1 / 47

Human Digestion and Absorption

Human Digestion and Absorption. Learning Outcomes. Outline the roles played by the gastrointestinal tract and the related accessory organs (liver, gallbladder, and pancreas) in digestion and absorption. Describe how foods are moved along the digestive tract.

yahto
Download Presentation

Human Digestion and Absorption

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Human Digestion and Absorption

  2. Learning Outcomes • Outline the roles played by the gastrointestinal tract and the related accessory organs (liver, gallbladder, and pancreas) in digestion and absorption. • Describe how foods are moved along the digestive tract. • Explain the 4 main types of absorption.

  3. Learning Outcomes • Identify the key enzymes and hormones involved in digestion and absorption and their functions. • Identify major nutrition-related gastrointestinal diseases and disorders and typical approaches to prevention and treatment. • Explain why diarrhea represents a serious health challenge to infants and young children around the world.

  4. Chemical Level Atoms combine to form molecules Cell Level Molecules form organelles Use ATP Tissue Level Similar cells make up tissues Organ Level Different tissues combine to form organs Organ System Level Organs make up an organ system Organism Level Organ systems make up an organism Organization of the Human Body

  5. Human Tissues • Epithelial • Cells that cover surfaces inside and outside of the body • Connective • Support and protect the body by holding structures together • Muscle • Contract and relax to permit movement • Nervous • Transmit nerve impulses

  6. Digestive Organ System • GI tract • Mouth, esophagus, stomach, small intestine, large intestine • Liver, pancreas and gall bladder

  7. Digestive System Overview • Digestion • Process of breaking down foods into a form the body can use • Absorption • Uptake of nutrients from the GI tract into the blood or lymph • Excretion of waste matter • Immune system function

  8. Anatomy of the GI Tract • GI tract = the alimentary canal • 15’ long, hollow, muscular tube • Four layers • Mucosa • Innermost layer: forms hollow area of the lumen • Submucosa • Contains blood vessels (carry nutrients), nerves, and glands • Muscle (as double layers) • Moves food forward • Serosa • Outside layer;-protects the tract

  9. Sphincters • Ring like muscles that control the flow of contents in the GI tract • Lower esophageal sphincter • Pyloric sphincter • Sphincter of Oddi • Ileocecal sphincter • Anal sphincter

  10. GI Motility:Mixing and Propulsion • Peristalsis • Contractions • Segmentation • Back and forth movement • Mass movements • Peristalsis over widespread area • Elimination • Vomiting

  11. Digestive System Secretions • Saliva • Mucus • Digestive enzymes • Hydrochloric acid • Bile • Bicarbonate ions • Hormones

  12. Mouth (Oral Cavity) • Chewing increases surface area • Mixed with saliva food becomes a bolus • Saliva • Lysozyme • Breaks down bacteria • Mucus • Lubricates and hold bolus together • Amylase • Breaks down starch • Enhances perception of flavor

  13. Taste and Smell • Taste buds on the tongue and soft palate – contain taste-receptor cells • Salty • Sour • Sweet • Bitter • Umami • Olfactory cells in nose (smell) • Stimulated with chewing

  14. Esophagus • Swallowing • Moves bolus from the mouth to the esophagus • Epiglottis • Prevents food from entering the trachea • Closes over the larynx

  15. Stomach • Food bolus enters stomach through lower esophageal sphincter • Holding & mixing tank • Mixed with stomach secretions food becomes chyme

  16. Stomach Secretions • Parietal Cells • Hydrochloric Acid • Inactivates proteins • Destroys bacteria and viruses • Dissolves minerals to aid in absorption • Converts pepsinogen into pepsin • Pepsinogen • Protein digesting enzyme • Gastrin • Hormone that controls release of HCl and pepsinogen

  17. Other Stomach Secretions • Chief cells • Gastric lipase • Mucus • Protects the stomach from being digested • Production relies on prostaglandins

  18. Small Intestine • Most digestion and absorption occurs here • Pyloric sphincter allows chyme into the small intestine • Gastric inhibitory peptide (hormone) slows release of chyme • Sections • Duodenum, jejunum and ileum

  19. Small Intestine (2) • Circular folds • Villi – lined with: • Goblet cells - make mucus • Endocrine cells - produce hormones • Enterocytes - produce digestive enzymes and absorb nutrients • Contain a brush border of microvilli covered with glycocalyx

  20. Liver, Gallbladder and Pancreas • Liver • Provides bile • Enterohepatic circulation (recycling of bile) • Gallbladder • Bile storage • Pancreas • Produces sodium bicarbonate, lipases, proteases and pancreatic amylase

  21. Hormones of the GI Tract • Gastrin • Stomach release of HCl and pepsinogen • Cholescystokinin (CCK) • Release of bile • Secretin • Release of pancreatic bicarbonate • Gastric Inhibitory Peptide • Limits release of gastric juices

  22. Absorption • Primarily occurs in small intestine • Passive diffusion • Concentration gradient • Facilitated diffusion • Concentration gradient + carrier protein • Active • Carrier protein + energy (regardless of concentration) • Endocytosis • Engulfment of compounds or liquids

  23. Cardiovascular System Includes heart, blood vessels and blood Water-soluble nutrients transported via capillaries in villi to portal vein Lymphatic System Includes lymph Fat-soluble nutrients and large particles transported via lacteals into the lymph vessels to thoracic duct Moving Nutrients around the Body

  24. Large Intestine • Ileocecal valve • Colon • Cecum, ascending colon, transverse colon, descending colon and sigmoid colon • Rectum • Anus

  25. Functions of Large Intestine • Absorption of water and electrolytes • Formation and expulsion of feces • Housing of bacteria (microbiota)

  26. Microbiota (bacterial flora) • Beneficial bacteria • Control pathogenic bacteria • Synthesize Vitamin K and Biotin • Aid lactose digestion and fermentation of dietary fibers • Probiotics • Live bacteria in food and supplements • Health benefits • Prebiotics • Non digestible carbohydrates in food that promote the growth of bacteria- • E.g. inulin, resistant starch

  27. Heartburn and Gastroesphogeal reflux disease (GERD) Foods that increase reflux: Citrus, caffeine, chocolate, fatty foods, spicy foods, onion, garlic and tomato based foods (Peptic) Ulcers Causes: H. pylori and NSAID medications Treatment: Medications Avoid foods that increase symptoms When Digestive Processes Go Awry

  28. Food Intolerances Intestinal Gas (Flatulence) Constipation Fiber, fluid and exercise Laxative use Diarrhea Replace fluid and electrolytes Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS) Cause unknown Inflammatory Bowel Disease (IBD) Ulcerative colitis and Crohn’s disease Hemorrhoids Gallstones When Digestive Processes Go Awry (2)

  29. Celiac Disease • Intolerance to gluten • 1 in 133 people affected • Many undiagnosed • Can affect many body systems • GI and others • Gluten-free diet for life • Corn, rice, quinoa, and buckwheat OK

More Related