THE DIGESTIVE SYSTEM
EDILBERTO A. RAYNES, MD
ORGANS OF THE DIGESTIVE SYSTEM
• MAIN ORGAN
• ACCESSORY ORGAN
MAIN ORGAN
• MOUTH
• PHARYNX (THROAT)
• ESOPHAGUS (FOODPIPE)
• STOMACH
• SMALL INTESTINE (DUODENUM, JEJUNUM, ILEUM)
• LARGE INTESTINE (CECUM; COLON: ASCENDING, TRANSVERSE, DESCENDING, SIGMOID; RECTUM; ANAL CANAL)
ACCESSORY ORGAN
• TEETH AND TONGUE• SALIVARY GLANDS (PAROTID,
SUBMANDIBULAR, SUBLINGUAL)• LIVER• GALLBLADDER• PANCREAS• VERMIFORM APPENDIX
FUNCTIONS OF DIGESTIVE SYSTEM
• INGESTION
• DIGESTION
• ABSORPTION
• DEFECATION
PERITONEUM
• ENVELOPS THE ENTIRE ABDOMINAL WALL
• LARGEST SEROUS MEMBRANE IN THE BODY
• THE FREE SURFACE IS LUBRICATED WITH A SEROUS FLUID THAT ALLOWS THE DIGESTIVE STRUCTURES AND OTHER VISCERAL ORGANS TO GLIDE EASILY AGAINST THE ABDOMINAL WALL WITHOUT FRICTION
PERITONEUM
• CONTAINS BLOOD VESSELS, LYMPH VESSELS AND NERVES
• INCLUDES MESENTERIES, PARIETAL AND VISECERAL PERITONEUM, GREATER AND LESSER OMENTUM
WALL OF DIGESTIVE TRACT: FOUR LAYERS
1. MUCOSA OR MUCOUS MEMBRANES-MUCOUS EPITHELIUM
2. SUBMUCOSA- CONNECTIVE TISSUE LAYER; BLOOD VESSELS AND NERVES
3. MUSCULARIS: 2 OR 3 LAYERS OF SMOOTH MUSCLE; PERISTALSIS
4. SEROSA-OUTERMOST COVERING; VISCERAL EPITHELIUM; ATTACHES THE DIGESTIVE TRACT TO THE WALL OF THE ABDOMINOPELVIC CAVITY BY FORMING FOLDS CALLED MESENTERIES
MOUTH OR ORAL CAVITY
ROOF• FORMED BY THE HARD AND SOFT
PALATES• HARD PALATE: PARTS OF MAXILLARY
AND PALATINE BONES• SOFT PALATE: ARCH-SHAPED MUSCLE
SEPARATING MOUTH FROM PHARYNX• UVULA: DOWNWARD PROJECTION OF THE
SOFT PALATE
MOUTH OR ORAL CAVITY
FLOOR• FORMED BY TONGUE AND ITS MUSCLES
•SKELETAL MUSCLE
•FRENULUM: ATTACHES THE TONGUE TO
FLOOR
•PAPILLAE: SMALL ELEVATIONS
-VALLATE: LARGEST
-TASTE BUDS: SENSORY RECEPTORS
TEETH
TYPES:
1. INCISORS: MASTICATION OR CHEWING
2. CANINES (CUSPIDS): PIERCING OR TEARING
3. PREMOLARS OR BICUSPIDS
4. MOLARS OR TRICUSPIDS
TEETH
• AT AGE 2, 20 TEETH IN TEMPORARY SET
• AT AGE BETWEEN 17 AND 24, 32 PERMANENT TEETH
• TYPICAL TOOTH
1. CROWN
2. NECK
3. ROOT
SALIVARY GLANDS
1. PAROTID GLAND: LARGEST; LIE BELOW AND IN FRONT OF EACH EAR AT THE ANGLE OF THE JAW; DUCT OPENS AT THE OPPOSITE THE 2ND MOLAR TOOTH ON EITHER SIDE OF THE UPPER JAW
2. SUBMANDIBULAR: ON EITHER SIDE OF THE LINGUAL FRENULUM
3. SUBLINGUAL
*SALIVA CONTAINS MUCUS AND A DIGESTIVE ENZYME THAT IS CALLED SALIVARY AMYLASE
PHARYNX
• MUSCULAR TUBE THAT FUNCTIONS AS PART OF THE RESPIRTORY AND DIGESTIVE SYSTEMS
ESOPHAGUS
• MUCUS LINED TUBE BETWEEN PHARYNX AND STOMACH
*HIATAL HERNIA: THE STOMACH PUSHES THROUGH THE GAP IN THE DIAPHRAGM THAT ALLOWS THE ESOPHAGUS BECOMES ENLARGED, ALLOWING ACIDIC STOMACH CONTENTS TO BYPASS A VALVELIKE SPHINCTER MUSCLE AND FLOW UPWARD INTO THE ESOPHAGUS
STOMACH
• LIES IN THE UPPER PART OF THE ABDOMINAL CAVITY JUST UNDER THE DIAPHRAGM
• LOWER ESOPHAGEAL OR CARDIAC SPHINCTER KEEPS THE FOOD FROM REENTERING THE ESOPHAGUS WHEN THE STOMACH CONTRACTS
• CONTRACTION OF THE STOMACH’S MUSCULAR WALLS MIXES THE FOOD THOROUGHLY WITH THE GASTRIC JUICE AND BREAKS IT DOWN INTO A SESAMOID MIXTURE CALLED CHYME.
STOMACH
• MUSCLE CONTRACTION RESULTS IN PERISTALSIS THAT PROPELS FOOD DOWN THE DIGESTIVE TRACT TOGETHER WITH THE GASTRIC JUICE AND HYDROCHOLORIC ACID INTO THE STOMACH
• PARTS: FUNDUS, BODY, PYLORUS• LESSER CURVATURE: UPPER RIGHT BORDER • GREATER CURVATURE: LOWER LEFT
BORDER
STOMACH
• THE GASTRIC MUCOSA CONTAINS ENDOCRINE AND EXOCRINE CELLS.
• G CELLS: ENDOCRINE CELLS THAT SECRETE HORMONE GASTRIN, WHICH INITIATES THE PRODUCTION AND SECRETION OF GASTRIC JUICE AND STIMULATES BILE AND PANCREATIC ENZYMES INTO THE SMALL INTESTINE
STOMACH
• 2 TYPES OF EXOCRINE CELLS: PARIETAL AND CHIEF CELLS
• PARIETAL CELLS: PRODUCE (1) INTRINSIC FACTOR, A SUBSTANCE REQUIRED FOR THE ABSORPTION OF VITAMIN B12 FROM THE SMALL INTESTINE TO THE BLOODSTREAM; (2) HYDROCHOLORIC ACID, WHICH BREAKS DOWN PROTEIN AND ACTIVATES MANY GASTRIC ENZYMES
STOMACH
• CHIEF CELLS: PRODUCE GASTRIC ENZYME, PEPSINOGEN, A PRECURSOR TO PEPSIN. PEPSIN IS SECRETED IN AN INACTIVE FORM TO PREVENT THE GASTRIC LINING FROM ERODING FROM PEPSIN’S PROTEIN DIGESTION. PEPSINOGEN CONVERTS TO PEPSIN WHEN IT COMES IN CONTACT WITH HCL AND BEGINS THE CHEMICAL DIGESTION OF PROTEINS BY CONVERTING THEM INTO PEPTIDES
STOMACH
• CHYMOSIN OR RENNIN, AN ENZYME PRESENT IN THE GASTRIC JUICES OF INFANTS, IS USED TO AID IN MILK CURDLING AND IS USED COMMERCIALLY TO PRODUCE CHEESE.
SMALL INTESTINE
• DIVISIONS: DUODENUM, JEJUNUM, ILEUM• WALL CONTAINS SMOOTH MUSCLE FIBERS
THAT CONTRACT TO PRODUCE PERISTALSIS• LINED BY MUCOUS MEMBRANES• INTESTINAL GLANDS: INTESTINAL JUICE• VILLI: FINGER-SHAPED PROJECTIONS THAT
CONTAIN BLOOD AND LYMPH CAPILLARIES THAT ABSORB THE PRODUCTS OF CARBOHYDRATE AND PROTEIN DIGESTION
LIVER
• LARGEST GLAND• SECRETE BILE• HEPATIC DUCTS: DRAINS BILE FROM
LIVER• CYSTIC DUCT: BILE ENTERS AND LEAVES
GALLBLADDER• COMMON BILE DUCT: UNION OF HEPATIC
AND CYSTIC DUCT; DRAINS BILE FROM HEPATIC OR CYSTIC DUCTS INTO DUODENUM
BILE
• MECHANICALLY BREAKS UP OR EMULSIFIES FATS
• WHEN CHYME CONTAINING LIPID OR FAT ENTERS THE DUODENUM, IT INITIATES A MECHANISM THAT CONTRACTS THE GALLBLADDER AND FORCES THE BILE INTO THE SMALL INTESTINE
BILE
• FATS IN CHYME TRIGGER THE SECRETION OF THE HORMONE CHOLECYSTOKININ (CCK) FROM THE INTESTINAL MUCOSA OF THE DUODENUM. CCK STIMULATES THE CONTRACTION OF THE GALLBLADDER AND BILE FLOWS INTO THE DUODENUM
GALLBLADDER
• LOCATED UNDER THE SURFACE OF THE LIVER
• CONCENTRATES AND STORES BILE PRODUCED IN THE LIVER
PANCREAS
• BEHIND THE STOMACH• FUNCTIONS: 1. PANCREATIC CELLS SECRETE
PANCREATIC JUICE INTO PANCREATIC DUCTS; MAIN DUCTS EMPTIES INTO DUODENUM
2. PANCREATIC ISLETS OF LANGERHANS: CELLS NOT CONNECTED WITH PANCREATIC DUCTS; SECRETE HORMONES GLUCAGON AND INSULIN INTO THE BLOOD
LARGE INTESTINE
• DIVISIONS: CECUM; COLON (ASCENDING, TRANSVERSE, DESCENDING AND SIGMOID); RECTUM
• WALL: SMOOTH MUSCLE FIBERS THAT CONTRACT TO PRODUCE CHURNING, PERISTALSIS AND DEFECATION
FUNCTIONS OF LARGE INTESTINE
1. ABSORPTION OF WATER AND CERTAIN ELECTROLYTES
2. SYNTHESIS OF CERTAIN VITAMINS BY THE INTESTINAL BACTERIA (ESPECIALLY VITAMIN K AND CERTAIN B VITAMINS)
3. TEMPORARY STORAGE SITE OF WASTE (FECES)
4. ELIMINATION OF WASTE FROM THE BODY (DEFECATION)
APPENDIX
• BLIND TUBE OFF CECUM
• NO IMPORTANT DIGESTIVE FUNCTION IN HUMANS
PROCESSING OF FOOD
1. DIGESTION
2. ABSORPTION
3. METABOLISM
DIGESTION
• CHANGING FOODS SO THAT THEY CAN BE ABSORBED AND USED BY CELLS
• TYPES: MECHANICAL, CHEMICAL, CARBOHYDRATE, PROTEIN, FAT DIGESTION
MECHANICAL DIGESTION
• CHEWING, SWALLOWING AND PERISTALSIS BREAK FOOD INTO TINY PARTICLES
• MIX WELL WITH DIGESTIVE JUICES
• MOVE THEM ALONG THE DIGESTIVE TRACT
CHEMICAL DIGESTION
• BREAKS UP LARGE FOOD MOLECULES INTO COMPOUNDS HAVING SMALLER MOLECULES
• BROUGHT ABOUT BY DIGESTIVE ENZYMES
CARBOHYDRATE DIGESTION
• MAINLY IN SMALL INTESTINE• PANCREATIC AMYLASE: CHANGES
STARCHES TO MALTOSE• INTESTINAL JUICE ENZYMES 1. MALTASE: CHANGES MALTOSE TO
GLUCOSE 2. SUCRASE: SUCROSE TO GLUCOSE 3. LACTASE: LACTOSE TO GLUCOSE
PROTEIN DIGESTION
• STARTS IN STOMACH; COMPLETED IN SMALL INTESTINE
• GASTRIC JUICE ENZYMES, RENNIN AND PEPSIN: PARTIALLY DIGEST PROTEINS
• PANCREATIC ENZYME, TRYPSIN: COMPLETES DIGESTION OF PROTEINS TO AMINO ACIDS
• INTESTINAL ENZYMES, PEPTIDASES: COMPLETE DIGESTION OF PARTIALLY DIGESTED PROTEINS TO AMINO ACIDS
FAT DIGESTION
• BILE CONTAINS NO ENZYMES BUT EMULSIFIES FATS (BREAKS FAT DROPLETS INTO VERY SMALL DROPPLETS)
• PANCREATIC LIPASE: CHANGES EMULSIFIED FATS TO FATTY ACIDS AND GLYCEROL IN SMALL INTESTINE
ABSORPTION
• DIGESTED FOOD MOVES FROM INTESTINE INTO BLOOD OR LYMPH
• FOODS AND MOST WATER FROM SMALL INTESTINE
• WATER FROM LARGE INTESTINE
Top Related