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The Digestive System. The organs of the digestive system can be separated into two groups The alimentary canal or gastrointestinal tract – perform all the functions of digestion as the long, coiled, hallow, muscular tube winds through the body
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The Digestive System • The organs of the digestive system can be separated into two groups • The alimentary canal or gastrointestinal tract – perform all the functions of digestion as the long, coiled, hallow, muscular tube winds through the body • Accessory digestive organs – assist the digestive process
Mouth • Also known as the oral cavity • This is where food enters the body. As it enters the body it is mixed with saliva and masticated (chewed) • It is a mucous membrane lined cavity • It is protected by the lips • The cheeks form the sides of the mouth, the hard palate forms the anterior roof, and the soft palate forms the posterior roof • The floor of the mouth is occupied by the muscular tongue • At the anterior portion of the mouth are the paired palatine tonsils (sides) and lingual tonsil (base)
Pharynx • Subdivided into three parts • Nasopharynx – the section that part if the respiratory system • Oropharynx – posterior to the oral cavity • Laryngopharnyx – part that connects to the esophagus • This area helps to propel food, which is also known as peristalsis
Esophagus • Also known as the gullet • Runs from the pharynx, through the diaphragm, and to the stomach • It is essentially a passageway for peristalsis • It is composed of the same four basic layers of all the other organs from the esophagus to the large intestine
The Four Layers • Mucosa – the moist, innermost layer that lines the cavity • Submucosa – a soft connective tissue layer just below the mucosa that contains blood vessels, nerve endings, and lymphatic vessels • Muscularisexterna – the smooth muscle layer which is made up of a circular inner layer and longitudinal outer layer • Serosa – the outermost wall
Stomach • C-shaped organ on the left side of the abdominal cavity that is hidden by the liver and diaphragm • The stomach acts as a temporary storage tank for food as well as a site for food breakdown • The stomach has an additional muscle layer so that it can move and churn its contents • It also has various cells that produce digestive enzymes and gastric juice to break down the food as well as mucous producing cells to protect the stomach. • The processed food is called chyme as it leaves the stomach and heads for the small intestine.
Small Intestine • It is the main digestive and food absorption organ • It is the longest part (8-18 feet) of the alimentary canal and is a long twisted passageway • It is composed of three areas called the duodenum, jejunum, and ileum • Walls of the small intestine have microvilli, villi and circular folds to help increase the surface area and therefore increase absorption
Large Intestine • Larger in diameter, but shorter in length than the small intestine • Its main purpose is to dry out the indigestible food residue by absorbing water and to eliminate this residue from the body as fecesthrough the anus
Salivary glands • Produce saliva – a mixture of mucus and serous fluids • Saliva moistens and binds food together into a mass called a bolus • Amylase in the serous fluid begins the digestive process by breaking down the starch in food
Teeth • Helps process food by breaking the food down into smaller pieces while helping the food mix with the saliva • Normally an adult will have 32 teeth
Pancreas • A soft, pink, triangular gland that extends across the abdomen from the spleen to the duodenum • Produces a multitude of enzymes that chemically break down food • The enzyme secretions form the pancreas enter the small intestine at the duodenum
Liver • Largest gland of the body • Its function in digestion is bile production, which emulsifies fats • This means the large fat molecules are separated into smaller molecules. This increases the surface area and gives fat digesting enzymes more places where they can work.
Gallbladder • Small, thin-walled green sac • Stores bile while digestion is not occurring • While being stored, the bile is concentrated by removing water • If bile is stored too long or too much water is removed, the cholesterol it contains may crystallize forming gallstones.
Functions of the Digestive System • Ingestion – the voluntary act of putting food in the mouth • Propulsion – movement of materials through the digestive system by peristalsis • Food Breakdown by Mechanical Digestion – physically fragmenting the materials • Food Breakdown by Chemical Digestion – chemically fragmenting the materials • Absorption – moving usable digested food into the body • Defecation - moving unusable digested food out of the body