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Nutrition and Digestion. www.consumer-supply.com. Resources Lecture: 2009, Dr. Sylvia Kehoe, UW—River Falls Textbook: The Veterinary Technician’s Pocket Partner, Marisa Bauer Resources Walter J. Taylor Agricultural Educator and Co-FFA Advisor Plymouth Comprehensive High School.
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Nutrition and Digestion www.consumer-supply.com Resources Lecture: 2009, Dr. Sylvia Kehoe, UW—River Falls Textbook: The Veterinary Technician’s Pocket Partner, Marisa Bauer Resources Walter J. Taylor Agricultural Educator and Co-FFA Advisor Plymouth Comprehensive High School
general terminology • Nutrition: how an organism assimilates food and uses it for growth and maintenance • BMR (Basal Metabolic Rate): the amount of energy consumed at rest • Calorie:a unit of energy consumed by the body • Nutrients:a chemical element or substance essential for supporting life (maintenance, growth, reproduction, lactation, gestation, and immunity • Homeostasis:biological systems that maintain stability for optimal health and survival • Metabolism:a collection of chemical reactions , takes place in the body’s cells, converts the fuel in the food consumed into the energy needed to power everything an animal does. If metabolism stops, a living thing dies.
why is nutrition important? • It is the basic life system of animals • A large portion of the cost of having/raising animals • There is a demand for nutritionists • History: the 18th century scientist, Antoine Lavoisier, was nicknamed the “Father of Nutrition” because of his thinking of why kids died while consuming various diets. He researched metabolic rates on guinea pigs, which were placed in a cold box and observed data on heat production in relation to diet.
six components of food * Please leave room in your notes for descriptions • Water • Fats • Protein • Carbohydrates • Ash/minerals • Vitamins
Water • Primary Nutrient • 10% water loss is really serious • 15% water loss is incompatible with life • Found inside and outside of cells • Lubes the body • Aids body temperatureby absorbing heat and moves it away from the body’s tissues • 70% of body composition • Carries nutrients, by-products, and waste through the body • A fluid medium for the blood and lymph system • A component of every biochemical reaction in the body
Terms • Digestion: • chemical breakdown of food/feed outside the body • Prehension: • how an animal obtains food/feed • Lips, trunks, beaks, tongues, hands, feet • Mastication: • chewing, the physical breakdown of food/feed • Absorption: • Uptake of nutrients into body tissue • Passage across epithelial cells • Metabolism: • Net process of anabolism and catabolism • Anabolism: build up of tissues • Catabolism: break down of tissues • Ration: • mixture of food/feed stuffs to supply nutrient for a day • Diet: • a ration over a longer period of time
The Gut • Alimentary Track • From the mouth to the anus • Gastrointestinal Track (GIT) • From the stomach to the colon
The Gut • Mouth • Prehension, teeth structure • Omnivores • Use incisors to bite and molars to grind • Carnivores • Use incisors to tea and molars to crush meat • Worst chewer • Herbivores • Use incisors to cut plants and molars to grind • Best chewer • Birds • Have beaks to gather feed, swallow, gizzard grinds feed
The Gut • Mouth • Salivary Glands • Aid in chemical and physical breakdown of food/feed • FOUR parts • Mucous: lubricates the food/feed • Water • Salivary amylase: enzymes that breaks down starch/amylase bonds • Sodium bicarbonate: neutralizes pH / reduces acidity • THREE locations • Sublingual salivary glands: under the tongue • Submaxillary/Submandibular: at the base of the jaw/tongue • Parotid: in cheek below the ear (largest of the three)
The Gut • Mouth/ Esophagus • Deglutition • Swallowing • Esophagus • Mouth to stomach connection • Circular muscles and longitudinal muscles • Connects to the stomach via the cardiac sphincter • Peristalsis • Involuntary movement of muscles acting on moving food/feed through the alimentary and GI tracks • Food entering the esophagus is called a bolus, “little round ball”
The Gut • Stomach • Physical and chemical breakdownof food/feed • No absorption except alcohol molecules • THREE Parts • Cardiac region: upper region of the stomach, secrets mucous to protect this region • Fundic/Gastric region: center region of the stomach • Peptic cells secrete the enzyme pepsinogen, which is the precursor to zymogen, which is produced when HCl and pepsinogen react, pH is lowered becoming more acidic • Chief cells secrete HCl “Hydrochloric acid”, they are stimulated by food/feed coming into the stomach • Pyloric region: lower region of the stomach that secrets mucous to protect this lower region, connects to the small intestine via the pyloric sphincter
The Gut • Stomach • Doctors Marshall and Warren found Heliobacterplyorii living in the stomach wall. • Causes stomach ulsars • Is consumed a lot, but only affects animals and people if environmental factors are prevelent, (ie: stress, a weak immune system, etc.)
The Gut • Small Intestine (SIN) • THREE parts • Duodenum: the first part of the SIN, mucous is secreted, chyme/ingesta entering this region trigger enzymes and secretions • Chemical digestion begines • Jejunum: some chemical digestion occurs, absorption mainly occurs, is the largest section of the SIN • Ileum: absorption of any remaining nutrients occurs • By-products: grand father clocks, strings on instruments, food casings
The Gut • Small Intestine (SIN) • There are three layers of the SIN: • Outermost layer is comprised of connective tissues that contain: nerves, blood vessels, collagen, etc. • Middle layer is called the muscularis layer • Inner most layer is called the mucosa • Villi are finger like projections made up of enterocytes (epithelial cells found in the intestines) • SIN is constantly shedding cells making up the villi • The bottom groove of the villi is called the crypt where enterocytes are actively dividing every 72 hours or every 3 days before they are discarded
The Gut • Small Intestine (SIN) • Enterocytes • Produce also produce enzymes • Maltase breaks down maltose into the molecules: glucose + glucose • Lactase breaks down lactose into the molecules: glucose + galactose • Sucrase breaks down sucrose into the molecules: glucose + fructose
The Gut • Pancreas: secrets digestive juices directly in the duodenum • Acts like: • Endocrine gland: has no storage and secrets directly into the blood • Exocrine gland: has storage and secrets into the blood or outside the body (into the GIT) • Digestive juices: • Pancreatic amylase: digests amlyose (starches) • Pancreatic lipase: digests lipids
The Gut • In the Duodenum • Breaks down protein…these are zymogens • Trypsinogen converts to Trypsin • Enterocytes make enterokinas • With trypsin activates the following conversions: • Chymotrysinogen to chymotrypsin • Proelastase to electase • Procarboxypeptidase A to carboxypeptidase A • Procarboxypeptidase B to carboyzpeptidase B
The Gut • In the Duodenum • Breaks down protein…these are zymogens • Cholesystokinin (CCK): a hormone that is secreted due to food/feed (proteins/lipids) entering the duodenum • Causes the pancreas to secret digestive juices • Causes the gall bladder to secrete bile • Also binds to receptors that tell your brain that you/animal is full • Bile: stored in the gall bladder, produced in the liver • FOUR parts • Bile salts: emulsify lipids • Bile pigments: dark-green color • Cholestrol • mucous
The Gut • Three types of absorption • Simple Diffusion: no energy, small, simple molecules • Facilitated Diffusion: transporter/channel, no energy • Active Transport: transporter/channel, energy is used, uses sodium/potassium channels • *Passive transfer: occurs only in young animals, ruminants less than 72 hours old • Large molecules can be absorbed w/out breaking them into small molecules • Ex: immunal globules, because calves are born w/out an immune system
The Gut • Large Intestine: (LI) • THREE parts • Cecum: blind pouch, houses microbes like fungi, protizoa and bacteria • Colon: houses bacteria, the main function is to absorb water and digest roughages • Has cuboidal cells + goblet cells that secrete mucous • Bacteria produce volatile fatty acids (VFAs) which are used for energy production in the body • Rectum: controls passage of undigested material called feces • Anus: anal sphincter controls the exiting of feces
The Gut (TBC) • Horses: hind-gut fermenters • Ruminants: Rumen • Birds: