The document summarizes the structure and function of the digestive system. It describes the alimentary canal and accessory digestive organs. It then discusses the processes of ingestion, digestion, absorption, and elimination. It provides details on the mouth, salivary glands, esophagus, stomach, small intestine, liver, gallbladder and pancreas. It explains their roles in mechanical and chemical breakdown of food as well as absorption of nutrients.
The document summarizes the structure and function of the digestive system. It describes the alimentary canal and accessory digestive organs. It then discusses the processes of ingestion, digestion, absorption, and elimination. It provides details on the mouth, salivary glands, esophagus, stomach, small intestine, liver, gallbladder and pancreas. It explains their roles in mechanical and chemical breakdown of food as well as absorption of nutrients.
throughout the body ◦ Digests and absorbs food particles ◦ Contains the following organs: ●Mouth, Pharynx, Esophagus, Stomach, Small and Large Intestines • Accessory Digestive Organs ◦ Contains the following organs: ●Teeth, Tongue, Gallbladder, Salivary Glands, Liver, and Pancreas • Ingestion
• Digestion
• Absorption
• Elimination Peritoneum Peritoneum is the serous membrane lining the abdominopelvic cavity
Visceral peritoneum covers the external surfaces of
most digestive organs and is continuous with the parietal peritoneum that lines the body wall
Between the two peritoneums is the peritoneal cavity
Mesentery is a double layer peritoneum; provides routes for BV, lymphatics, nerves
Alimentary canal organs are classified as
Retroperitoneal - no mesentery and organs lies posterior to the peritoneum (SADPUCKER) Intraperitoneal - mesentery and organs lies within the peritoneal cavity • Ingestion • Propulsion • Mechanical digestion • Chemical digestion • Absorption • Defecation • Splanchnic Circulation ◦ Includes all arteries branching off the abdominal aorta and the hepatic portal circulation ◦ Arterial supply: ●Celiac Trunk (hepatic, splenic, and left gastric) ●Mesenteric Arteries: sup. and inf. ◦ Receives ¼ of the blood volume (CO); increases after a meal • Buccal/oral cavity • Contains stratified squamous epithelium • Vestibule: area bounded by lips and cheeks externally and teeth and gums internally • Lips: posses no sweat or oil glands • Palate: forms roof of the mouth, soft and hard palate, uvula • Helps grind food into a bolus which contains partially digested food and saliva • Helps form words and is a sensory organ for taste • Three surface features: ◦ Filiform papillae (roughness and grip) ◦ Fungiform papillae (contains taste buds) ◦ Circumvallate papillae (contains taste buds) • Main functions: ◦ Produces and secretes saliva ◦ Cleanses the mouth ◦ Dissolves food chemicals so they can be tasted ◦ Moistens food, compacting it into a bolus ◦ Begins the chemical breakdown of food ●Salivary amylase: starch • Submandibular Glands ◦ Found underneath the mandible • Sublingual Glands ◦ Found underneath the tongue • Parotid Glands ◦ Found anterior to the ear between masseter and skin • Saliva travels to oral orifice via ducts from all three glands • Composition of Saliva: 97-99.5% water • pH 6.75-7.0 • Sodium, potassium, chloride, phosphate, and bicarbonate • Mucin • Salivary amylase • Break food into smaller parts, increasing surface area for digestion • Types of Teeth ◦ Deciduous Teeth (“baby” teeth) ◦ Permanent Teeth ●Incisors- cutting and shredding ●Canines- piercing and tearing ●Molars- grinding ●Premolars- grinding and crushing • Crown: exposed portion of tooth covered by enamel which covers dentin • Root: internal portion that is beneath the gums (gingiva) and is anchored by periodontal ligaments • Deglutition = swallowing • Oropharynx and Laryngopharynx are common passageways for food and air • Pharynx contains stratified squamous epithelium (friction-resistant) • Muscular tube that propels food to stomach; bolus enters stomach through esophageal hiatus • Skeletal muscle (upper third for swallowing) and smooth muscle (lower third) for peristalsis • Esophageal glands – produce mucus to lubricate bolus • Esophageal sphincter – prevents backflow into oral cavity • Cardiac sphincter- prevents backflow into esophagus • Mouth processes: ◦ Ingestion ◦ Mechanical digestion (e.g. salivary amylase) ◦ Initiation of Propulsion ◦ Mastication: chewing • Pharyngeal processes: ◦ Deglutition = swallowing ●Voluntary Buccal phase ●Involuntary Pharyngeal-Esophageal Phase • Esophageal processes: ◦ Peristalsis (rhythmic contractions, involuntary) • Temporary storage area for food and allows it to mix with gastric juice to produce chyme • Regions: cardiac, fundus, body, and pyloric • Greater and Lesser Curvatures: connected to greater and lesser omentums • Rugae folds: longitudinal folds in stomach wall - mucous b/w folds • Muscle layers arranged circularly, longitudinally, AND obliquely (aids in digestion) • Simple columnar epithelium – contains gastric pits that secrete gastric juices • Goblet cells – secrete mucus that coats stomach and prevents it from being digested itself • Parietal cells – secrete hydrochloric acid (converts pepsinogen into pepsin) and intrinsic factor (necessary for absorption of vitamin B12) • Chief cells – secrete pepsinogen which is converted to pepsin to aid in protein digestion • Enteroendocrine cells – release hormones such as: ◦ Histamine, Serotonin, Gastrin, Endorphins, and Somatostatin • Histamine - activates parietal cells to release HCl • Serotonin - contraction of stomach muscle • Gastrin - gastric glands to increase secretion • Endorphins - natural opiates • Somatostatin - sympathetic n.s. - inhibits gastric secretion - inhibits gastric emptying • Gastric Secretion ◦ Cephalic Phase ●Stimulated by the thought, sight, taste, or aroma or food ●Inputs from olfactory receptors and taste buds travel to parasympathetic enteric ganglia which then stimulate stomach glands ◦ Gastric Phase ●Stomach distension activates stretch receptors ●Food chemicals (e.g. peptides, rising pH) activate chemoreceptors which activate G cells which secrete gastrin ◦ Intestinal Phase ●Presence of low pH and partially digested foods in duodenum stimulates intestinal gastrin secretion • Peristaltic waves approach stomach and become stronger near pyloric region • Pyloric sphincter allows ~ 3 mL of chyme to pass to duodenum and the rest to return to stomach for further mixing • Receives chyme from stomach; performs majority of digestion and absorption of nutrients • Regions: ◦ Duodenum (upper region receiving chyme from stomach and digestive enzymes from pancreas and bile from liver and gallbladder) ◦ Jejunum/Ileum (lower regions where absorption occurs) ◦ Plicae circulares (permanent folds in mucosa and submucosa that slow movement of chyme) • Villi: fingerlike projections that increase the surface area of the SI • Microvilli: tiny projections on the plasma membranes of columnar cells that appear fuzzy (i.e. brush border cells) • Crypts of Lieberkuhn: secrete intestinal juice and special lysozymes that protect against bacteria • Peyer’s Patches: aggregated lymphoid tissues containing lymphocytes • Secretin: released by enteroendocrine cells when acidic chyme enters SI; causes release of bicarbonate-rich pancreatic juices • Somatostatin: slows gastric motility and emptying and inhibits production of gastric secretions • Cholecystokinin (CCK): released when fatty, protein-rich chyme enters SI; causes release of enzyme-rich pancreatic juices and bile • Brush border enzymes: process long peptides, nucleic acids, and sugars into smaller ones • Largest internal organ • Functions: ◦ Filters and processes nutrient-rich blood of carbohydrates, proteins, and lipids from intestine ◦ Production and regulation of cholesterol ◦ Production of bile which emulsifies fats ◦ Removes drugs and hormones from circulation ◦ Storage of vitamins and minerals • Right and Left Lobes: separated by falciform ligament • Caudate and Quadrate Lobes: found on posterior side • Blood vessels: ◦ Hepatic artery/vein and hepatic portal vein • Gallbladder: found underneath right lobe, stores bile • Liver Lobules: structural unit of liver • Hepatocytes: liver cells contained within the lobules • Hepatic portal vein & Hepatic Artery: the circulation of the liver, they bring blood into the liver where it is filtered through the liver sinusoidal capillaries • Kupffer cells: remove debris • Filtered blood drains into the central vein, then to the hepatic vein, and eventually to the inferior vena cava • Bile (produced by hepatocytes) drains into the bile duct after passing through portal triad • Bile then shipped to gallbladder for storage Blood supply - receives fresh O2 blood from hepatic artery (off of aorta) - receives deoxygenated blood with nutrients (from small intestine) - hepatic portal vein - From liver- hepatic vein- inferior vena cava Hepatic portal vein, hepatic artery and bile ducts make up the portal triad. • Bile ducts are present at every portal triad • Bile flows down bile canaliculi (tiny canals) between adjacent hepatocytes towards bile duct branches at every portal triad • Bile enters the bile ducts which drain into the common hepatic duct • Bile emulsifies fats, separating them into smaller parts • Bilirubin: the chief bile pigment, a waste product of the heme of hemoglobin formed during the breakdown of worn-out erythrocytes • Bile exits cystic duct upon stimulation • CCK released when acidic, fatty chyme enters intestines • Causes: ◦ Gallbladder Contraction ◦ Pancreatic Juice Secretion ◦ Relaxation of hepatopancreatic sphincter • Pancreatic Juice secreted by acinar cells • Islets of Langerhans release insulin and glucagon (important in glucose metabolism) • Pancreatic Juice contains: ◦ Sodium Bicarbonate (buffers HCl in stomach) ◦ Proteases (break down polypeptides) ◦ Pancreatic amylase (digests oligosaccarides and disaccharides into monosaccharides) ◦ Pancreatic lipases (break down lipids into fatty acids and glycerol) ◦ Pancreatic nucleases (break down nucleic acids) • Functions: ◦ Reabsorption of remaining water and electrolytes ◦ Production and absorption of Vitamins B and K ◦ Elimination of feces • Diameter is only 7 cm but is larger than that of the small intestine • Teniae Coli: bands of smooth muscle that create pocket-like sacs (haustra) • Cecum: sac-like connection between the small and large intestines • Appendix: small structure containing lymphoid tissue; small immune function • Ascending, Descending, Transverse, and Sigmoid Colon • Splenic and hepatic flexure • Rectum: storage area • Anus: regulates defecation with two sphincter muscles; internal and external • Simple columnar epithelium for absorption except in the anal canal where there is stratified squamous • No villi, no digestive-secreting cells • Goblet cells produce mucus for lubrication of feces • Bacterial flora synthesize vitamin B and most of the vitamin K needed for blood clotting • gastric and duodenal, caused by Helicobacter pylori, HCl hypersecretion • scarred liver due to chronic inflammation • gall stones • crystals of cholesterol in bile • rumbling noise caused by gas through intestines • inflammation of gall bladder • Form in the tooth surface usually in the pit and grooves of the molars teeth. • Produced by bacteria because of carbohydrate residues of food • Fungal infection of the mouth tissues • Caused by Candida albicans. • difficulty in swallowing • Inflammation of the pancreas, caused by alcohol abuse, infection disease or drugs. • Can be chronic or acute. • Cancer of the large intestines and rectum. • Second most cancer in the United States