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Digestive System Overview

The digestive system breaks down food through mechanical and chemical digestion. Mechanical digestion is the physical breakdown of food while chemical digestion relies on enzymes. There are two main stages - digestion within the digestive tract which includes the mouth, esophagus, stomach, and small and large intestines, and accessory organs like the liver, gallbladder and pancreas that produce enzymes and bile to aid digestion. Nutrients are then absorbed into the bloodstream and cells.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
72 views4 pages

Digestive System Overview

The digestive system breaks down food through mechanical and chemical digestion. Mechanical digestion is the physical breakdown of food while chemical digestion relies on enzymes. There are two main stages - digestion within the digestive tract which includes the mouth, esophagus, stomach, and small and large intestines, and accessory organs like the liver, gallbladder and pancreas that produce enzymes and bile to aid digestion. Nutrients are then absorbed into the bloodstream and cells.
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DIGESTIVE SYSTEM

Digestion- process of breaking down food

Two Types of Digestion


1. Mechanical Digestion- the physical process
2. Chemical Digestion- relies on the powerful action of enzymes

Processes of Digestion
1. Ingestion- taking food through the mouth…
2. Absorption- absorbing nutrients into the bloodstream
3. Assimilation- absorbing nutrients into every cell
4. Excretion- eliminating waste

Enzymes- protein molecules that act as catalyst


Catalysts- substances that help speed up the rate of chemical reactions

Two Groups of Organs


1. The Digestive Tract (Alimentary Canal)- muscular passageway
2. Accessory Organs- not directly involved in digestion
Digestive System Organization
Gastrointestinal (GI) Tract- tube within a tube
Structures
 Mouth
 Pharynx
 Esophagus
 Stomach
 Small Intestine
 Large Intestine
 Rectum

1. Mouth
Teeth mechanically break down food into small pieces. The tongue mixes
food with saliva (contains amylase, which helps break down starch).

Epiglottis- a flap-like structure at the back of the throat that closes over the
trachea preventing food from entering it. It is located in the Pharynx.

2. Esophagus
Approximately 20 cm long.

Functions include:
1. Secrete mucus
2. Moves food from the throat to the stomach using muscle movement
called peristalsis. If acid from the stomach gets in here that’s heartburn.

3. Stomach
A j-shaped muscular bag that stores the food you eat, breaks it down into
tiny pieces.
Mixes food with Digestive Juices that contain enzymes to break down
Proteins and Lipids.
Acid (HCl) in the stomach Kills Bacteria.
Chyme- food found in the stomach
4. Small Intestine
Small intestines are roughly 7 meters long.

The lining of intestine walls has finger-like projections called villi, to


increase surface area. The villi are covered in microvilli which further
increases surface area for absorption.

The Three Parts of the Small Intestine


1. Duodenum
2. Jejunum
3. Ileum

Nutrients from the food pass into the bloodstream through the small
intestine walls.

Absorbs:
80% ingested water
o Vitamins
o Minerals
o Carbohydrates
o Proteins
o Lipids

o Secretes digestive enzymes


5. Large Intestine
About 1.5 meters long
Accepts what small intestines don’t absorb
Absorbs more water
Concentrate wastes

Functions:
o Bacterial digestion
Ferment carbohydrates

Rectum (short term storage which holds feces before it is expelled).

Accessory Organs The Glands


Not part of the path of food, but play a critical role.
Include: Liver, gall bladder, and pancreas

Liver
 Directly affects digestion by producing bile
o Bile helps digest fat
o filters out toxins and waste including drugs and alcohol and
poisons.
Gallbladder
 Stores bile from the liver, releases it into the small intestine.
 Fatty diets can cause gallstones

Pancreas
Produces digestive enzymes to digest fats, carbohydrates and proteins
Regulates blood sugar by producing insulin

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