Digestive System
Digestive System
Digestive System
Introduction
Ingest food
Break down food into nutrient molecules
Absorb molecules into the bloodstream
Rid the body of indigestible remains
There are four stages to food processing:
The cavity has dome shaped roof called palate.The hard palate is in front and
soft palate is behind.
Pharyngeal tonsils which form the lymph glands are on either side and protect
against infection from adjacent area.
Function
In the oral cavity food is teared and grinded with the help of teeth and
also mixed with saliva.
The process tearing, grinding with saliva involves movement of
jaws,cheek,lips and tongue.
This process is known as Mastication.
Tongue
The tongue is at the base of the mouth with it’s one-third lying in Front
and one-third in the posterior part of the oral cavity.
It is musculo membranous structure with taste buds and papillae on
it’s surface.
The tongue is mobile organ with tip, body and base.
TONGUE
There are 16+16 =32 teeth in the mouth and are fixed in their sockets in the upper
jaw and lower jaw.
Dentine.
Enamel.
Cementum.
Dentine forms the major part of the tooth and has bone like structure.
Parotid.
Submaxillary.
Sublingual.
Mucous.
Former type secretes watery clear fluid and later secretes mucous type
of fluid.
Saliva
Ptyalin present in saliva splits starch into maltose and then into
glucose.
Saliva helps in excretion of heavy metals,urea,and certain other drugs.
Saliva act as buffer by maintaining the level of bicarbonate and
phosphate in blood.
Pharynx
Oropharynx
Laryngopharynx.
Pharynx
Mucosa
Oesophagus
• Muscular layer
• 1.Stratied Muscle , 2.Smooth Muscle
Posterior
Serosa
Muscularis Externa.
Submucosa
Muscularis interna.
Histology of stomach
Serosa is made up of areolar connective tissue.
Muscularis externa consist of three layer of muscle fibres.
Longitudinal
Circular
Peptic glands.
Oxyntic glands.
Mucus glands.
Histology of stomach
Body of the stomach consist of peptic glands.
Oxyntic glands are concentrated in fundus of stomach.
Mucous glands secrete alkaline mucus present in pylorus portion of
stomach.
Histology of stomach
The surface of the mucosa is a layer of simple columnar epithelial cells
called surface mucousa cells.
The mucosa contains a lamina propria (areolarconnective tissue) and a
muscularis mucosae (smooth muscle)
Epithelial cells extend down into the lamina propria, where they form
columns of secretory cells called gastric glands.
Histology of stomach
Several gastric glands open into the bottom of narrow channels called
gastric pits.
Gastric glands contain three types of exocrine gland cells that secrete
their products into the stomach lumen: mucous neck cells, chief cells, and
parietal cells.
Histology of stomach
Serosa Muscularis externa Submucosa Muscularis interna Mucosa
Highly acidic.
Mechanism of secretion
Body and fundus of stomach secrete acidic juice,
Pyloric part releases alkaline juice.
Fasting stomach secretes 10-60 ml of gastric juices per hour.
500 ml of juices is secreted after meals.
Mechanism of secretion
Gastric secretion occurs in 3 phases.
Nervous
Gastric
Intestinal phase
Mechanism of secretion
Nervous phase:
Gastric phase:
Release of chemical substance of gastrin, histamine and release of gastric juice takes
place after entry of food into stomach due to stimulation and activation of gastrin
hormone.
Intestinal Phase:
When food enters duodenum further secretion of gastric juice is stopped.
It is also inhibited by release of enterogastrin hormone secreted from
duodenum.
Secretin,CCK and GIP inhibit gastric acid secretion.
Function of gastric juice
The enzyme pepsin with HCL digests protein into peptone and
proteoses.
Renin acts on milk protein caseinogen and converts into casein.
HCL carries out hydrolysis of food stuff and act as antiseptic.
Gastric juice excretes heavy metals and certain drugs.
It also consist extrinsic food factor(absorbs Vit b12)
Function of stomach
Mechanical function
Secretion
Antiseptic(HCL)
Digestion
Absorption
Excretion
Mechanical and chemical digestion in
stomach
Several minutes after food enters the stomach, waves of peristalsis pass
over the stomach every 15 to 25 seconds.
Few peristaltic waves are observed in the fundus, which primarily has a
storage function.
Instead, most waves begin at the body of the stomach and intensify as they
reach the antrum.
Mechanical and chemical digestion in
stomach
Each peristaltic wave moves gastric contents from the body of the stomach
down into the antrum, a process known as propulsion.
The pyloric sphincter normally remains almost, but not completely, closed.
Because most food particles in the stomach initially are too large to fit
through the narrow pyloric sphincter, they are forced back into the body of
the stomach, a process referred to as retropulsion.
Mechanical and chemical digestion in
stomach
The net result of these movements is that gastric contents are mixed
with gastric juice, eventually becoming reduced to a soupy liquid called
chyme.
Once the food particles in chyme are small enough, they can pass
through the pyloric sphincter, a phenomenon known as gastric
emptying.
Gastricemptying is a slow process: only about 3 mL of chyme moves
through the pyloric sphincter at a time.
Mechanical and chemical digestion
in stomach
Jejunum
Iluem
The descending part of duodenum contains opening of bile duct and pancreatic
duct.
Jejunum
It is the continuation of duodenum and forms two-fifth of small intestine.
It is coiled up structure and perform peristaltic movements .
It has innumerable glands which form the succus entricus juice.
It is bound by fold of peritoneum called mesentery which carries blood
vessels.
Main Function is digestion of food and function of absorption.
Ileum
It is distal part and coiled up part of intestine.
It follows jejunum and ends at caecum which is beginning of large
intestine.
Ileum has same structure as jejunum but has additional villi.
Histology of small intestine
The wall of the small intestine is composed of the same four layers that
make up most of the GI tract: mucosa, submucosa, muscularis, and
serosa.
The mucosa is composed of a layer of epithelium, lamina propria, and
muscularis mucosae
Histology of small intestine
The epithelial layer of the small intestinal mucosa consists of simple
columnar epithelium that contains many types of cells
Absorptive cells of the epithelium contain enzymes that digest food and
possess microvilli that absorb nutrients in small intestinal chyme.
Also present in the epithelium are goblet cells, which secrete mucus.
Histology of small intestine
The lamina propria of the small intestinal mucosa contains areolar
connective tissue and has an abundance of mucosa-associated lymphoid
tissue (MALT).
Solitary lymphatic nodules are most numerous in the distal part of the
ileum
Groups of lymphatic nodules referred to as aggregated lymphatic
follicles, or Peyer’s patches (PI--erz), are also present in the ileum.
The Muscularis mucosae of the small intestinal mucosa consists of
smooth muscle.
Histology of small intestine
The parts of the gallbladder include the broad fundus, which projects
inferiorly beyond the inferior border of the liver;
The body, the central portion; and the neck, the tapered portion.
The body and neck project superiorly.
Histology of gall bladder
The mucosa of the gallbladder consists of simple columnar epithelium
arranged in rugae resembling those of the stomach.
The wall of the gallbladder lacks a submucosa.
The middle, muscular coat of the wall consists of smooth muscle fibers.
Contraction of the smooth muscle fibers ejects the contents of the
gallbladder into the cystic duct.
Function of Gall Bladder
The functions of the gallbladder are to store and concentrate the bile
produced by the liver (up to tenfold) until it is needed in the duodenum.
In the concentration process, water and ions are absorbed by the
gallbladder mucosa.
Bile aids in the digestion and absorption of fats.
Histology of liver and Gall
bladder
Hepatocytes. Hepatocytes (hepat- = liver; -cytes = cells) are the major
functional cells of the liver and perform a wide array of metabolic, secretory,
and endocrine functions.
These are specialized epithelial cells with 5 to 12 sides that make up about
80% of the volume of the liver.
Hepatocytes form complex three-dimensional arrangements called hepatic
laminae (laminae are plates of hepatocytes one cell thick bordered on either
side by the endothelial-lined vascular spaces called hepatic sinusoids.
Histology of liver and Gall
bladder
Bile canaliculi (kan-a-LIK-ū-li = small canals) are small ducts between
hepatocytes that collect bile produced by the hepatocytes.
From bile canaliculi, bile passes into bile ductules and then bile ducts.
The bile ducts merge and eventually form the larger right and left
hepatic ducts, which unite and exit the liver as the common hepatic
duct
Histology of liver and Gall
bladder
Hepatic sinusoids are highly permeable blood capillaries between rows
of hepatocytes that receive oxygenated blood from branches of the
hepatic artery and nutrient-rich deoxygenated blood from branches of
the hepatic portal vein.
Function of liver
Each day, hepatocytes secrete 800–1000 mL (about 1 qt) of bile,
The principal bile pigment is bilirubin
The phagocytosis of aged red blood cells liberates iron, globin, and
bilirubin (derived from heme)
Function of liver
Carbohydrate metabolism. Storage.
Excretion of bilirubin.
Structurally, the four major regions of the large intestine are the cecum, colon,
rectum, and anal canal.
Anatomy of Large Intestine
The opening from the ileum into the large intestine is guarded by a fold of
mucous membrane called the ileocecal sphincter (valve), which allows
materials from the small intestine to pass into the large intestine.
Hanging inferior to the ileocecal valve is the cecum, a small pouch about 6
cm (2.4 in.) long.
Attached to the cecum is a twisted, coiled tube ,measuring about 8 cm (3
in.) in length, called the appendix.
Anatomy of Large Intestine
The open end of the cecum merges with a long tube called the colon (= food passage),
which is divided into ascending, transverse, descending, and sigmoid portions.
True to its name, the ascending colon ascends on the right side of the abdomen.
The colon continues across the abdomen to the left side as the transverse colon
The sigmoid colon (sigm- = S-shaped) begins near the left iliac crest, projects
medially to the midline, and terminates as the rectum at about the level of the third
sacral vertebra.
Anatomy of Large Intestine
The rectum is about 15 cm (6 in.) in length and lies anterior to the
sacrum and coccyx.
The terminal 2–3 cm (1 in.) of the large intestine is called the anal
canal.
The mucous membrane of the anal canal is arranged in longitudinal folds
called anal columns that contain a network of arteries and veins.
Anatomy of Large Intestine
The opening of the anal canal to the exterior, called the anus, is guarded by
an internal anal sphincter of smooth muscle (involuntary) and an
external anal sphincter.
Histology of the Large Intestine
The wall of the large intestine contains the typical four layers found in the rest of the
GI tract: mucosa, submucosa, Muscularis, and serosa.
They are located in long, straight, tubular intestinal glands (crypts of Lieberkühn) that
extend the full thickness of the mucosa.
Histology of the Large
Intestine
Solitary lymphatic nodules are also found in the lamina propria of the
mucosa and may extend through the muscularis mucosae into the
submucosa.
Mechanical Digestion in the
Large Intestine
The passage of chyme from the ileum into the cecum is regulated by the
action of the ileocecal sphincter.
Immediately after a meal, a gastroileal reflex (gas′-trō-IL-ē-al)
intensifies peristalsis in the ileum and forces any chyme into the cecum.
Whenever the cecum is distended, the degree of contraction of the
ileocecal sphincter intensifies.
Mechanical Digestion in the
Large Intestine
One movement characteristic of the large intestine is haustral churning.
In this process, the haustra remain relaxed and become distended while they fill up.
When the distension reaches a certain point, the walls contract and squeeze the contents
into the next haustrum.
A final type of movement is mass peristalsis, a strong peristaltic wave that begins at about
the middle of the transverse colon and quickly drives the contents of the colon into the
rectum.
Mechanical Digestion in the
Large Intestine
Because food in the stomach initiates this gastrocolic reflex in the colon,
mass peristalsis usually takes place three or four times a day.
Chemical Digestion in large
Intestine
The final stage of digestion occurs in the colon through the activity of
bacteria that inhabit the lumen
Mucus is secreted by the glands of the large intestine, but no enzymes
are secreted.
Chyme is prepared for elimination by the action of bacteria, which
ferment any remaining carbohydrates and release hydrogen, carbon
dioxide, and methane gases.
These gases contribute to flatus (gas) in the colon, termed flatulence
when it is excessive.
Chemical Digestion in large
Intestine
Bacteria also convert any remaining proteins to amino acids and break
down the amino acids into simpler substances indole, skatole, hydrogen
sulfide, and fatty acids.
Some of the indole and skatole is eliminated in the feces and contributes to
their odor. Bacterial products that are absorbed in the colon include several
vitamins needed for normal metabolism, among them some B vitamins
and vitamin K.
Chemical Digestion in large
Intestine
Some of the indole and skatole is eliminated in the feces and contributes
to their odor.
Bacterial products that are absorbed in the colon include several
vitamins needed for normal metabolism, among them some B vitamins
and vitamin K.
Absorption and Feces Formation
in the Large Intestine
By the time chyme has remained in the large intestine 3–10 hours, it has become
solid or semisolid because of water absorption and is now called feces.
Chemically, feces consist of water, inorganic salts, sloughed-off epithelial cells
from the mucosa of the gastrointestinal tract, bacteria, products of bacterial
decomposition, unabsorbed digested materials, and indigestible parts of food.
Absorption and Feces Formation
in the Large Intestine
Although 90% of all water absorption occurs in the small intestine, the
large intestine absorbs enough to make it an important organ in
maintaining the body’s water balance.
The large intestine also absorbs ions, including sodium and chloride, and
some vitamins.
Absorption and Feces Formation
in the Large Intestine
Mass peristaltic movements push fecal material from the sigmoid colon into
the rectum. The resulting distension of the rectal wall stimulates stretch
receptors, which initiates a defecation reflex that results in defecation. the
elimination of feces from the rectum through the anus.
Absorption and Feces Formation
in the Large Intestine
The defecation reflex occurs as follows: In response to distension of the
rectal wall, the receptors send sensory nerve impulses to the sacral spinal
cord.
Motor impulses from the cord travel along parasympathetic nerves back
to the descending colon, sigmoid colon, rectum, and anus.
The resulting contraction of the longitudinal rectal muscles shortens the
rectum, thereby increasing the pressure within it.
Absorption and Feces Formation
in the Large Intestine
The external anal sphincter is voluntarily controlled
Ifit is voluntarily relaxed, defecation occurs and the feces are expelled
through anus.
Disorders of Digestive System
Constipation Cholecystitis
Diahorrea Gastroenteritis.
Nausea Dysphagia
Vomiting Peptic ulcer
Anorexia Appendicitis
Gastritis Peritonitis
Heartburn
Disorders of Digestive System
Peritonitis
Haemorrhoids (Piles)
Fatty liver
Hepatitis
Cirhossis of liver