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Chapter 24 The Digestive System. Structures and functions, fig 24.1. Digestive System Organs Alimentary Canal Accessory Digestive Organs Digestive Processes Ingestion Secretion Propulsion Digestion Absorption Defecation. Anatomy of the Digestive System. ________________
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Structures and functions, fig 24.1 • Digestive System Organs • Alimentary Canal • Accessory Digestive Organs • Digestive Processes • Ingestion • Secretion • Propulsion • Digestion • Absorption • Defecation
Anatomy of the Digestive System • ________________ • Mouth, Pharynx, and Esophagus • Stomach • Small Intestine • Large Intestine • ___________ Digestive Organs • Teeth, Tongue, Salivary Glands • Liver and Gallbladder • Pancreas
Functions • _______________ taking food into the mouth • _______________ release of water, acid, buffers, & enzymes into lumen of GI tract • ___________ and __________ churning & propulsion of food thru GI tract • ______________ mechanical & chemical breakdown of food • _________________ passage of digested products from the GI tract into blood & lymph • ___________ elimination of feces from GI tract
Mouth, Pharynx, & Esophagus • Anatomy • Mouth • Lips and Cheeks • Palate • Tongue • Salivary Glands • Teeth • Pharynx • Esophagus • Digestive Processes • Mastication • Deglutition
Mouth (oral or buccal cavity) fig 24.5 • Formed by cheeks, hard & soft palate, tongue • Where mechanical AND chemical digestion begin • _____________ - chewing • Bolus- soft, flexible mass • ______________ – enzyme, initiates breakdown of starch • ______________ – enzyme in saliva, works in stomach to breakdown dietary triglycerides
Tongue • accessory organ • skeletal muscles covered w/ mucous membrane • Attached to hyoid, styloid process, mandible • Extrinsic muscles manuever food -chewing, form bolus, force back for swallowing • Intrinsic muscles alter shape and size during speech & swallowing • Dorsal & lateral surfaces covered w/_____________ - which are projections of lamina propria • Many contain taste buds - ______________ • Lacking taste buds - touch, increase friction • ____________ – secrete mucus, & serous fluid that contains lingual lipase
Teeth figure 24.7 • Accessory digestive organs in _________ __________ • Crown, neck, root – major external regions • _______________ - calcifed CT, gives shape and rigidity, harder than bone, majority of tooth • ________________- covers dentin on crown, hardest substance in body, protects tooth from wear & tear of chewing, and acids • ________________ - CT containing bv, nerves, lymphatic vessels
Dentitions figure 24.8 • ______________ teeth = primary, milk, or baby teeth – begin to erupt @ 6 months • 20 in full set • All are lost between age 6 to 12 • ______________ or secondary teeth • 32 teeth • 8 incisors – chisel shaped for cutting • 4 canine or cuspid – pointed to tear and shred • 8 premolars or bicuspid – crush and grind • 4 first molars (age 6) – crush and grind • 4 second molars (age 12)- crush and grind • 4 third molars or wisdom teeth (age 17)- crush and grind
Oral mucosa • Non-keratinized stratified squamous • ______________ – membrane that lines a body cavity that opens to the exterior • Of mouth and tongue- contain small salivary glands that open into oral cavity • Labial, buccal, palatal, and lingual • Make small contribution to saliva
Salivary glands figure 24.6 • Keep mouth & pharynx mucous membranes moist • Cleanse mouth & teeth • When food enters mouth, secretion • Lubricates, dissolves, begins chemical digestion • 3 major glands (in pairs)- parotid, submandibular, sublingual glands
Control of salivation • ______________ stim= continuous secretion • ______________ stim= dominates during stress resulting in dryness of mouth • If body dehydrated, saliva not secreted dry mouth sensation of thirst • Feel & taste of food stimulate receptors in taste buds nuclei in brain stem parasymp impulse via facial & glossopharyngeal nerves to stimulate salivation • Smell, sight, sound or thought of food may also stim.
4 basic layers of GI tract fig 24.2 • Variations, but same basic organization in esophagus, stomach, small & large intestines • From inner to outermost (starting inside the __________) • Mucosa • Submucosa • Muscularis • Serosa
Layers of GI tract • 1. ____________ - lines lumen, has 3 layers: • ______________- • mouth, pharynx, esophagus, & anal canal= non-keratinized stratified squamous for protective function • stomach & intestines = simple columnar, w/ tight junctions for secretion & absorption • Cells renew every 5-7 days (rapid reproduction) • Some epithelium = exocrine - mucus secreting cells • Enteroendocrine cells secrete hormones into bloodstream
________________ –areolar CT, many bv & lymphatic vessels, nutrients tissues of body • Supports epithelium & binds to muscularis mucosa • Contains most mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue (MALT) – lymphatic nodules containing immune cells • Also found in tonsils, s.i., appendix and l.i. • ________________- thin layer of smooth muscle • Puts mucous membrane of stomach & s. i. into many small folds ↑ SA for digestion & absorption • movements insure absorptive cells fully exposed
2. _________________- areolar CT binds mucosa to muscularis • Highly vascular • __________________- portion of ENS- regulates movements of mucosa & bv vasoconstriction • Sensory – act as chemoreceptors & stretch receptors • Interneurons – connect myentric & submucosal • Motor - innervates secretory cells of epithelium • May contain glands and lymphatic tissue
3. _____________- mouth, pharynx, & superior-mid esophagus = skeletal muscle- swallow • Skeletal muscle forms external anal sphincter • Thru rest of tract: smooth muscle- generally found in 2 sheets (exception- stomach has 3): • Inner = circular layer • outer = longitudinal layer • Involuntary contractions breakdown food • Mix food w/ secretions & propel it along tract • Between 2 sheets: ________________ (ENS)- mostly controls GI tract motility- freq & strength of contraction
4. __________- found in portions of GI tract suspended in abdominopelvic cavity • serous membrane: areolar CT & simple squamous epithelium • AKA- visceral peritoneum • Esophagus lacks this layer, has adventitia instead- single layer of areolar CT & no simple squamous
Peritoneum figure 24.4 • largest serous membrane of body • consists of a layer of simple squamous (mesothelium) w/ supporting areolar CT • __________________- lines abdominopelvic cavity wall • __________________- covers some organs in cavity, is serosa • peritoneal cavity- slim space between these layers • contains serous fluid
Peritoneum (2) • ___________________- organs lie on posterior abdominal wall • covered by peritoneum on their anterior surface • kidneys and pancreas • Bind organs to each other & walls of abdominal cavity • Contain bv, lv, & nerves -supply organs • Contains large folds between viscera: • ___________________ outward fold of serous coat of small intestine; binds to posterior ab wall • ___________________ binds large intestine to posterior ab wall; carries bv & lv to intestines *both hold intestines loosely in place
Peritoneum (3) • ________________- attaches liver to anterior ab wall & diaphragm, (liver = only digestive organ attached to anterior wall) • ________________- 2 folds in serosa, suspends stomach & duodenum from liver, contains some lymph nodes • _______________- largest part of peritoneum Hangs loosely like a “fatty apron” over transverse colon & coils of small intestine Contains considerable adipose & many lymph nodes, contributes macrophages & plasma cells to combat infection & prevent spread of infection
Esophagus figure 24.10 • Extends from laryngopharynx esophageal hiatus (surrounded by diaphragm) stomach • Stratified squamous epithelium • Muscularis: superior 1/3 = skeletal • Intermediate 1/3 = skeletal & smooth • Inferior 1/3 = smooth • At each end is sphincter • ____________ – skeletal, regulate pharynx esophagus • ____________ – smooth, regulate esophagus stomach • Adventitia- not serosa (no simple squamous cells) • Secretes mucus, transport food • No production of enzymes, no absorption
Deglutition (swallowing) - 3 phases • Movement of food from mouth to stomach • ________________ stage- bolus forced back into oropharynx by movement of tongue • _______________ stage- bolus stimulates receptors in oropharynx deglutition center in medulla & pons • Soft palate & uvula close off nasal cavity • Epiglottis closes off opening to larynx • Bolus moves thru oro & laryngopharynx • ________________ stage- bolus enters esophagus • Peristalsis- progression of coordinated contractions & relaxations of circular & longitudinal layers of muscularis • Mucus to lubricate & reduce friction
Stomach • Functions • Anatomy • Surface Epithelium • Gastric Glands • Secretory Cells • Digestive Processes • Regulation of Gastric Secretion • Gastric Motility and Emptying
Stomach functions figure 24.11 • Mixes saliva, food & gastric juices to form __________ – semifluid mixture of partially digested food • reservoir for holding before release into s.i. • secretes ___________ (2-3L/day), contains: • HCl - kills bacteria & denatures proteins • Pepsin begins the digestion of proteins • Intrinsic factor- aids absorption of vitamin B12 • Gastric lipase - aids digestion of triglycerides • Secretes ___________ into blood when stomach is distended or pH is too high
Stomach anatomy figure 24.11 • 4 main regions: • Cardia • Fundus • Body • Pylorus • Pyloric sphincter • Lesser curvature • Greater curvature • ____________ – large folds of mucosa when stomach is empty
Histology of stomach fig 24.12, 13 • Mucosa – simple columnar = surface mucous cells that extend into lamina propria forming columns of ____________ secretory cells – gastric glands which line gastric pits • Mucous neck cells- secrete mucus • Parietal cells- secrete intrinsic factor & HCl • Chief cells- secrete pepsinogen & gastric lipase • ____________________ cells also part of gastric gland • G cells- secretes gastrin, which stimulates gastric acitivity, located mainly at pyloric antrum • Muscularis – 3 layers: outer-longitudinal, mid-circular, inner-oblique
Chemical digestion in stomach • food may remain in fundus for hr, salivary amylase works • chyme mixes w/gastric juices & lingual lipase activated • HCl denatures proteins & stimulates secretion of hormones that promote flow of bile and pancreatic juice • Also, acidity kills microbes • Enzymatic digestion of proteins begins w/pepsin • Gastric lipase breaks down short chain triglycerides (BUT, optimum pH is 5-6) • Pancreatic lipase is more important • Small amt of nutrients absorbed in stomach • Mucous cells absorb some water, ions, some f.a., drugs (such as aspirin) & alcohol
What prevents auto-digestion? • _____________ secreted in inactive form: pepsinogen cannot digest proteins inside chief cells • Pepsinogen pepsin in presence of HCl or other active pepsin • Stomach epithelium protected by 1-3 mm of _______________ secreted by surface mucous cells & mucous neck cells
3 Phases of digeston, p 937 • _________________ sight, smell, thought or initial taste activates neural centers in cerebral cortex, hypothalamus, & brain stem • Facial and glossopharygeal nerves stimulate saliva secretion • Vagus nerve stimulates gastric juice secretion • (all to prep mouth & stomach for food to be eaten)
Phases (2) figure 24.24 • _________________ food in stomach, digestion begins • Neural regulation- when either of following occur, sets off negative feedback loop submucosal plexus activates parasym & enteric neurons peristalsis & gastric secretion • Stretch receptors monitor distention • Chemoreceptors monitor pH • Hormonal regulation- gastrin regulates gastric secretions, released in response to distension, partially digested proteins, pH (food present), caffeine, or Ach (parasymp) • Glands to secrete large amt. gastric juice • Strengthens contraction of LES • stomach motility • Relaxes pyloric sphincter