730 likes | 753 Views
Explore the absorption of nutrients, salivary glands function, stomach histology, small intestine sections, and liver anatomy in this informative quiz picture chapter. Learn about peritonitis, mumps, and more homeostatic imbalances. Study the functions of the mouth, esophagus, and stomach, and understand the roles of bile and liver histology.
E N D
Digestive System Chapter 23
Absorption of Nutrients • The passage of digested molecules of food, water, minerals, and vitamins from the lumen of the GI tract into the mucosal cells by active or passive transport into blood or lymph
Upper esophageal Tonic contractions are shown by sphincters; most are smooth muscle, some are skeletal. Lower esophageal Pyloric Oddi Ileocecal Internal anal Fig. 22-9, pg: 691 External anal
Homeostatic Imbalance Peritonitis • Inflammation of peritoneum • Puncture wound of abdomen
Salivary Glands • Parotid Glands- located anterior to ear • Sublingual Glands- located in floor of mouth • Submandibular Glands- located under jaw • Function: produce saliva- mostly water, salivary amylase, antimicrobials Saliva moistens food, starts starch breakdown, dissolves food chemicals for taste
Homeostatic Imbalance Mumps • Inflammation of parotid gland • Passed by saliva • In males can lead to testes infection
Homeostatic Imbalance Halitosis • Inhibited saliva production • No saliva=no washing of mouth • Cavities, anaerobic bacteria make hydrgen sulfide, methyl mercaptan and cadaverine which smell like rotten eggs, feces and corpes
Mouth, Pharynx, Esophagus • Mouth- place where mechanical breakdown of food begins with chewing • Pharynx- has 2 skeletal muscle layers whose contractions propel food into esophagus • Esophagus- long tube to stomach posterior to trachea; conduit for food; peristalsis (alternate waves of contraction/relaxation of muscle that propels food to stomach)
Swallowing uses contraction of tongue, upper pharynx constrictors, and laryngeal muscles. Is voluntarily initiated, but medullary swallowing center coordinates muscles. Fig. 22-10, pg: 692
Stomach • Chemical breakdown of proteins begins here • food becomes chyme • upper end to esophagus is cardiac portion; fundus is top • middle is body and end is pylorus
Stomach Histology Epithelium- simple columnar • Gastric pits- primarily goblet cells • Gastric glands- below gastric pits Neck Cells- produce acidic mucous Parietal Cells- secrete HCl and Intrinsic Factor Chief Cells- produce pepsinogen to digest protein Enteroendocrine Cells- release hormones; gastrin, histamine, endorphins, serotonin, cholecystekinin, somatostatin
Stomach Mucosal Barrier • Bicarbonate rich mucous on stomach wall • Epithelial cells connected by tight junctions • Gastric Gland cells impermeable to HCl • Damaged epithelial cells replaced quickly; lining shed every 3-6 days
Functions of Stomach • Protein digestion- only enzymatic type that occurs here • Secretion of IF- essential for intestinal absorption of B12; B12 deficiency causes Pernicious Anemia
Control of Gastric Secretion • Neural Control-CN X (Vagus)-stimulation causes increase of all gland secretion • Gut Brain local reflexes Hormonal Control-Gastrin- stimulates secretion of enzymes and HCl and hormones of small intestine
Homeostatic Imbalances Gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD) • Heartburn • Stomach acid travels back up esophagus • Hiatal hernia • Damage to esophagus if prolonged
Homeostatic Imbalances Gastric Ulcers • Erosion of stomach wall • Breach mucosal barrier • Stress, medicines, bacteria (helicobacter pylori
Small Intestine Three Sections 1. Duodenum 2. Jejunem 3. Ilium
Peritoneum • Serous membrane- double membrane • Mesentery is a sheet of 2 serous membranes fused back to back; holds part of the GI tract together; extends from body wall to digestive organs; provides route for blood/lymphatic vessels and nerves
2) villi • fingerlike projections on mucosa • Surface cells for absorption • Contains capillary bed and lacteal (lymph capillary) • Made of cells
3) microvilli • tiny plasma membrane projections of absorptive cells of mucosa • Fuzzy appearance called brush border • Brush border enzymes located here • On a single cell
Histology of Small Intestine • Epithelium- simple columnar with goblet cells; enteroendocrine cells that secrete intestinal Gastrin, Secretin, Cholecystikinin (CCK), GIP, VIP • Intestinal Pits located above intestinal glands that are called Crypts of Leiberkuhn- secrete intestinal juice, lysozyme • Brunner’s Glands- duodenum only; alkaline mucous
Liver • Digestive function- produce bile for transport to small intestine • Other functions include storage of Vit. A, D, E, and K and production of proteins including albumin, clotting factors and production of cholesterol
Gross anatomy of Liver • About 3 pounds • Divided into right and left lobes • Bile produced in the liver leaves through the common hepatic duct which joins the Cystic Duct of the gall bladder to form the Common Bile Duct • Under R costal margin from 5th to 10th rib
Histology of Liver • Functional Unit- Liver Lobule consisting of hepatocytes (liver cells) and vessels; hexagonal with each corner being a portal triad (artery, vein, bile duct); center is the central vein • Sinusoids- leaky capillaries between liver cells; also Kupffer cells (macrophages • Bile Canaliculi- canals between liver cells that take bile to bile ducts
Homeostatic Imbalances Cirrhosis • Chronic inflammation of the liver • Obstructed blood flow through liver, portal hypertension • Chronic alcoholism or hepatitis
Bile • Bile Salts- cholesterol derivatives; emulsify fats • Phospholipids • Fats • Electrolytes • Bile Pigments