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Digestive System

This document provides an overview of the digestive system and body metabolism lecture. It discusses the main functions and divisions of the digestive system, including the gastrointestinal tract and accessory organs. The gastrointestinal tract is described as a continuous hollow tube that digests food, breaks it down, and absorbs nutrients. Key parts include the mouth, pharynx, esophagus, stomach, small intestine and large intestine. The document outlines the anatomy and processes of the mouth and provides details on the stomach, small intestine, chemical digestion and nutrient absorption throughout the digestive system.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
98 views4 pages

Digestive System

This document provides an overview of the digestive system and body metabolism lecture. It discusses the main functions and divisions of the digestive system, including the gastrointestinal tract and accessory organs. The gastrointestinal tract is described as a continuous hollow tube that digests food, breaks it down, and absorbs nutrients. Key parts include the mouth, pharynx, esophagus, stomach, small intestine and large intestine. The document outlines the anatomy and processes of the mouth and provides details on the stomach, small intestine, chemical digestion and nutrient absorption throughout the digestive system.

Uploaded by

JM Matias
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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ANPH 111: Anatomy and Physiology

LECTURE 12: DIGESTIVE SYSTEM AND BODY METABOLISM

MRS. SHERLEEN JANE F. PULIDO – COLLEGE OF ARTS AND SCIENCES


FIRST SEMESTER | A.Y. 2022-2023

FUNCTIONS 2. CHEEKS
→ Form the lateral walls
1. DIGESTION
→ breakdown of ingested food 3. HARD PALATE
→ Forms the anterior roof
2. ABSORPTION
→ passage of nutrients into blood 4. SOFT PALATE
→ Forms the posterior roof
3. METABOLISM
→ production of cellular energy 5. UVULA
→ catabolizing and anabolizing molecules → Fleshy projection of the soft palate

6. VESTIBULE
DIVISION OF DIGESTIVE SYSTEM → Space between lips externally, and teeth and gums internally
A. GASTROINTESTINAL TRACT – mouth, pharynx,
7. TONGUE
esophagus, stomach, small intestine, and large intestine
→ Attached at hyoid and styloid processes, and by the lingual
frenulum
B. ACCESSORY DIGESTIVE ORGANS – teeth, tongue, gall
bladder, salivary glands, liver, and pancreas
8. FRENULUM
→ Membrane that secures the tongue to the floor of the mouth;
GASTROINTESTINAL TRACT limits movement

→ A continuous, hollow coiled tube that digests food, breaks it down, 9. TONSILS
and absorbs the fragments through its lining into the blood. Palatine Tonsils – associated with preventing infections in
digestive and respiratory tract

GASTROINTESTINAL TRACT ACTIVITIES Lingual Tonsils – prevent infection and contains B lymphocytes
and T lymphocytes
1. INGESTION
→ Taking food into digestive tract
→ Act of putting food into mouth PROCESSES OF THE MOUTH

2. MECHANICAL DIGESTION - chewing, mixing, and churning food 1. MASTICATION - chewing of food (MECHANICAL DIGESTION)
Biting - using of teeth to cut the food
Mastication - chewing or grinding food 2. Mixing masticated food with saliva (CHEMICAL DGESTION)
→ SALIVARY AMYLASE – enzyme that digests starch
3. PROPULSION - Deglutition and peristalsis → MUCIN – slippery protein (mucus); protects soft lining of
Deglutition – swallowing digestive system; lubricates food for easier swallowing
Peristalsis – waves of contraction and relaxation of the muscles in → BUFFERS – neutralizes acid to prevent tooth decay
the organ walls → ANTI-BACTERIAL CHEEMICALS – kills bacteria that enter
mouth with food
4. CHEMICAL DIGESTION – catabolic breakdown of food
Initial Digestion - Stomach 3. Initiation of swallowing by the tongue
Final Digestion - Small Intestine 4. Allowing for sense of taste

5. ABSORPTION
→ Movement of nutrients from the G.I. Tract to the blood or PHARYNX
lymph (villi and microvilli)
→ Serves as a way for air and food
6. DEFACATION
→ Food is propelled to the esophagus by 2 muscle layers
→ Elimination of indigestible and unabsorbed solid wastes
1. Longitudinal Inner Layer
(Large Intestine)
2. Circular Outer Layer

ORGANS OF DIGESTIVE SYSTEM → Food movement is by alternating contractions of the muscle layers
(PERISTALSIS)
MOUTH

ANATOMY OF MOUTH (Oral Cavity) EPIGLOTTIS

1. LIPS (Labia) → Prevents food from going into trachea


→ Protects the anterior opening → Bends backward when swallowing to cover the trachea and avoid
choking

MATIAS, JHON MANUEL MANALASTAS


ESOPHAGUS 3. ILEUM
→ Extends from the jejunum to ileocecal valve of large intestine
→ Runs from pharynx to stomach through the diaphragm (12 feet long)
→ Conducts food by peristalsis (slow rhythmic squeezing) → Absorption of nutrients and water
→ Passageway for food only (respiratory system branches off after
the pharynx)
VILLI OF THE SMALL INTESTINE

STOMACH → Small projections of the plasma membrane


→ Found on absorptive cells
→ Located on the left side of the abdominal cavity (10 inch long)
→ When full, holds about 1 gallon of food
→ Food enters at the cardio-esophageal sphincter STRUCTURE INVOLVED IN ABSORPTION OF NUTRIENTS
→ Food exits at the pyloric sphincter (valve) between the stomach and
small intestine 1. ABSORPTIVE CELLS
2. BLOOD CAPPILARIES

STOMACH FUNCTIONS
CHEMICAL DIGESTION IN THE SMALL INTESTINE
→ Acts as storage tank for food
→ Site of food breakdown → Source of enzymes that are mixed with chyme
→ Produces 2 to 3 liter of gastric juice (HCl, enzymes, and mucus) → Acid from the stomach mixes with digestive juices from accessory
per day glands
→ Chemical breakdown of protein begins at stomach
PEPSIN – enzyme that breaks down proteins; secreted as • PANCREAS:
pepsinogen which is activated by HCl 1. PEPTIDASES – digests proteins and breaks peptide bonds
→ Delivers chyme (processed food) to the small intestine (trypsin, chymotrypsin, carboxypeptidase)
→ Regulated by neural and hormonal factors 2. PACREATIC AMYLSE – digests starch
1. MOTILIN – a polypeptide that has a role in fat metabolism 3. LIPASE – needed to digest fat
2. GASTRIN – a hormone that stimulates the production of 4. NUCLEASES – digests nucleic acids
gastric acid in the stomach
3. SECRETIN – a peptide hormone secreted by the duodenum • LIVER
that serves to regulate its acidity → Produces bile
→ BILE – breaks up fats
→ It takes 4 hours for the stomach to empty after a well-balanced meal
and 6 hours for a fatty meal • GALL BLADDER
→ Storage of bile

DISEASES AND DISORDERS


PROPULSION IN THE SMALL INTESTINE
1. HEARTBURN – occurs when cardio-esophageal sphincter fails to
close tightly and gastric juice backs up into esophagus PERISTALSIS is the major means of moving food

2. HIATAL HERNIA – superior part of the stomach protrudes above • SEGMENTAL MOVEMENTS
the diaphragm allowing juices to go into esophagus → Mix chyme with digestive juices
→ Aid in propelling food
3. VOMITING – reverse movement of the food, brought about by a
signal from the medulla
LARGE INTESTINE

SMALL INTESTINE (12 TO 24 HOURS)

(4 TO 8 HOURS) → Larger in diameter, but shorter that the small intestine


→ Frames the internal abdomen
→ The body’s major digestive organ
→ Site of nutrient absorption into the blood
→ Muscular tube extending from the pyloric sphincter to the ileocecal FUNCTIONS OF THE LARGE INTESTINE
valve
→ Reabsorption of water
→ Suspended from the posterior abdominal wall by the mesentery
→ Eliminates indigestible food from the body as feces
→ Does not participate in digestion of food
SUBDIVISIONS OF THE SMALL INTESTINE

1. DUODENUM STUCTURES OF THE LARGE INTESTINE


→ attached to the stomach
1. ILEOCECAL VALVE – between small intestine and large intestine
→ curves around the pancreas (10 inches)
2. CECUM – saclike, first part of the large intestine
→ Most digestion
3. APPENDIX
2. JEJUNUM
→ Accumulation of lymphatic tissue that sometimes becomes
→ Attaches to the duodenum (8 feet long)
inflames (appendicitis)
→ Absorption of nutrients and water
→ Hangs from the cecum

MATIAS, JHON MANUEL MANALASTAS


4. COLON: CLASSIFICATION OF TEETH
→ ASCENDING COLON – travels up the right side
→ TRANSVERSE COLON – travels across abdomen 1. INCISORS – adult (8), child (8)
→ DESCENDING COLON – travels down the left side → they have sharp edges that help you bite into food
→ SIGMOIDAL COLON – aka PELVIC COLON
2. CANINES – “cuspids,” adult (4), child (4)
5. RECTUM – holding area before the release of fecal material
6. ANUS – external body opening 3. PREMOLARS – “bicuspids” adult (8)
→ it has a flat surface with ridges for crushing and grinding food
into smaller pieces
FOOD BREAKDOWN AND ABSORPTION IN LARGE INTESTINE
4. MOLARS – adult (12) including 4 wisdom teeth; child (4)
→ No digestive enzymes are produced → Biggest and strongest teeth
→ Resident bacteria digest remaining nutrients → It has large surface area for grinding up food and break up the
• Produce some vitamin K and vitamin B food into small pieces
• Release gases
→ Water and vitamins K and B are absorbed
→ Remaining materials are eliminated via feces REGIONS OF A TOOTH

1. CROWN – exposed part (hardest substance in the body)


PROPULSION IN LARGE INTESTINE → Outer enamel
→ Dentin
→ Sluggish peristalsis → Pulp cavity
→ Mass movements
• Slow, powerful movements 2. NECK – region in contact with the gum; connects crown to root
• Occur three to four times a day
→ Presence of feces in rectum causes a defecation reflex 3. ROOT
• Defecation occurs with relaxation of the voluntary (external) anal → periodontal membrane attached to the bone
sphincter → ROOT CANAL carrying blood vessels and nerves

DISEASES AND DISORDERS PANCREAS

1. DIARRHEA – results when water in not sufficiently absorbed by → Produces a wide spectrum of digestive enzymes that break down
large intestine (can be due to bacteria) all categories of food
→ Enzymes are secreted into duodenum
2. CONSTIPATION – results when too much water is absorbed by the → Alkaline fluid introduced with enzyme neutralizes acidic chyme
large intestine → Endocrine products of pancreas: INSULIN

ACCESSORY DIGESTIVE ORGANS LIVER

→ Consist of salivary glands, teeth, pancreas, liver, gall bladder → Largest internal organ/gland in the body
→ Located on the right side of the body under the diaphragm
→ Consist oof four lobes suspended from the diaphragm and
SALIVARY GLANDS abdominal wall by the falciform ligament
→ Connected to the gall bladder via the COMMON HEPATIC DUCT
→ Saliva-producing glands

1. PAROTID GLANDS – located anterior to ears BILE


MUMPS is inflammation of the parotid glands
→ Produced by cells in liver
2. SUBMANDIBULAR GLANDS – located beneath the floor of the
mouth COMPOSITION:

1. Bile salts
3. SUBLINGUAL GLANDS – located under the tongue
2. Bile pigment (mostly bilirubin from the breakdown of
hemoglobin)
TEETH 3. Cholesterol
4. Phospholipids
→ The role is to masticate or chew the food 5. Electrolytes
→ Aids in mechanical digestion

→ Humans two have to sets of teeth ROLES OF LIVER IN METABOLISM


• DECIDUOUS TEETH (Baby or Milk Teeth)
→ Several roles in digestion
➔ 20 teeth are fully formed by the age of two
→ Detoxifies drugs and alcohol
→ Degrades hormones
• PERMANENT TEETH
→ Produce cholesterol, blood proteins (clotting proteins)
➔ Will replace deciduous teeth beginning between the
→ Plays a central role in metabolism
ages of 6 to 12
➔ A full set is 32 teeth, but some people do not have
wisdom teeth
➔ Teeth are named according to their function
MATIAS, JHON MANUEL MANALASTAS
METABOLISM 2. LIPIDS – triglycerides, phospholipids, fatty acids
3. PROTEINS – amino acids
→ Chemical reactions that are necessary to maintain life 4. VITAMINS – need a balanced diet to obtain essential vitamins
5. MINERAL – body requires 7 minerals (Ca, P, K, S, Na, Cl, Mg)
CATABOLISM – substances are broken down, energy released and 6. WATER – helps in absorption of food
captured to make ATP
WHAT NUTRIENTS DO FOR THE BODY?
ANABOLISM – small molecules come together to form larger, complex
molecules → CARBOHYDRATES – broken down to form ATP

→ LIPIDS – build cell membranes, make myelin sheath, and insulates


MAINTAINING BLOOD GLUCOSE LEVEL the body

• Blood circulates through the liver and glucose is removed. If the → PROTEINS – major structure for building cells
body has an abundance, glucose is made into glycogen. The
process is called GLYCOGENESIS.
DISEASES AND DISORDERS
• If the body is low on sugar, the liver will break down the glycogen
into sugar/glucose. The process is called GLYCOGENOLYSIS. 1. FROSTBITE – when the body is exposed to low temperatures;
capillaries constrict to keep blood deeper for the internal organs

CARBOHYDRATE METBOLISM 2. SHIVERING – occurs when internal body becomes too cold; this
produces heat
CELLULAR RESPIRATION – glucose is broken down, releasing
chemical energy to form ATP 3. HYPOTHERMIA – extremely low body temperature; this results
from prolonged exposure to cold; vital signs decreased
GLUCOSE + O2 = CO2 + H2O + ATP
4. If the body is hot, capillaries become flushed with warm blood,
• If too much sugar is in the blood, it will be converted to FAT! releasing heat; SWEATING will occur. HEAT STROKE or HEAT
EXHAUSTION can occur.
PROTEIN METABOLISM
5. CLEFT PALATE – palate does not form properly; deformities of
• Amino acids (make up proteins) are used to make ATP only when mouth, nose, and lips
proteins are over abundant or carbohydrates, and fats are not
available. 6. CYSTIC FIBROSIS – excessive mucus impairs activity of
• Amino acids are oxidized and ammonia (NH3) is given off pancreas; fat and fat-soluble vitamin are not digested
(secreted). The rest of the amino acids enter the citric acid cycle.
7. PHENYLKETONURIA – inability to use amino acids in food; can
cause brain damage and mental retardation
FAT METABOLISM
8. GASTROENTERITIS – inflammation of the gastrointestinal tract;
• Most of fat metabolism occurs in the liver can be cause by contaminated food
• Fat is broken into acetic acid. Then, it is oxidized and CO 2, H2O,
and ATP are formed. 9. APPENDICITIS – inflammation of appendix
• This occurs when there are low amounts of sugar in the blood.
10. ULCER – lesion or erosion of mucus membrane, leads to exposure
to secretions of the stomach
GALL BALDDER

→ sac found in hollow part of the liver


→ stores bile from the liver
→ bile is introduced into the duodenum in the presence of fatty foods
→ GALLSTONES can cause blockages

DIESEASE AND DISORDER

1. GALLSTONES – occur when bile is stored for too long and fat
crystallizes

2. JAUNDICE – bile enters the blood stream and tissues become


yellow

NUTRITION

NUTRIENT – substance used by the body for growth, maintenance, and


repair

CATEGORIES OF NUTRIENTS

1. CARBOHYDRATES – simple sugars, starches, fiber (fruit, grain,


veggies, some milk and meat)

MATIAS, JHON MANUEL MANALASTAS

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