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Chapter 21 Digestion
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About this Chapter Overview of the digestive system & how it is organized How products are moved and the role of digestive secretions How and where food is broken down and absorbed How digestive wastes are concentrated and eliminated How digestion is regulated in the gastrointestinal (GI) tract
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Processes of the Digestive System: Overview
Ingestion Digestion: enzymatic Motility Secretion Absorption Elimination (Self protection) Figure 21-1: Processes of the digestive system
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Digestive Anatomy: Overview
Oral cavity Salivary glands Esophagus Stomach Fundus Body (rugae) Antrum pyloris
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Chemical and mechanical digestion in the mouth
Saliva Lubricates and softens food Salivary amylase Breaks down starches into smaller carbs Mechanical digestion; mastication Protection Lysosomes and immunoglobulins kill viruses and bacteria.
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Figure 21-17: Integration of secretion in the stomach
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Intestinal Phase: ENDOCRINE RESPONSE
The pyloric sphincter sends chyme into the duodenum in spurts. Acidic chyme in the duodenum stimulates hormone release into the blood of: Secretin, cholecystokinin, GIP
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Digestive Anatomy: Overview
Figure 21-2a: ANATOMY SUMMARY: The Digestive System
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More Digestive Anatomy
Small intestine Duodenum Jejunum Ileum Pancreas Liver Large intestine Colon Rectum Anus
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Digestive Anatomy: Histological Overview
Stomach wall Mucosa Gastric glands Muscularis mucosa Submucosa Muscularis Externa Serosa Small intestine wall Vili & microvilli Peyer's patches
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Digestive Anatomy: Histological Overview
Figure 21-2c: ANATOMY SUMMARY: The Digestive System
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Digestive Anatomy: Histological Overview
Figure 21-2e: ANATOMY SUMMARY: The Digestive System
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Motility: Smooth Muscle Contractions
Tonic – support Phasic – move products Parastalsis – moves Segmentation – mixes Figure 21-4: Contractions in the GI tract
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Digestive Secretions: (7 L / Day From Tissues into Lumen)
Salivary glands Pancreas Water Enzymes Mucus Ions: H+, K+, Na+ HCO3-, Cl- Mass Balance (H2O) Figure 21-5: Daily mass balance in the digestive system
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Chemistry of Digestion: Carbohydrates
Complex carbohydrate foods Long polymers Enzyme hydrolysis Amylase Maltase Sucrase Lactase
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Chemistry of Digestion: Carbohydrates
Figure 21-6: Carbohydrate digestion
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Chemistry of Digestion: Carbohydrates
Disccharides Monosccharides (Absorption)
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Chemistry of Digestion: Proteins
Proteins enzyme hydrolysis amino acids Enzymes: endopeptidases & exopeptidases Figure 21-7: Endopeptidases and exopeptidases
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Chemistry of Digestion: Fats
Bile emulsification to small fat droplets Enzymes: lipases, colipases & phospholipases Triglycerides monoglycerides & free fatty acids
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Chemistry of Digestion: Fats
Figure 21-8: Fat digestion
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Regulating Digestion: CNS and Enteric Nervous System (ENS)
Long (cephalic) reflexes: CNS, feed forward & emotional reflexes Short reflexes – ENS ("little brain") integration, motility & secretion: enzymes & hormone/paracrine GI peptides
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Regulating Digestion: CNS and Enteric Nervous System (ENS)
Figure 21-9: The enteric nervous system
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Phases of Digestion: Overview
Figure 21-11: Overview of functions in different regions of the digestive system
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Cephalic and Oral Phases of Digestion
Cephalic: anticipation of food CNS ANS long reflex Enteric cells short reflex GI motility GI secretions Mouth: starts digestion Grind, mix & liquefy Saliva: water, enzymes, mucus & lysozyme
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Cephalic and Oral Phases of Digestion
Figure 21-12: Long and short reflexes in the stomach
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Swallowing reflex: Soft Palate & Esophagus
Deglutition Epiglottis Upper esophageal sphincter Lower esophageal sphincter (heartburn)
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Swallowing reflex: Soft Palate & Esophagus
Figure 21-13: The swallowing reflex
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Gastric Phase: The Stomach
Storage Digestion HCl – parietal C. Lipase – chief C. Pepsin – chief C. Protect walls HCO3- Mucus
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Secretion in the Stomach
Parietal cells – pH-1 Chief cells – inactive pepsinogen active pepsin D cells – somatostatin Enterochromaffin-like (ECL) cells – histamine G cells – the hormone gastrin. Mucuos cells – mucus and bicarbonate
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Gastric Phase: The Stomach
Figure 21-17: Integration of secretion in the stomach
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Gastric Phase: The Stomach
Figure 21-15: The mucus-bicarbonate barrier of the gastric mucosa
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Regulation of the Stomach Digestive Activities
CNS – cephalic input ENS – ANS integration w/hormones & paracrines
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Regulation of the Stomach Digestive Activities
Figure 21-17: Integration of secretion in the stomach
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Intestinal Phase: Reflexes Direct Digestive Action
Limit chyme entrance rate & motility Neutralize HCl, add bile & enzymes
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Intestinal Phase: EXOCRINE RESPONSE
Pancreatic bicarbonate secretions Secretin stimulates bicarbonate release. Neutralize HCl, add bile & enzymes Pancreatic exocrine enzyme secretions CCK stimulates pancreatic release of inactive enzymes Figure 21-20 Liver adds bile via gall bladder CCK stimulates gall bladder contraction Bile; a non-enzyme Bile salts Act as detergents Bilirubin cholesterol
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Intestinal Phase: Pancreatic Secretions
Enzymes HCO3- Insulin Glucagon Figure 21-18: The intestinal phase of gastric function
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Intestinal Phase: Pancreatic Secretions
Figure 21-19: The hepatic portal system
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Intestinal Phase: Liver-Nutrient Storage & Conversions
Bile secretion Hepatic portal system directs absorbed nutrients
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Intestinal Phase: Liver-Nutrient Storage & Conversions
Figure 21-24: Carbohydrate absorption
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Intestinal Phase: Carbohydrate Digestion & Absorption
Hydrolysis to simple sugars Absorption: transport Na+/ glucose symport Fructose GLUT To ECF capillary Figure 21-23: Bile salts
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Let’s remember what “fat” is. . .
Phospholipids Triglycerides cholesterol
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Intestinal Phase: Fat Digestion & Absorption
Figure 21-26: Fat digestion and absorption
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Intestinal Phase: Large Intestine, H2O Absorption & Defecation
(Small intestine reabsorbs 7.5 L/day of water) Large Intestine reabsorbs 1.4 L/day Defecation Reflex: mass movement rectal distension internal sphincter (invol) external sphincter (vol)
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Intestinal Phase: Large Intestine, H2O Absorption & Defecation
Figure 21-27: Anatomy of the large intestine
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Intestinal Phase: Large Intestine Digestion & Absorption
Bacterial digest significant amounts of complex carbs and proteins through fermentation. Most remaining water is reabsorbed Figure 21-28: NaCl reabsorption by colonocytes
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Intestinal Phase: Large Intestine Digestion & Absorption
Bacterial fermentation: Vit. K , lactate & buterate Water and electrolyte secretion &/or absorption Figure 21-28: NaCl reabsorption by colonocytes
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Digestive Health: Protection & Problems
Immune defense: M-cells, Peyer's patches, lymphocytes Irritable bowel disease – chronic inflammation Diarrhea: leads to dehydration (4 million deaths/yr) Osmotic-solutes prevent H2O reabsorption Secretory- bacterial toxins ("flush out' pathogens) Vomiting (emesis) can lead to alkalosis Ulcers- H. pylori "heart-burn" acid reflux disease
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Summary Processes of digestion: ingestion, digestion, absorption, secretion, motility, reabsorption & defecation Anatomy of digestion: mouth, esophagus, stomach, small & large intestines, rectum, anus (pancreas & liver) Enzyme hydrolysis of carbohydrates, proteins, lipids and nucleic acids provide the nutrients, absorbed & conducted to liver for storage Regulation from CNS (long reflex) and ENS (short reflex) integrate hormones & paracrines to coordinate digestion
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