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The Digestive System Chapter 15
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The Digestive System Chapter 15. 15.1 Functions: mechanical and chemical breakdown of food *absorption of nutrients Consists of alimentary canal and accessory.

Dec 25, 2015

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Winfred Bond
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Page 1: The Digestive System Chapter 15. 15.1 Functions: mechanical and chemical breakdown of food *absorption of nutrients Consists of alimentary canal and accessory.

The Digestive System

Chapter 15

Page 2: The Digestive System Chapter 15. 15.1 Functions: mechanical and chemical breakdown of food *absorption of nutrients Consists of alimentary canal and accessory.

15.1

Functions: mechanical and

chemical breakdown of food

       *absorption of nutrients

Consists of alimentary canal

and accessory organs

Page 3: The Digestive System Chapter 15. 15.1 Functions: mechanical and chemical breakdown of food *absorption of nutrients Consists of alimentary canal and accessory.

Wall of the Alimentary Canal

Page 4: The Digestive System Chapter 15. 15.1 Functions: mechanical and chemical breakdown of food *absorption of nutrients Consists of alimentary canal and accessory.

15.2 Characteristics of the Canal

1.  Mucosa - protects tissues and carries absorption

2.  Submucosa - glands, blood vessels, nerves

3.  Muscular Layer - smooth muscle tissue, circular & longitudinal fibers, pushes food  (PERISTALSIS)

4.  Serosa (serous layer) - visceral perioneum, outer covering of the tube, lubricates surfaces (serous fluid)

Page 5: The Digestive System Chapter 15. 15.1 Functions: mechanical and chemical breakdown of food *absorption of nutrients Consists of alimentary canal and accessory.
Page 6: The Digestive System Chapter 15. 15.1 Functions: mechanical and chemical breakdown of food *absorption of nutrients Consists of alimentary canal and accessory.

Mixing Movements

Contractions mix food with digestive juices

 

Peristalsis - pushes food down the tube

Page 7: The Digestive System Chapter 15. 15.1 Functions: mechanical and chemical breakdown of food *absorption of nutrients Consists of alimentary canal and accessory.

Anatomy of the Mouth

Page 8: The Digestive System Chapter 15. 15.1 Functions: mechanical and chemical breakdown of food *absorption of nutrients Consists of alimentary canal and accessory.

Anatomy of a Tooth

Page 9: The Digestive System Chapter 15. 15.1 Functions: mechanical and chemical breakdown of food *absorption of nutrients Consists of alimentary canal and accessory.

Teeth

 

Incisors

Cuspid (canine)

Bicuspids

Molars

Page 10: The Digestive System Chapter 15. 15.1 Functions: mechanical and chemical breakdown of food *absorption of nutrients Consists of alimentary canal and accessory.
Page 11: The Digestive System Chapter 15. 15.1 Functions: mechanical and chemical breakdown of food *absorption of nutrients Consists of alimentary canal and accessory.
Page 12: The Digestive System Chapter 15. 15.1 Functions: mechanical and chemical breakdown of food *absorption of nutrients Consists of alimentary canal and accessory.

Salivary Glands Produces saliva for chemical digestion of starches- Basic to neutralize acid to prevent decay of tooth enamel

Page 13: The Digestive System Chapter 15. 15.1 Functions: mechanical and chemical breakdown of food *absorption of nutrients Consists of alimentary canal and accessory.

Pharynx 

 

“throat”

-Trachea and

esophagus meet

 

 

 

 

Page 14: The Digestive System Chapter 15. 15.1 Functions: mechanical and chemical breakdown of food *absorption of nutrients Consists of alimentary canal and accessory.

Esophagus

Muscular tube that transports food to your stomach5-7 seconds

Page 15: The Digestive System Chapter 15. 15.1 Functions: mechanical and chemical breakdown of food *absorption of nutrients Consists of alimentary canal and accessory.

STOMACHPrimary food digestion location-secrete enzymes and digestive juices, including hydrochloric acid

Page 16: The Digestive System Chapter 15. 15.1 Functions: mechanical and chemical breakdown of food *absorption of nutrients Consists of alimentary canal and accessory.

Stomach

Regions

•Cardiac•Fundic•Body (greater and

lesser curvature)•Pyloric

Page 17: The Digestive System Chapter 15. 15.1 Functions: mechanical and chemical breakdown of food *absorption of nutrients Consists of alimentary canal and accessory.

Stomach Lining

Gastric Juices contain acids that break down food  - secreted by gastric glands (can sometimes release causing acid reflux)

PEPSIN  - most important digestive enzyme for breaking down food   

 

Mucus prevents stomach from digesting itself 

Page 18: The Digestive System Chapter 15. 15.1 Functions: mechanical and chemical breakdown of food *absorption of nutrients Consists of alimentary canal and accessory.

Chyme - paste, after food has been broken down, released then into the duodenum via the pyloric sphincter valve

Rugae - folds within stomach

Gastric Pits contain glands to make juices 

Page 19: The Digestive System Chapter 15. 15.1 Functions: mechanical and chemical breakdown of food *absorption of nutrients Consists of alimentary canal and accessory.

PANCREAS - secretes insulin which breaks down sugars

Pancreatic Juice also breaks down fat

Page 20: The Digestive System Chapter 15. 15.1 Functions: mechanical and chemical breakdown of food *absorption of nutrients Consists of alimentary canal and accessory.

 Liver

 1 large right lobe  | 1 smaller left lobe

Page 21: The Digestive System Chapter 15. 15.1 Functions: mechanical and chemical breakdown of food *absorption of nutrients Consists of alimentary canal and accessory.

Liver - ducts and vessels

Hepatic duct --> to common bile duct

Hepatic portal vein - circulates blood throughout liver

Page 22: The Digestive System Chapter 15. 15.1 Functions: mechanical and chemical breakdown of food *absorption of nutrients Consists of alimentary canal and accessory.

Liver Functions1.  blood glucose levels2.  breakdown of lipids and fats3.  protein metabolism4.  stores vitamins5.  destroys damaged RBCs6.  removes toxins7.  secretes bile

Page 23: The Digestive System Chapter 15. 15.1 Functions: mechanical and chemical breakdown of food *absorption of nutrients Consists of alimentary canal and accessory.

Gall Bladder - under liver          cystic duct --> common bile duct          stores bile, digests fat                 *gallstones may form

 

Page 24: The Digestive System Chapter 15. 15.1 Functions: mechanical and chemical breakdown of food *absorption of nutrients Consists of alimentary canal and accessory.

Small Intestine

 

Starts at the pyloric sphincter

1.  Duodenum

2.  Jejunum

 

3.  Ileum

 

*Mesentery 

Membrane holds it together,  contains

blood vessels

Page 25: The Digestive System Chapter 15. 15.1 Functions: mechanical and chemical breakdown of food *absorption of nutrients Consists of alimentary canal and accessory.

Greater Omentum

a  "curtain-like" membrane that covers the intestines, stores fat and lays like a drape

Page 26: The Digestive System Chapter 15. 15.1 Functions: mechanical and chemical breakdown of food *absorption of nutrients Consists of alimentary canal and accessory.

Greater Omentum

Page 27: The Digestive System Chapter 15. 15.1 Functions: mechanical and chemical breakdown of food *absorption of nutrients Consists of alimentary canal and accessory.

Intestinal villi - increase surface area to absorb nutrients, connect to vessels

Page 28: The Digestive System Chapter 15. 15.1 Functions: mechanical and chemical breakdown of food *absorption of nutrients Consists of alimentary canal and accessory.

The main function of the small intestine is to secrete chemicals that break down food and carry the nutrients away in the blood stream.  In one word:

ABSORPTION

Page 29: The Digestive System Chapter 15. 15.1 Functions: mechanical and chemical breakdown of food *absorption of nutrients Consists of alimentary canal and accessory.

Large Intestine

 

Cecum 

 

Appendix

 

Colon (4 parts)

    Cecum    Ascending   

Transverse     Descending    

Sigmoid

 

 

Rectum

 

Anus

Page 30: The Digestive System Chapter 15. 15.1 Functions: mechanical and chemical breakdown of food *absorption of nutrients Consists of alimentary canal and accessory.

Function of Large IntestineSecretes mucus,  reabsorbs water, contains bacteria to aid in digestion  (intestinal flora)

Mass Movements (defecation) - removes undigested food

The main job is  WATER REABSORPTION...

Page 31: The Digestive System Chapter 15. 15.1 Functions: mechanical and chemical breakdown of food *absorption of nutrients Consists of alimentary canal and accessory.

1.  esophagus2.  liver3.  stomach4. pyloric sphincter5.  duodenum6.  pancreas7.  jejunum8.  ileum9.  cecum10. appendix11.  ascending colon12.  descending colon13.  sigmoid colong14.  anus

Page 32: The Digestive System Chapter 15. 15.1 Functions: mechanical and chemical breakdown of food *absorption of nutrients Consists of alimentary canal and accessory.

Nutrition

Page 34: The Digestive System Chapter 15. 15.1 Functions: mechanical and chemical breakdown of food *absorption of nutrients Consists of alimentary canal and accessory.

Colon Cancer

Colonoscopy is a screening technique to detect cancer. 

See Katie Couric's Colonoscopy

Page 35: The Digestive System Chapter 15. 15.1 Functions: mechanical and chemical breakdown of food *absorption of nutrients Consists of alimentary canal and accessory.

The Urinary System

Chapter 17

Page 36: The Digestive System Chapter 15. 15.1 Functions: mechanical and chemical breakdown of food *absorption of nutrients Consists of alimentary canal and accessory.

17.1 Introduction

-Cells produce waste that can become toxic if they accumulate

Functions•the urinary system removes salts

and nitrogenous wastes•maintains normal concentration of

water and electrolytes•maintains pH, controls red blood

cell production and blood pressure

Page 37: The Digestive System Chapter 15. 15.1 Functions: mechanical and chemical breakdown of food *absorption of nutrients Consists of alimentary canal and accessory.

Composition•consists of a pair of kidneys which remove

substances from the blood•ureters which transport urine from the kidneys

to the bladder•urinary bladder stores urine•urethra conveys urine to the outside of the

body

Page 38: The Digestive System Chapter 15. 15.1 Functions: mechanical and chemical breakdown of food *absorption of nutrients Consists of alimentary canal and accessory.

17.2 Kidneys•lie on either side of the

vertebral column deep in the abdominal cavity

•positioned behind the parietal peritoneum (retroperitoneally)

•lateral side is convex, medial is concave, kidneys sit in a depression called the renal sinus

•Entrance is called the HILUM

Page 39: The Digestive System Chapter 15. 15.1 Functions: mechanical and chemical breakdown of food *absorption of nutrients Consists of alimentary canal and accessory.

-superior end of the kidney forms a funnel shaped sac - renal pelvis-renal medulla = center of the kidney-renal cortex = outer shell around the medulla; the cortex appears granulated due to the presence of nephrons-renal arteries and veins supply blood to the kidneys

The nephron is the functional unit of the kidney

Page 40: The Digestive System Chapter 15. 15.1 Functions: mechanical and chemical breakdown of food *absorption of nutrients Consists of alimentary canal and accessory.
Page 41: The Digestive System Chapter 15. 15.1 Functions: mechanical and chemical breakdown of food *absorption of nutrients Consists of alimentary canal and accessory.

Renal Arteries & Veins

•Arteries attach to the abdominal aorta•Veins attach to the inferior vena cava

Interlobar arteries pass between the renal pyramidsAfferent arterioles lead to the nephrons

Page 42: The Digestive System Chapter 15. 15.1 Functions: mechanical and chemical breakdown of food *absorption of nutrients Consists of alimentary canal and accessory.

Parts of the Urinary System - The NEPHRON

Page 43: The Digestive System Chapter 15. 15.1 Functions: mechanical and chemical breakdown of food *absorption of nutrients Consists of alimentary canal and accessory.

NEPHRONS -  functional unit of the urinary systemQuick Analogy:  A nephron is to the urinary system as the _________________ is to the nervous system

-each kidney contains about 1 million nephrons-renal corpuscle: composed of a tangled cluster called a glomerulus which filters fluid

Pathway = glomerulus -> proximal tubulue --> nephron loop (also called loop of henle) --> distal tubule --> collecting duct --> ureter --> bladder

Page 44: The Digestive System Chapter 15. 15.1 Functions: mechanical and chemical breakdown of food *absorption of nutrients Consists of alimentary canal and accessory.
Page 45: The Digestive System Chapter 15. 15.1 Functions: mechanical and chemical breakdown of food *absorption of nutrients Consists of alimentary canal and accessory.
Page 46: The Digestive System Chapter 15. 15.1 Functions: mechanical and chemical breakdown of food *absorption of nutrients Consists of alimentary canal and accessory.
Page 47: The Digestive System Chapter 15. 15.1 Functions: mechanical and chemical breakdown of food *absorption of nutrients Consists of alimentary canal and accessory.

What blood vessel enters the glomerulus?

Page 48: The Digestive System Chapter 15. 15.1 Functions: mechanical and chemical breakdown of food *absorption of nutrients Consists of alimentary canal and accessory.

17.3 Urine Formation (section is abbreviated)

•glomerular filtration - urine formation begins, plasma is filtered

•tubular reabsorption - returns most of the fluid to the body

•tubular secretion - removes what is not needed; produces urine

Page 49: The Digestive System Chapter 15. 15.1 Functions: mechanical and chemical breakdown of food *absorption of nutrients Consists of alimentary canal and accessory.

Urine Composition

95 % Water

Contains urea and uric acid (characteristic smell)

Can contain trace amino acids

Page 50: The Digestive System Chapter 15. 15.1 Functions: mechanical and chemical breakdown of food *absorption of nutrients Consists of alimentary canal and accessory.

Urine may also contain other chemicals that can be detected.

Hormones present in a pregnant woman are detectable in urine

Page 51: The Digestive System Chapter 15. 15.1 Functions: mechanical and chemical breakdown of food *absorption of nutrients Consists of alimentary canal and accessory.

17.4 Urine Elimination•After urine forms in the nephrons,the ureters

(starting with the renal pelvis) carry the urine away to the bladder

•Bladder is an expandable structure that stores urine before it is eliminated from the body.

•Transitional epithelial cells change shape to allow for expansion and contraction.

Micturation = urination; as the bladder fills this reflex occurs though it is also under voluntary control

Urethra = tube carries urine to the outside of the body

Page 52: The Digestive System Chapter 15. 15.1 Functions: mechanical and chemical breakdown of food *absorption of nutrients Consists of alimentary canal and accessory.

Disorders of the Urinary System

Many urinary problems can be solved by drinking enough water.  So how much fluid does the average, healthy adult living in a temperate climate need? The Institute of Medicine determined that an adequate intake (AI) for men is roughly 3 liters (about 13 cups) of total beverages a day. The AI for women is 2.2 liters (about 9 cups) of total beverages a day.

Page 53: The Digestive System Chapter 15. 15.1 Functions: mechanical and chemical breakdown of food *absorption of nutrients Consists of alimentary canal and accessory.

Cystitis = bacteria enters the bladder or kidneys (kidney infection); more common in women because the urethra is shorter

Commonly known as a "bladder infection" UTI = urinary tract infection

Frequent  need to urinatePain in the abdomen Burning sensation during urinationCloudy, bad-smelling urineBlood in the urineLeaking urineLow back pain Fever and chillsNausea and poor appetite

Page 54: The Digestive System Chapter 15. 15.1 Functions: mechanical and chemical breakdown of food *absorption of nutrients Consists of alimentary canal and accessory.

Catheters In medicine, a catheter is a tube that can be inserted into a body cavity, duct, or vessel.   The process of inserting a catheter is catheterization.

Catheterization of the bladder is a common medical procedure, often performed by nurses

Page 55: The Digestive System Chapter 15. 15.1 Functions: mechanical and chemical breakdown of food *absorption of nutrients Consists of alimentary canal and accessory.