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Digestive System

Digestive System. HS I. What are the structures and functions of the Digestive System?. Objective 2.07 & 2.08 Essential questions: What are the structures of the digestive system? What are the fxs & disorders of the digestive system?. Structures of the digestive system. Digestive system

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Digestive System

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  1. Digestive System HS I

  2. What are the structures and functions of the Digestive System? • Objective 2.07 & 2.08 • Essential questions: • What are the structures of the digestive system? • What are the fxs & disorders of the digestive system?

  3. Structures of the digestive system Digestive system Also known as: Alimentary Canal Digestive Tract Gastrointestinal Tract Upper GI Lower GI Approximately 30’ in length from mouth to anus

  4. Functions of the Digestive System • Physical breakdown of food • Chemical digestion of food into the end products of fat, carbohydrates and protein. • Absorb nutrients into blood capillaries of the small intestines • Eliminate waste products of digestion

  5. The Digestive System • DIGESTION – the process of changing complex solid foods into simpler soluble forms which can be absorbed by body cells. • ENZYMES – chemical substances that promote chemical reactions in living things. • ALIMENTARY CANAL – digestive tract or gastrointestinal tract (GI Tract). A 30 ft. tube from mouth to anus. • PERITONEUM – double-layered serous membrane that lines the abdominal cavity (Lining of the Digestive System)

  6. Primary Organs of Digestion • Mouth • Esophogus • Stomach • Small Intestines • Large Intestines (a.k.a Colon

  7. Accessory Organs of Digestion • Mouth • Tongue • Teeth • Salivary Glands • Pancreas • Liver • Gall Bladder

  8. Structure of Organs of Digestion - Mouth • A.K.A. Buccal Cavity • Food enters digestive system through mouth • Inside of mouth covered with mucous membrane • Roof of mouth is HARD PALATE (bone) and SOFT PALATE • UVULA – flap that hangs off soft palate – prevents food from going up the nose when you swallow

  9. Structure of Organs of Digestion - Tongue • Attached to floor of mouth • Helps in chewing and swallowing • Made of skeletal muscle attached to four bones • Taste buds on the surface – sweet, sour, bitter, salty

  10. Structure of Organs of Digestion – Teeth • GINGIVA – gums, support and protect teeth • MASTICATION – chewing, teeth help in mechanical digestion • DECIDUOUS (primary) teeth – 20 baby teeth • Permanent (secondary) teeth – 32 adult teeth Did you know??? Canine teeth are also known as cuspids and eye teeth

  11. Structure of Organs of Digestion – Teeth • Incisors – cutting and chopping food • Cuspids – ripping food • Bicuspids – ripping food • Molars – crushing and grinding food

  12. Structure of Organs of Digestion – Salivary Glands • Three pairs of glands – parotid, sublingual, submandibular • PAROTID – largest salivary glands, they become inflamed during mumps • Secrete saliva

  13. Structures of the digestive system Pharynx (throat) – permits swallowing food and liquids Nasopharynx Oropharynx Hypopharynx -

  14. Structure of Organs of Digestion – Esophagus • Muscular tube, 10” long • Connects pharynx and stomach • Esophageal wall layers • Mucosa • Submucosa • Muscular • External serous

  15. Structure of Organs of Digestion – Stomach • Upper part of abdominal cavity - LUQ • CARDIAC SPHINCTER – circular layer of muscle, controls passage of food into stomach from esophagus • PYLORIC SPHINCTER – valve, regulates the entrance of food into duodenum • RUGAE – mucous coat lining of stomach in folds when the stomach is empty • Stomach has muscular coat that allows it to contract (peristalsis) and push food into the small intestine

  16. Structure of Organs of Digestion – Stomach

  17. Structure of Organs of Digestion – Small Intestines • DUODENUM – first segment, curves around pancreas, 12” long • JEJUNUM – next section, 8 ft. long • ILEUM – final portion, 10-12 feet long • ABSORPTION – in small intestine, digested food passes into bloodstream and on to body cells, undigestible passes on to large intestine

  18. Accessory Organs of Digestion - Pancreas • Located behind stomach • Exocrine function – secretes digestive enzymes • Also has endocrine function

  19. Accessory Organs of Digestion - Liver • Largest organ in the body • Located below the diaphragm, upper right quadrant • Connected to gallbladder and small intestine by ducts • Functions: • Produce and store glucose in the form of GLYCOGEN • Detoxify alcohol, drugs and other harmful substances • Manufacture blood proteins • Manufactures bile • Store Vitamins A, D and B complex

  20. Accessory Organs of Digestion – Gall Bladder • Small green organ, inferior surface of the liver • Stores and concentrates BILE from the liver until needed by the body • When fatty foods digested, bile released by gallbladder for digestion

  21. Accessory Organs of Digestion – Large Intestines • CHYME – semi-liquid food • Approx 2” in diameter • Also called the colon • CECUM – lower right portion of large intestine • APPENDIX is finger-like projection off cecum • RECTUM – last portion of large intestine • ANUS – external opening

  22. Understand the functions of the digestive system

  23. Digestion • BOLUS – soft, pliable ball – creating from chewing and addition of saliva – it slides down esophagus • PERISTALSIS – wavelike motions, moves food along esophagus, stomach and intestines In the mouth… • saliva softens food to make it easier to swallow • PTYALIN in saliva converts starches into simple sugar (maltose) • under nervous control – just thinking of food can cause your mouth to water

  24. Digestion In the stomach… • gastric (digestive) juices are released • Acid and enzymes • Pepsin – enzyme that breakdowns proteins • stomach walls churn and mix (This mixture is chyme) • small amount of chyme enters duodenum at a time - controlled by pyloric sphincter • takes 2-4 hours for stomach to empty

  25. Digestion More about gastric juices… • Enteroendocrine glands • Gastrin – stimulates secretion of gastric acid by • Parietal cells of the stomach • HCL (gastric acid) and intrinsic factor (glycoprotein-absorption of B12 in small intestines) • Chief type cells • Pepsinogen – converted into pepsin by gastric acid • Mucus cells • alkaline mucus • Rennin – digestion of milk proteins

  26. Digestion In the small intestine… • where digestion is completed and absorption occurs • addition of enzymes from pancreas and bile from liver/gallbladder • Villi – small finger-like projections that protrude from the epithelial lining of intestinal wall – increase surface area of the intestinal wall for increased absorption area

  27. Digestion In the small intestine-pancreas… • enzymes release into the small intestines • amylase – breaks down starch • steapsin – breaks down fat • pancreatic proteases – breaks down proteins

  28. Digestion In the large intestine… • regulation of H2O balance by absorbing large quantities back into bloodstream • bacterial action on undigested food – decomposed products excreted through colon – bacteria form moderate amounts of B complex and Vitamin K • gas formation – 1-3 pints/day, pass it through rectum (FLATULENCE) 14 times a day, bacteria produce the gas • FECES – undigested semi-solid consisting of bacteria, waste products, mucous and cellulose • DEFECATION – when large intestine fills, defecation reflex triggered – colon and rectal muscles contract while internal sphincter relaxes – external anal sphincter under conscious control

  29. Fecal transplant Allows the bacteria from the healthy stool to repopulate the gut of the patient who has lost healthy bacteria in their gut Functions of the digestive system News Flash... New treatment!!!! • Used to treat Clostridium difficile that grows in human intestines • Symptoms range from persistent diarrhea to life-threatening inflammation of the colon to death

  30. What are the characteristics and treatment of common digestive disorders? Digestive Disorders

  31. Disorders of the digestive system VS • Anorexia • Decreased or poor appetite • Symptom • Anorexia nervosa • Eating disorder characterized by refusal to eat • Psychiatric disorder

  32. Disorders of the digestive system Caries • Tooth decay

  33. Disorders of the digestive system Cleft palate • Fissure or opening – non fusion of the palate • Abnormal facial development during gestation – congenital deformity • Speech, hearing, and psychosocial problems • Babies have breathing problems while nursing/suckling

  34. Heartburn (indigestion) Gastroesophageal Reflux Disease (GERD) • Acid reflux • Symptoms – burning sensation • Rx – avoid chocolate and peppermint, coffee, citrus, fried or fatty foods, tomato products – stop smoking – take antacids – don’t lay down 2-3 hours after eating

  35. GASTROENTERITIS • Inflammation of mucous membrane lining of stomach and intestine • Common cause = virus • Symptoms – diarrhea and vomiting for 24-36 hours • Complication = dehydration • See a Gastroenterologist

  36. Peptic Ulcer • Sore or lesion that forms in the mucosal lining of the stomach • Gastric ulcers in the stomach and duodenal ulcers in the duodenum • Cause – H. pylori (bacteria) is primary cause • Lifestyle factors that contribute: cigarette smoking, alcohol, stress, certain drugs • Symptoms – burning pain in abdomen, between meals and early morning, may be relieved by eating or taking antacid • DX – x-ray, presence of bacteria • Rx – H2 blockers (drugs) that block release of histamine, avoid spicy food

  37. APPENDICITIS • When appendix becomes inflamed • If it ruptures, bacteria from appendix can spread to peritoneal cavity • Symptoms – RLQ pain (rebound pain) • Rx – Antibiotics and appendectomy

  38. Hepatitis HEPATITIS A • Infectious hepatitis • Cause – virus • Spread through contaminated food or H2O – fecal-oral • Treat symptoms, rest, no ETOH or fatty foods, stay hydrated HEPATITIS B • Caused by virus found in blood • Transmitted by blood transfusion or being stuck with contaminated needles (drug addicts) • Health care workers at risk and should be vaccinated • Use standard precautions for prevention

  39. Hepatitis HEPATITIS C • Chronic infectious hepatitis • Cause – virus (HCV) • Spread through blood to blood contact • Transmitted by blood transfusion or being stuck with contaminated needles (drug addicts) HEPATITIS D • Caused by virus found in blood • Only occur in people who have Hepatitis B – transmitted at same time • Super Hepatitis – Delta Hepatitis

  40. Hepatitis HEPATITIS E • Acute viral infectious hepatitis • Cause – virus (HEV) • Spread through fecal-oral transmission • Lethal – no cure • Mostly in under developed countries due to poor sanitation

  41. CIRRHOSIS • Chronic, progressive disease of liver • Normal tissue replaced by fibrous connective tissue • 75% caused by excessive alcohol consumption • S&S – edema, ascites, jaundice, fatigue, itching, bruise easily, weight loss, red palms, confusion • Rx – no cure, avoid Tylenol and ibuprofen, low Na diet, stop ETOH consumption,

  42. CHOLECYSTITIS • Inflammation of gallbladder • Symptoms– RUQ pain, fever, nausea, vomiting, pale stool, jaundice • Causes – Gallstones (cholelithiasis), bile duct blockage • Rx – bed rest, antibiotics, pain medications, hospitalization, Cholecystectomy (surgical removal of gallbladder)

  43. CHOLELITHIASIS • Gallstones • Can block the bile duct causing pain and digestive disorders • Small ones may pass on their own, large ones surgically removed • CHOLECYSTECTOMY

  44. IRRATABLE BOWEL SYDROME - IBS • Spastic colon – chronic abdominal pain, discomfort, bloating • Diarrhea or constipation • Urgency for bm • Etiology - Unknown • No cure • Rx – diet, stress relief, exercise, medication

  45. Other Disorders DIARRHEA • Loose, watery, frequent bowel movements when feces pass along colon too rapidly • Caused by infection, poor diet, nervousness, toxic substances or irritants in food CONSTIPATION • When defecation delayed, feces become dry and hard • Rx – diet with cereals, fruits, vegetables, (roughage), drinking plenty of fluids, exercise, and avoiding tension OBSTIPATION • Blockage of intestines – severe constipation JAUNDICE • Yellow color of the skin

  46. Relevance of nutrition to the digestive system Healthy dietary habits help maintain homeostasis of body systems

  47. Vitamins Fat soluble Vitamins A, D, E, K Water soluble Vitamins C, B Electrolytes Calcium Chloride Magnesium Phosphorus Potassium Sodium Relevance of nutrition to the digestive system

  48. QUESTIONS

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