1 / 18

Digestive System

Digestive System. Week 13 Dr. Walid Daoud A. Professor. The Pancreas. Pancreas is a soft oblong gland. It lies posterior to the greater curvature of the stomach and is connected by pancreatic duct to the duodenum. Pancreas has a head, body and tail. Pancreatic juice:

josiah
Télécharger la présentation

Digestive System

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Digestive System Week 13 Dr. Walid Daoud A. Professor

  2. The Pancreas Pancreas is a soft oblong gland. It lies posterior to the greater curvature of the stomach and is connected by pancreatic duct to the duodenum. Pancreas has a head, body and tail. Pancreatic juice: 1-2 L / day. Alkaline pH (7.1- 8.2). Water and enzymes 98.5%. Sodium bicarbonate 1.5%

  3. ssss

  4. Functions of Pancreatic Juice 1- Sod. bicarbonate: Neutralizes acidity in duodenum. 2- Pancreatic amylase: Digests starch into maltose. 3- Proteolytic enzymes: Trypsin, chemotrypsin, carboxypeptidase. 4- Pancreatic lipase: Digests fat into glycerol and fatty acids.

  5. The Bile Hepatic cells secrete 1-2 L of bile daily. Alkaline pH (7.6-8.6) due to sod. bicarbonate which is absorbed during storage of bile in the gall bladder and bile becomes acidic. Composition of bile: 1- Bile salts. 2- Cholesterol. 3- Bile pigments: bilirubin and biliverdin.

  6. Steps of Bile Pigment Formation 1- Old red blood cells are broken releasing iron + globin + bilirubin. 2- bilirubin binds to plasma proteins forming hemobilirubin which is taken by the liver. 3- Bilirubin conjugates with glucoronic acid or SO4 forming cholebilirubin excreted by hepatic cells with bile. 4- In the intestine cholebilirubin is reduced by intestinal bacteria to stercobilinogen.

  7. Fate of Stercobilinogen A- 2/3 lost in feces. B- 1/3 absorbed in the portal blood to the liver cells and oxidized again into bilirubin or excreted in bile (enterohepatic circulation of stercobilinogen). C- Small amount passes in circulation and excreted in urine as urobilinogen which is oxidized by air into urobilin..

  8. Functions of Gall Bladder 1- Storage of bile. 2- Concentration of bile. 3- Secretion of mucus (white bile). 4- Acidification of liver bile. 5- Biliary pressure buffer. 6- Emptying of its contents.

  9. Small Intestine Small intestine (21 feet in length) is divided into 3 segments: 1- Duodenum 2- Jejunum 3- Ileum. Functions: 1- Digestion mainly in upper half. 2- Absorption mainly in lower half. 3- Movement of chyme into the colon. 4- Secretion of hormones regulating digestion

  10. Succus Entericus Digestive juice of small intestine, 2-3 L /day, alkaline pH 7.6, contains sod. bicarbonate & Enzymes: 1- Peptidases group. 2- Disaccharidases group. 3- Intestinal lipase. 4- Nucleases. 5- Enterokinase.

  11. Mechanism of Intestinal Secretion 1- Local axon reflex. 2- Hormonal mechanism. 3- Extrinsic nerves.

  12. Movements of Small Intestine 1- Peristaltic movement: A wave of contraction preceded by a wave of relaxation. 2- Mass peristalsis: A rapid wave of peristalsis along the whole length of intestine in less than 1 minute. 3- Antiperistalsis. 4- Segmenting movements.

  13. Absorption It is the passage of digested nutrients (glucose, amino acids and fatty acids) from alimentary canal into blood or lymph. 90% of absorption occurs through the villi in small intestine and depends on: 1- Diffusion. 2- Facilitated diffusion. 3- Osmosis. 4- Active transport.

  14. Large Intestine It extends from the end of ileum to anus. 4 regions: cecum, colon, rectum & anal canal Functional Anatomy: 1- Proximal colon: for absorption. From cecum to middle of transverse colon. 2- Distal colon: for storage. From middle of transverse colon to the junction of pelvic colon with rectum. 3- Rectum and anal canal: for defecation.

  15. sss

  16. Functions of Large Intestine 1- Digestion: No digestion in human but in animals. 2- Absorption. 3- Excretion. 4- Secretion of mucin. 5- Storage of feces. 6- Synthesis of vitamin K and B complex. 7- Defecation.

  17. - Defecation Reflex - Gastrocolic Reflex

More Related