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HUMAN NUTRITION DIGESTIVE SYSTEM
37

Powerpint digestive system

Jan 21, 2018

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Page 1: Powerpint digestive system

HUMAN NUTRITION

DIGESTIVE SYSTEM

Page 2: Powerpint digestive system

THE ALIMENTARY CANAL• INGESTION: taking substances (e.g. food, drink) into the body

through the mouth.

• DIGESTION: the break-down of large, insoluble foodmolecules into small, water-soluble molecules usingmechanical and chemical processes.

• ABSORPTION: the movement of digestive foodmoleculesthrough the wall of the intestine into the blood orlymph.

• ASSIMILATION: the movement of digestive food moleculesinto the cells of the body where they are used, becoming partof the cells.

• EGESTION: the ´passing out of food that has not been digeste, as faeces, through the anus.

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Name the layers of tissue that makeup the alimentary canal, starting

from the inside

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PERISTALSISA contraction in one region of the alimentary canal is followed by another contractionjust below it so that a wave of contraction passes along the canal pushing food in front

of it.

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DIGESTION:

Physical: teethChemical: enzymes

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Chemical digestion

FOOD ENZYMES PRODUCTS

Starch amylase glucose

Proteins protease Amino acids

Fats lipase Fatty acids + glycerol

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MOUTH-Ingestion-Digestion

Food is chewed and mixed withsaliva.

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How to reduce the risk of toothdecay

-Eating food with a low sugar content.

- Regular and effective brushing of teeth at least twice a day to prevent the build up of

plaque.

- Use a fluoride toothpaste regularly. Itmakes your teeth more resistant to decay

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Chemical digestion (mouth)

• Saliva: contains salivary amylase

starch → maltose

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SWALLOWING

• Ensures that food does not enter the windpipe(trachea) and cause choking.

• Beginning: voluntary

• Then: involuntary

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STOMACH

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STOMACH

• Functions:

- stores food from a meal.

- turns food into a liquid (peristalticmovements)

- releases food in small quantities at a time tothe rest of the alimentary canal (pyloricsphincter)

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Chemical digestion:

• Production of gastric juice (glands in thelining)

- Enzyme: pepsin (protease)

Proteins → peptides

- Hydrochloric acid: provides the best degree of

acidity for pepsin to work in and kills many bacteria

of food.

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THE SMALL INTESTINE

Duodenum Ileum

• Chemical digestion

Enzymes from:

1. Pancreatic juices

2. Bile

3. Intestinal juices

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Liver, gall bladder, duodenum and pancreas

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PANCREAS• Secretion of pancreatic juice:delivered to the

duodenum by the pancreatic duct.

i) Enzymes:-Proteases:

Proteins → peptides → aa- Pancreatic amylase:

Starch → maltose- Lipase:

Fats → fatty acids + glycerol

ii) Sodium hydrogencarbonate: neutralizes the acid liquid from

the stomach so that pancreatic enzymes work correctly. (alkaline conditions)

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BILE

• Produced by the liver.

• Stored in the gall bladder.

• Delivered to the duodenum by the bile duct.

• No enzymes

• Bile pigment:from the break down of haemoglobin in the

liver.

• Bile salts: Emulsify the fats: they break them up into

small drops which are more easily digested by lipase.

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INTESTINAL JUICES

• The epithelial cells of the villi produce enzymes which complete the breakdown of:

- Maltose

- Peptides

before they are absorbed.

Maltose → glucose

Peptides → aa

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FINAL PRODUCTS OF DIGESTION

FOOD FINAL PRODUCTS

Starch Glucose

Proteins Amino acids

Fats Fatty acids + glycerol

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ABSORPTION: ILEUM

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VILLI: Hystology

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Structure of a villus

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Molecules

Epithelial cells → a large proportion of

↓ fatty acid + glycerolcapillaries (bloodstream ) ↓

↓ form fats againveins veins ↓

↓ pass to lactealsHepatic Portal Vein

↓ ↓ lymphatic systemLIVER

↓General circulation (vena cava)

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LARGE INTESTINEColon and rectum

• Material that reaches it contains:

i) water with undigested matter

ii) cellulose

iii) fibre: digested partly by bacteria

iv) mucus

v) dead cells from the lining of the alimentary canal

• Function: absorption of water.

semisolid waste → faeces → rectum → anus (EGESTION)

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ASSIMILATION

• Glucose

Respiration energy

• Fats

-Are built into cell membranes and other cell structures

- Source of energy

• Amino acids- Built up into proteins. Functions??

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STORAGE OF DIGESTED FOOD

• Glucose

- Changed in the liver to glycogen

- Some of the glycogen is stored in liver(short- term store) and muscles.

- LIVER: If ↓ blood sugars Glycogen → glucose → circulation

- MUSCLES: glucose: for muscular activity

- Excess of glucose: converted to fat and stored in fats depots

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STORAGE OF DIGESTED FOOD

• Fats

- There is no limit to storage of fats

- Long- term store as fat depots in:

-abdomen

- round the kidneys (adipose tissue)

- under the skin

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STORAGE OF DIGESTED FOOD

• Amino acids

- They are not stored in the body

- Those not used in protein formation are deaminated (in the liver)

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LIVERFunctions

• Regulation of blood sugars.

• Production of bile.

• Deamination

• Storage of iron.

• Manufacture of plasma proteins.

• Detoxication.

• Storage of vitamins

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