Digestive System
Digestive System
The wall of the GI tract from the lower esophagus to the anal canal has the same basic, four-layered arrangement of tissues. The four
layers of the tract, from deep to superficial, are the mucosa, submucosa, muscularis, and serosa.
Mucosa
The mucosa, or inner lining of the GI tract, is a mucous membrane. It is composed of:-
(1) A layer of epithelium in direct contact with the contents of the GI tract,
(2) A layer of connective tissue called the lamina propria,
(3) A thin layer of smooth muscle (muscularis mucosae).
1. The Epithelium
In the mouth, pharynx, esophagus, and anal canal, it is mainly nonkeratinized stratified squamous epithelium that serves a
protective function. Simple columnar epithelium, which functions in secretion and absorption, lines the stomach and
intestines.
Located among the epithelial cells are exocrine cells that secrete mucus and fluid into the lumen of the tract, and several
types of endocrine cell called enteroendocrine cells, which secrete hormones.
2. The lamina propria
It is the areolar connective tissue containing many blood and lymphatic vessels, which are the routes by which nutrients
absorbed into the GI tract reach the other tissues of the body.
It also contains the majority of the cells of the mucosaassociated lymphatic tissue (MALT).
3. Muscularis mucosae: - It increases the surface area for digestion and absorption.
Submucosa
The submucosa contains many blood and lymphatic vessels that receive absorbed food molecules.
Also located in the submucosa is an extensive network of neurons known as the submucosal plexus.
Muscularis
The muscularis of the mouth, pharynx, and superior and middle parts of the esophagus contains skeletal muscle that
produces voluntary swallowing.
The muscularis also consists of smooth muscle. Involuntary contractions of the smooth muscle help break down food, mix it
with digestive secretions, and move it along the tract.
Between the layers of the muscularis is a second plexus of neurons—the myenteric plexus.
Serosa
Great amount of movements such as muscular contractions mix and move the luminar contents along GIT
MOUTH
The mouth, also referred to as the oral or buccal cavity, is formed by the cheeks, hard and soft palates, and tongue.
The cheeks form the lateral walls of the oral cavity.
The lips or labia are fleshy folds surrounding the opening of the mouth.
The oral cavity proper is the space that extends from the gums and teeth to the fauces, the opening between the oral cavity and the
oropharynx
The palate is a wall or septum that separates the oral cavity from the nasal cavity, and forms the roof of the mouth. This
important structure makes it possible to chew and breathe at the same time.
Digestive system
The hard palate—the anterior portion of the roof of the mouth—is formed by the maxillae and palatine bones and is covered
by a mucous membrane; it forms a bony partition between the oral and nasal cavities.
The soft palate, which forms the posterior portion of the roof of the mouth, is an arch-shaped muscular partition between the
oropharynx and nasopharynx that is lined with mucous membrane.
Hanging from the free border of the soft palate is a conical muscular process called the uvula.
During swallowing, the soft palate and uvula are drawn superiorly, closing off the nasopharynx and preventing swallowed
foods and liquids from entering the nasal cavity.
Salivary Glands
A salivary gland is a gland that releases a secretion called saliva into the oral cavity.
When food enters the mouth,secretion of saliva increases, and it lubricates, dissolves, and begins the chemical
breakdown of the food. The mucous membrane of the mouth and tongue contains many small salivary glands that open directly, or
indirectly via short ducts, to the oral cavity.
These glands include labial, buccal, and palatal glands in the lips, cheeks, and palate, respectively, and lingual glands in the tongue,
all of which make a small contribution to saliva.
However, most saliva is secreted by the major salivary glands, which lie beyond the oral mucosa, into ducts that lead to the oral
cavity.
There are three pairs of major salivary glands:-
The parotid glands are located inferior and anterior to the ears, between the skin and the masseter muscle.
The submandibular glands are found in the floor of the mouth; they are medial and partly inferior to the body of the mandible..
The sublingual glands are beneath the tongue and superior to the submandibular glands.
(1) The water in saliva provides a medium for dissolving foods so that they can be tasted by gustatory receptors and so that
digestive reactions can begin.
(2) Chloride ions in the saliva activate salivary amylase, an enzyme that starts the breakdown of starch in the mouth into
maltose, maltotriose, and _-dextrin.
(3) Bicarbonate and phosphate ions buffer acidic foods that enter the mouth, so saliva is only slightly acidic (pH 6.35–6.85).
(4) Salivary glands (like the sweat glands of the skin) help remove waste molecules from the body, which accounts for the
presence of urea and uric acid in saliva.
(5) Mucus lubricates food so it can be moved around easily in the mouth, formed into a ball, and swallowed.
(6) Immunoglobulin A (IgA) prevents attachment of microbes so they cannot penetrate the epithelium the enzyme lysozyme kills
bacteria;
DEGLUTITION
The movement of food from the mouth into the stomach is achieved by the act of swallowing, or deglutition
Deglutition is facilitated by the secretion of saliva and mucus and involves the mouth, pharynx, and esophagus.
Swallowing occurs in three stages:
(1) The voluntary stage, in which the bolus is passed into the oropharynx;
(2) The pharyngeal stage, the involuntary passage of the bolus through the pharynx into the esophagus; and
(3) The esophageal stage, the involuntary passage of the bolus through the esophagus into the stomach.
Swallowing starts when the bolus is forced to the back of the oral cavity and into the oropharynx by the movement of the
tongue upward and backward against the palate; these actions constitute the voluntary stage of swallowing.
With the passage of the bolus into the oropharynx, the involuntary pharyngeal stage of swallowing begins.
The bolus stimulates receptors in the oropharynx, which send impulses to the deglutition center in the medulla oblongata and
lower pons of the brain stem.
The returning impulses cause the soft palate and uvula to move upward to close off the nasopharynx, which prevents
swallowed foods and liquids from entering the nasal cavity.
In addition, the epiglottis closes off the opening to the larynx, which prevents the bolus from entering the rest of the
respiratory tract.
The bolus moves through the oropharynx and the laryngopharynx. Once the upper esophageal sphincter relaxes, the bolus
moves into the esophagus.
The esophageal stage of swallowing begins once the bolus enters the esophagus.
During this phase, peristalsis pushes the bolus onward.
In the section of the esophagus just superior to the bolus, the circular muscle fibers contract, constricting the
esophageal wall and squeezing the bolus toward the stomach.
The contractions are repeated in waves that push the food toward the stomach. As the bolus approaches the end of
the esophagus, the lower esophageal sphincter relaxes and the bolus moves into the stomach.
Mucus secreted by esophageal glands lubricates the bolus and reduces friction.
The passage of solid or semisolid food from the mouth to the stomach takes 4 to 8 seconds; very soft foods and
liquids pass through in about 1 second.
STOMACH
The stomach is a J-shaped enlargement of the GI tract inferior to the diaphragm in the abdomen. The stomach connects the esophagus
to the duodenum, the first part of the small intestine. One of the functions of the stomach is to serve as a mixing chamber and holding
reservoir.
Anatomy of the Stomach
The stomach has four main regions: the cardia, fundus, body, and pyloric part.
The cardia surrounds the superior opening of the stomach.
The rounded portion superior to and to the left of the cardia is the fundus.
Inferior to the fundus is the large central portion of the stomach, the body.
The pyloric part is divisible into three regions.
The first region, the pyloric antrum, connects to the body of the stomach.
The second region, the pyloric canal, leads to the third region, the pylorus, which in turn connects to the duodenun.
When the stomach is empty, the mucosa lies in large folds, or rugae, that can be seen with the unaided eye.
The pylorus communicates with the duodenum of the small intestine via a smooth muscle sphincter called the pyloric sphincter.
The concave medial border of the stomach is called the lesser curvature; the convex lateral border is called the greater
curvature.
Digestive system
Mechanical and Chemical Digestion in the Stomach
(1) Several minutes after food enters the stomach, gentle, rippling, peristaltic movements called mixing waves pass over the
stomach every 15 to 25 seconds. These waves breakdown food, mix it with secretions of the gastric glands, and reduce it to a
soupy liquid called chime.
(2) More vigorous mixing waves begin at the body of the stomach and reach the pylorus. The pyloric sphincter normally remains
almost, but not completely, closed. As food reaches the pylorus, each mixing wave forces about 3 mL of chyme into the
duodenum through the pyloric sphincter, a phenomenon known as gastric emptying. The waves pushes the chyme forward
again and forces a little more into the duodenum.These forward and backward movements of the gastric contents are
responsible for most mixing in the stomach.
(3) Foods may remain in the fundus for about an hour without becoming mixed with gastric juice. During this time, digestion by
salivary amylase continues. Soon, however, the churning action mixes chyme with acidic gastric juice, inactivating salivary
amylase and activating lingual lipase, which starts to digest triglycerides into fatty acids and diglycerides.
(4) Although parietal cells secrete H +ions and cl- ion separately into the stomach lumen, the net effect is secretion of
hydrochloric acid (HCl). Proton pumps powered by H/K ATPases actively transport H+into the lumen while bringing K+
into the cell
(5) At the same time, Cl and K diffuse out into the lumen through its channels in the apical membrane. The enzyme carbonic
anhydrase, catalyzes the formation of carbonic acid from water and carbon dioxide . As carbonic acid dissociates, it provides
a ready source of H or the proton pumps but also generates bicarbonate ions.
(6) As HCO builds up in the cytosol, it exits the parietal cell in exchange for Cl via Cl /HCO antiporters in the basolateral
membrane. HCO diffuses into nearby blood capillaries. This “alkaline tide” of bicarbonate ions entering the bloodstream
after a meal may be large enough to elevate blood pH slightly and make urine more alkaline.
(7) Receptors are present in the plasma membrane of parietal cells. The histamine receptors on parietal cells called H2 receptors
mediate different responses
(8) HCl partially unfolds proteins in food and stimulates the secretion of hormones that promote the flow of bile and pancreatic
juice.The only proteolytic (protein-digesting) enzyme in the stomach is pepsin, which is secreted by chief cells.
(9) Another enzyme of the stomach is gastric lipase, which splits the short-chain triglycerides (fats and oils) in fat molecules
(such as those found in milk) into fatty acids and monoglycerides.
More important than either lingual lipase or gastric lipase is pancreatic lipase, an enzyme secreted by the pancreas into the
small intestine.
(10) Only a small amount of nutrients are absorbed in the stomach because its epithelial cells are impermeable to most materials.
However, mucous cells of the stomach absorb some water, ions, and short-chain fatty acids, as well as certain drugs and
alcohol.
Within 2 to 4 hours after eating a meal, the stomach has emptied its contents into the duodenum.
PANCREAS
The pancreas is a pale grey gland that is about 12–15 cm long and 2.5 cm thick lies posterior to the greater curvature of the
stomach.
The pancreas consists of a head, a body, and a tail and is usually connected to the duodenum by two ducts.
The head is the expanded portion of the organ near the curve of the duodenum; superior to and to the left of the head are the
central body and the tapering tail.
Pancreatic juices are secreted by exocrine cells into small ducts that unite to form two larger ducts, the pancreatic duct and
the accessory duct.
The pancreatic duct, or duct of Wirsung, is the larger of the two ducts. The pancreatic duct joins the common bile duct from the
liver and gallbladder and enters the duodenum as a dilated common duct called the hepatopancreatic ampulla, or ampulla of
Vater.
The passage of pancreatic juice and bile through the hepatopancreatic ampulla into the small intestine is regulated by a mass
of smooth muscle surrounding the ampulla known as the sphincter of the hepatopancreatic ampulla, or sphincter of Oddi .
The other major duct of the pancreas, the accessory duct (duct of Santorini), leads from the pancreas and empties into the
duodenum about 2.5 cm superior to the hepatopancreatic ampulla.
LIVER
The liver is the heaviest gland of the body, weighing about 1.4 kg in an average adult
The liver is almost completely covered by visceral peritoneum and is completely covered by a dense irregular connective
tissue layer that lies deep to the peritoneum.
The liver is divided into two principal lobes—a large right lobe and a smaller left lobe—by the falciform ligament.
The falciform ligament extends from the undersurface of the diaphragm between the two principal lobes of the liver to the
superior surface of the liver, helping to suspend the liver in the abdominal cavity.
In the free border of the falciform ligament is the ligamentum teres (round ligament), a remnant of the umbilical vein of the
fetus; this fibrous cord extends from the liver to the umbilicus.
Digestive system
The right and left coronary ligaments are narrow extensions of the parietal peritoneum that suspend the liver from the
diaphragm.
DIGESTION
Digestion of Carbohydrates
Though the action of salivary amylase may continue in the stomach for a while, the acidic pH of the stomach destroys
salivary amylase and ends its activity.
Thus, only a few starches are broken down by the time chyme leaves the stomach. Those starches not already broken down
into maltose, maltotriose, and dextrins are cleaved by pancreatic amylase, an enzyme in pancreatic juice that acts in the
small intestine.
After amylase has split starch into smaller fragments, a brush-border enzyme called dextrinase acts on the resulting dextrins,
spltting one glucose unit at a time. Ingested molecules of sucrose, lactose, and maltose—three disaccharides—are not acted
on until they reach the small intestine.
Three brush-border enzymes digest the disaccharides into monosaccharides- Sucrase,lactase and maltase
Digestion of carbohydrates ends with the production of monosaccharides, which the digestive system is able to absorb.
Digestion of Proteins
Enzymes in pancreatic juice—trypsin, chymotrypsin, carboxypeptidase, and elastase—continue to break down proteins
into peptides.
Although all these enzymes convert whole proteins into peptides, their actions differ somewhat because each splits peptide
bonds between different amino acids.
Protein digestion is completed by two peptidases in the brush border: aminopeptidase and dipeptidase.
Digestion of Lipids
Enzymes that split triglycerides and phospholipids are called lipases. There are three types of lipases that can participate in
lipid digestion: lingual lipase, gastric lipase, and pancreatic lipase.
Although some lipid digestion occurs in the stomach through the action of lingual and gastric lipases, most occurs in the
small intestine through the action of pancreatic lipase.
Triglycerides are broken down by pancreatic lipase into fatty acids and monoglycerides. The liberated fatty acids can be
either short-chain fatty acids (with fewer than 10–12 carbons) or long-chain fatty acids.
Before a large lipid globule containing triglycerides can be digested in the small intestine, it must first undergo
emulsification— a process in which the large lipid globule is broken down into several small lipid globules.
The small lipid globules formed from emulsification provide a large surface area that allows pancreatic lipase to function
more effectively.
ABSORPTION
Absorption of Monosaccharides
$ All carbohydrates are absorbed as monosaccharides.
$ Monosaccharides pass from the lumen through the apical membrane via facilitated diffusion or active transport.
$ The transporter has binding sites for one glucose molecule and two sodium ions; unless all three sites are filled,
neither substance is transported. Monosaccharides then move out of the absorptive cells through their basolateral surfaces via
facilitated diffusion and enter the capillaries of the villi.
Absorption of Water
The small intestine absorbs about 8.3 liters of the fluid; the remainder passes into the large intestine, where most of the rest of
it about is also absorbed.
Only 0.1 liter of water is excreted in the feces each day.
All water absorption in the GI tract occurs via osmosis from the lumen of the intestines through absorptive cells and into
blood capillaries.
Because water can move across the intestinal mucosa in both directions, the absorption of water from the small intestine
depends on the absorption of electrolytes and nutrients to maintain an osmotic balance with the blood.
MOVEMENTS OF INTESTINE
Draw a labeled diagram showing various parts of GI tract.explain the fuctions of various digestive enzymes.define any 2
disorders related to digestion
Discuss the diferrent phases of deglutition
Describe the composition and functions of gastric juice
Mention the various enzymes involved in the digestion of carbohydrates.explain its site of secretion,regulation and function
Mechanical and chemical digestion in stomach
Explain the process of digestion in stomach
Different types of salivary glands and explain the functions of saliva
Explain protein digestion
Explain about digestion of fats and carbohydrates