Digestive System.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Class 9 Digestive System
Advertisements

© 2012 Delmar Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be scanned, copied, duplicated, or posted to a publicly accessible website, in whole or in.
Chapter 3: The Human Body. Body Cells  Form tissues  Tissues form Organs  Organs form Systems (e.g., digestive)  Turnover  Require nutrients.
The Digestive System.
Chapter 14 Accessory Digestive Organs
Digestive System.
The Digestive System. Functions of the Digestive System  Ingest food  Break down food Digestion  Physical  Chemical  Absorb nutrients  Eliminate.
Chapter 9: digestion.
Digestive System Chapter 18.
Functions of the digestive system
DIGESTIVE SYSTEM Professor Andrea Garrison Biology 11
Digestive System: From Mouth to Anus
Chapter 17: The Digestive System
The Digestive System. Organ groups of digestion Alimentary organs – Mouth – Pharynx – Esophagus – Stomach – Small and large intestine Accessory digestive.
THE DIGESTIVE SYSTEM EDILBERTO A. RAYNES, MD.
DIGESTIVE SYSTEM.
Chapter 16 – digestive system
Gastrointestinal System
CHAPTER 15 DIGESTIVE SYSTEM
Digestive System Gastrointestinal Tract 1. Mouth Accessory Structures
What happens where? STARCH to MALTOSESALIVARY AMYLASE REACTANT/PRODUCTENZYME PROTEINS to PEPTIDES LIPASE Chymo/trypsin LIPIDS to FAs & GLYCEROL PROTEINS.
SI Session Digestive system Spring 2010 For Dr. Wright’s Bio 6 Class Designed by Pyeongsug Kim ©2010 Picture from
Introduction to the Digestive System
The Digestive System Lab
Physiology of the Digestive System
Chapter 19-Digestive System. Chapter : Digestive System Overview.
Human Anatomy, 3rd edition
The Digestive System Food, Glorious Food!. Functions Take in food  ingestion Physical & chemical break down of food  digestion Absorption of nutrients.
The DIGESTIVE System.
Click Here. ORAL CAVITY ESOPHAGUS LIVER STOMACH GALL BLADDER GALL BLADDER PANCREAS SMALL INTESTINE SMALL INTESTINE LARGE INTESTINE LARGE INTESTINE RECTUM.
The Digestive System.
© 2010 Delmar, Cengage Learning 1 PowerPoint Presentation to Accompany.
Digestive System. Humans as Heterotrophs Hetero=another Trophe= nutrition As heterotrophs we cannot create carbon, therefore we need to ingest carbon.
Digestive System.
Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. The Digestive System  The digestive system is arranged as a series of organs along a tube called the gastrointestinal.
ELAINE N. MARIEB EIGHTH EDITION 14 Copyright © 2006 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings PowerPoint ® Lecture Slide Presentation by.
When Human Digestive System becomes A luxury tour is waiting for U Duodenum Dynamics Ad Agency© Disneyland…
Functions of the Digestive System. Ingestion Active, voluntary process Food is placed into the mouth
Digestive System Organs Involved. Mouth n Oral Cavity n Food enters – Ingested n Roof, Walls, Floor Mucous Membrane n Physical & Chemical Breakdown.
The Digestive System and Body Metabolism
Digestion Food: The easiest thing you will pass in school.
Functions of the digestive system Ingestion- bringing in food/nutrients Mechanical processing- mechanically breaking food down, chewing, etc. Digestion-
The Digestive System and Body Metabolism
Digestive System Continued... The Digestive Tract.
The Digestive System By Khaled Na3im. The Digestive System.
DIGESTION.
Nutrition and the Digestive System
Anatomy of the Digestive System u Functions of the Digestive System u Organs of the GI Tract u Layers of the GI Tract u Gross and Microscopic Anatomy of.
Chapter 17 The Digestive System. Alimentary canal aka GI tract Extends from mouth to anus –9 m (29 feet) Functions: –Digestion –Absorption –Metabolism.
The Digestive System.
Digestive System. Digestion: The chemical breakdown of large food molecules into smaller molecules that can be used by cells. The basic fuel molecules.
General anatomy of the Digestive System
Digestive, Excretory & Urinary Systems Digestive, Excretory & Urinary Systems DIGESTION & ITS ORGANS.
THE DIGESTIVE SYSTEM CHAPTER 25 atch?v=9FEACJ-cXsY.
Chapter 14 Accessory Digestive Organs
The Digestive System Body Cavities Cranial Thoracic pleural pericardial Spinal Abdominal Pelvic.
Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.Chapter 6 Human Structure and Function The Digestive System The Gastrointestinal (Digestive) System Every cell.
THE DIGESTIVE SYSTEM A.K.A. THE GASTROINTESTINAL (GI) TRACT Converts foods into simpler molecules, then absorbs them into the blood stream for use by.
Digestive Anatomy. Alimentary Canal organs thru which food actually passes oral cavity pharynx esophagus stomach small intestine large intestine.
The Digestive System.
Digestive Play.
The Gastrointestinal (Digestive) System
Anatomy and Physiology of the Digestive System
Digestive System Continued... The Digestive Tract
The Gastrointestinal (Digestive) System
Pig Digestive System Chapter 6 (pages 42 – 49)
6.1 – Digestion.
Digestive System Organs
Presentation transcript:

Digestive System

Functions Ingestion Secretion Mixing and propulsion Digestion Absorption Defecation

Digestive Organs GI tract: Accessory organs: Mouth, Pharynx, Esophagus, Stomach, Small Intestine, Large Intestine, Anus Accessory organs: Teeth, Tongue, Salivary glands, Liver, Gallbladder, Pancreas

GI Tract Layers Mucosa Submucosa - areolar Epithelium - Strat. Squamous to Simple Columnar Lamina propria Some smooth muscle Submucosa - areolar Muscularis - skeletal higher, smooth lower Serosa - visceral peritoneum

Peritoneum Largest serous membrane Parietal and visceral Five major folds: Contain adipose tissue Anchor major organs Contain blood vessels and lymph nodes Greater Omentum and Mesentary as examples

Macromolecule Review Carbohydrates - Mono- and Polysaccharides Proteins - Amino acids form polypeptides Lipids - Simple, complex, steroids Nucleic Acids What kinds of enzymes break down each group?

Mouth Ingestion Mastication and moistening Beginning of chemical digestion Movement of bolus to oropharynx

Accessory Organs in Mouth Salivary glands - parotid, submandibular, sublingual Tongue - papillae and lingual frenulum Teeth 20 deciduous teeth, 32 permanent Incisors (4), canines (2), bicuspid (4), molars (4-6?) per jaw

Mouth Mechanical Digestion Chemical Digestion Saliva also used to: Mastication - Tongue, teeth, saliva  Bolus Chemical Digestion Salivary Amylase - starch  maltose, -dextrins Lingual Lipase - Activated in stomach - Triglycerides  F.A.s and Diglycerides Saliva also used to: Destroy bacteria (Lysozyme, IgA) Lubricate food (mucus) Remove waste Aid gustation (water)

Esophagus Laryngopharynx to stomach Upper esophageal sphincter (skeletal muscle) Lower esophageal sphincter (cardiac) Passes through diaphragm at esophageal hiatus

Esophagus Deglutition (Swallowing) Peristalsis Wavelike contractions Alternating bands of muscle

Stomach

Stomach Mechanical digestion Chemical digestion Mixing waves - produce chyme and promote gastric emptying Chemical digestion Pepsin - proteins into smaller peptides HCl - partial denaturation Absorbs some water, ions, Fas, some drugs and alcohol

Gastric Glands Gastric Juice HCl Pepsin - protein digestion kills microbes converts pepsinogen to pepsin Pepsin - protein digestion Gastric lipase - Triglycerides  Fas and monoglycerides Mucous - protects lining

Gastric glands

Pancreas Endocrine and exocrine gland Pancreatic islets: insulin and glucagon (and others) Acini: Pancreatic juice Sodium bicabonate Enzymes to digest all four macromolecule groups

Liver Secretion of Bile Bile stored in gall bladder Used for: Excretion of Bilirubin Emulsification of lipids by bile salts Easier absorption of lipids Excretion of drugs and hormones

Other Liver Functions Glycogen storage and glucose release/production Lipid Metabolism Protein metabolism - ease conversion of a.a., synthesize plasma proteins Detoxification Storage of vitamins/minerals Phagocytosis of old blood cells and some bacteria Activation of vitamin D

Small Intestine 90% of all absorption Aided by: Length (10 ft avg) Villi (1 mm) Microvilli (1 um) - “Brush Border” Monomers absorbed into capillaries or Lacteals

Small Intestine Duodenum, jejunum, ileum Intestinal glands Duodenal glands - alkaline mucus - why? Digestive enzymes along w/ pancreas Circular folds - better absorption Villi Absorptive cells Capillaries and lacteals Microvilli

Small Intestine Chemical Digestion Brush Border enzymes – all major groups Intestinal Juices - water and mucus Pancreatic Juice, Bile and Intestinal juice work in combination

Large Intestine Mechanical digestion Chemical digestion by bacteria Haustral churning - contraction following distension Peristalsis Mass peristalsis - pushes contents into rectum Chemical digestion by bacteria Absorption of water, ions, and some vitamins

Defecation Feces formed in large intestine Defecation Reflex Water, Inorganic salts, Bacteria and their products, Unabsorbed/Indigestible material, Epithelial cells Defecation Reflex Rectum distended Stretch receptors  spinal cord Parasymp  contraction of colon and rectum Internal anal sphincter opens External is voluntarily relaxed

pH Enzymes operate at optimal pH Saliva = 6.5 Gastric juice = 2 Pancreatic Juice = 7.1-8.2 Intestinal Juice = 7.6 pH adjusted by negative feedback (Buffers, Hormone release)

Hormones Gastrin - gastric glands - gastric juice , gastric emptying , Sphincter control Cholecystokinen (CCK) - s. Int - Pancreatic juice , Bile release , gastric emptying , satiation Secretin - S. Int - Pancreatic Juice , Gastric Juice 