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Chapter 26 Physiology of the Digestive System

Chapter 26 Physiology of the Digestive System. Overview of Digestive Function. Primary function of digestive system— to bring essential nutrients into the internal environment so that they are available to each cell of the body Mechanisms used to accomplish primary function of digestive system:

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Chapter 26 Physiology of the Digestive System

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  1. Chapter 26Physiology of the Digestive System

  2. Overview of Digestive Function • Primary function of digestive system— to bring essential nutrients into the internal environment so that they are available to each cell of the body • Mechanisms used to accomplish primary function of digestive system: • Ingestion— food is taken in • Digestion— breakdown of complex nutrients into simple nutrients • Motility of gastrointestinal (GI) wall— physically breaks down large chunks of food material and moves food along the tract • Secretion of digestive enzymes allows chemical digestion • Absorption— movement of nutrients through the GI mucosa into the internal environment • Elimination— excretion of material that is not absorbed • Regulation— coordination of the various functions of the digestive system

  3. Mechanical digestion • Mechanical digestion— movements of the digestive tract • Change ingested food from large particles into minute particles, facilitating chemical digestion by increasing surface area • Churn contents of the GI lumen to mix with digestive juices and come in contact with the surface of the intestinal mucosa, facilitating absorption • Propel food along the alimentary tract, eliminating digestive waste from the body • Mastication— chewing movements • Reduces size of food particles • Mixes food with saliva in preparation for swallowing

  4. Mechanical digestion • Deglutition— process of swallowing • complex process requiring coordinated and rapid movements • Oral stage (mouth to oropharynx) • voluntarily controlled • formation of a food bolus in the middle of the tongue • tongue presses bolus against the palate  food is then moved into the oropharynx

  5. Mechanical digestion • Oral  pharyngeal • Pharyngeal stage (oropharynx to esophagus) • involuntary movement • to propel bolus from pharynx to esophagus, the mouth, nasopharynx, and larynx must be blocked • combination of contractions and gravity move bolus into esophagus

  6. Mechanical digestion • Esophageal stage (esophagus to stomach) • involuntary movement • contractions and gravity move bolus through esophagus and into stomach Oral  pharyngeal  esophageal

  7. Mechanical digestion • Peristalsis and segmentation • two main types of motility produced by the smooth muscle of GI tract • can occur together, in an alternating fashion

  8. Peristalsis • Peristalsis • wavelike ripple of the muscle layer of a hollow organ • produces forward movement of matter along the GI tract

  9. Peristalsis • Rate of peristalsis picks up as chyme approaches end of jejunum  large intestine • after leaving stomach, normally takes approximately 5 hours for chyme to pass all the way through small intestine • regulated in part by intrinsic stretch reflexes • stimulated by cholecystokinin (CCK) • chol = bile, cyst = bladder/sac, kinin = move • Stimulates contraction of gallbladder  bile flowing into duodenum

  10. Previously contracted regions relax and adjacent regions now contract, effectively “chopping” the contents of each segment into smaller chunks. Segmentation • digestive reflexes cause a forward-and-backward movement with a single segment of the GI tract • helps break down food particles, mixes food and digestive juices, and brings digested food in contact with intestinal mucosa to facilitate absorption • mixes chyme with digestive juices

  11. Regulation of motility • Gastric motility • emptying the stomach takes approximately 2 to 6 hours • while in the stomach, food is churned and mixed with gastric juices to form chyme (milky substance) • chyme is ejected about every 20 seconds into the duodenum

  12. Regulation of motility Gastric emptying is controlled by hormonal and nervous mechanisms • Hormonal mechanism • Fats in duodenum stimulate release of gastric inhibitory peptide (GIP)  decrease peristalsis of gastric muscle  slows passage of chyme into duodenum • Nervous mechanism • “enterogastric reflex” = overload in small intestine  decreased gastric motility • receptors in duodenal mucosa are sensitive to presence of acid (pH 3-4) and to distention • Sensory and motor fibers  reflex inhibition of gastric peristalsis

  13. Chemical Digestion • Chemical digestion • changes in chemical composition of food as it travels through the digestive tract • these changes are the result of hydrolysis

  14. Digestive enzymes • Extracellular, organic (protein) catalysts • Principles of enzyme action • Very specific • Function optimally at a specific pH • Enzymes are continually being destroyed or eliminated from the body and must continually be synthesized • Most digestive enzymes are synthesized as inactive proenzymes

  15. Carbohydrate Digestion Carbohydrates are saccharide compounds (C6H12O6) • Polysaccharides are hydrolyzed by amylases (saliva and pancreatic juice)  disaccharides • Disaccharides catalyzed by sucrase, lactase, and maltase (epithelial cells covering the villi= brush border)  monosaccharides (glucose, fructose and galactose) *Sucking on bread (starch) creates maltose (malt sugar) to make a malt shake

  16. Protein Digestion Protein compounds are made up of twisted chains of amino acids • Proteases catalyze hydrolysis of proteins   amino acids • Main proteases: • pepsin in gastric juice • trypsin & chymotrypsin in pancreatic juice • peptidases in intestinal brush border

  17. Fat Digestion Fats must be emulsified by bile and lecithin in small intestine before being digested  micelles • Hydrophilic heads (polar) = outer surface • Hydrophobic tails (nonpolar) = inner surface • Pancreatic lipase is the main fat-digesting enzyme • Colipase = coenzyme that anchors lipase to the inner face of a micelle

  18. Residues of digestion • Some compounds of food resist digestion and are eliminated as feces • Humans lack the enzymes to hydrolyze them • Includes: • Cellulose • Connective tissue from meat • Undigestable fats (combined with Mg+ or Ca+2)

  19. Secretion • Saliva— secreted by salivary glands • Mucus • Lubricates food and, with water, • Facilitates mixing • Protects digestive mucosa • Amylase = enzyme that begins digestion of starches  maltose • Sodium bicarbonate increases the pH for optimal amylase function

  20. Secretion • Gastric juice— secreted by gastric glands • Pepsin • secreted as inactive pepsinogen by chief cells • protease that begins the digestion of proteins • Hydrochloric acid (HCl) • secreted by parietal cells • decreases the pH of chyme for activation and optimal function of pepsin • Released actively into the gastric juice • Mucus and water lubricates, protects, and facilitates mixing of chyme • Parietal cells also absorb vitamin B12 for production of new RBC

  21. Secretion • Pancreatic juice— secreted by exocrine cells • Proteases (trypsin and chymotrypsin) = enzymes to digest proteins and polypeptides • Trypsinogen activated by enterokinase  Trypsin activates chymotrypsin, nucleases and amylase • Lipases = enzymes to digest emulsified fats • Nucleases = enzymes to digest nucleic acids (DNA and RNA) • Amylase = enzyme that digests starches • Sodium bicarbonate increases the pH for optimal enzyme function • its manufacture also helps restore normal pH of blood

  22. Secretion • Bile • secreted by the liver • stored and concentrated in gallbladder • Bile salts & lecithin emulsify fats by encasing fats in shells to form tiny spheres called micelles • Sodium bicarbonate increases pH for optimal enzyme function • Cholesterol, products of detoxification, and bile pigments are waste products excreted by liver  eliminated in feces

  23. Secretion • Intestinal juice— secreted by cells of intestinal exocrine cells • Largely small intestine • Mucus and water lubricate and aid in continued mixing of chyme • Sodium bicarbonate increases pH for optimal enzyme function

  24. Refer to Table 26-3, Page 779 • Other great tables: Table 26-4 and Table 26-5 (P. 782)

  25. Control of Salivary Secretion • Salivary secretion • Only reflex mechanisms control secretion of saliva • Chemical and mechanical stimuli come from presence of food in the mouth • Olfactory and visual stimuli come from the smell and sight of food

  26. Control of Gastric Secretion • Gastric secretion— three phases • Cephalic phase—“psychic phase” • Parasympathetic system (“rest and digest”) • Stimulates the gastric glands • stimulates production of gastrin (in the stomach)  stimulates gastric secretion

  27. Control of Gastric Secretion • Gastric phase • when products of protein digestion reach pylorus  stimulate release of gastrin  accelerates secretion of gastric juice, ensuring enough enzymes are present to digest food

  28. Control of Gastric Secretion • Intestinal phase— various mechanisms adjust gastric secretion as chyme passes to the intestinal tract • endocrine reflexes involving GIP, secretin, and CCK inhibit gastric secretions • Also inhibited by enterogastric reflex

  29. Overall Gastric Control • Anticipation of swallowing  stomach prepares itself by increasing secretion of enzymes and acid • can then be adjusted according to amount of food present and whether it contains proteins (the only food that can be chemically digested by gastric juice) • Gastric secretion can be slowed when the duodenum becomes full • This prevents the stomach from finishing its task before the small intestine is ready to receive the chyme

  30. Control of Digestive Gland Secretion • Pancreatic secretion stimulated by several hormones released by intestinal mucosa • Secretin evokes production of pancreatic fluid low in enzyme content but high in bicarbonate • CCK— several functions • Causes increased exocrine secretion from pancreas • Opposes gastrin, thus inhibiting gastric HCl secretion • Stimulates contraction of gallbladder so that bile is ejected into duodenum • Secretion of bile • secreted continually by liver • secretin and CCK stimulate ejection of bile from gallbladder

  31. Control of Digestive Gland Secretion • Intestinal secretion • little is known about how intestinal secretion is regulated • suggested that intestinal mucosa is stimulated to release hormones that increase production of intestinal juice

  32. Absorption • Process of absorption • Passage of substances through intestinal mucosa into blood • Most absorption occurs in small intestine • Mechanisms of absorption • For some substances such as water, absorption occurs by diffusion (osmosis) • Other substances are absorbed through more complex mechanisms • Active transport— transports sodium • Sodium cotransport (coupled transport)— transports glucose • Fatty acids, monoglycerides, and cholesterol are transported with the aid of bile salts from lumen to absorbing cells of the villi • After food is absorbed, it travels to the liver Most absorption occurs in the small intestine!

  33. Elimination • Elimination • expulsion of feces from digestive tract • act of expelling feces is called defecation • Defecation occurs as a result of a reflex brought about by stimulation of receptors in the rectal mucosa that is produced when rectum is distended • Constipation • contents of lower colon and rectum move at a slower rate • extra water is absorbed from the feces  hardened stool • Diarrhea • result of increased motility of small intestine • causing decreased absorption of water and electrolytes  watery stool

  34. The Big Picture: Digestion and the Whole Body • Primary contribution of digestive system to overall homeostasis is to provide a constant nutrient concentration in the internal environment • Secondary roles of digestive system • Absorption of nutrients • Teeth and tongue, along with respiratory system and nervous system, important in producing spoken language • Gastric acids aid the immune system by destroying potentially harmful bacteria Useful Map (that may have more than you need to know)

  35. GI Problems The Big Picture: Digestion and the Whole Body • To accomplish its functions, digestive system needs other systems to contribute • Regulation of digestive motility and secretion requires nervous system and endocrine system • Oxygen for digestive activity needs proper functioning of respiratory and circulatory systems • Integumentary and skeletal systems support and protect digestive organs • Muscular system is needed for ingestion, mastication, deglutition, and defecation to occur normally Digestive Quiz!

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