glands in
    the submucosa
  • Intestinal mucosa have digestive enzymes on their
    luminal surfaces
  • peptidases split peptides into amino acids
  • sucrase, maltase, lactase split disaccharides
    into monosaccharides
  • intestinal lipase splits fats into fatty acids
    and glycerol
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