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Discover the purpose and process of the digestive system, from breaking down food to absorbing nutrients. Learn about important organs, nutrient absorption, sphincters, and more.
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Purpose of the Digestive System • To break down food to provide nutrients and water to the body, and expel waste • What is the toughest food that the human body might try to break down? • Fibre – made from plants (vegetables and grains)
How does food get broken down? • Mechanically • Mouth chews food to break it into smaller pieces • Stomach churns • Chemically • Liver produces bile to mix water and fat together for digestion • Gastric acid is produced by the cells of the stomach lining (it would burn your hand!)
Mouth Esophagus Liver Stomach Gall Bladder Pancreas Large Intestine Small Intestine Colon Rectum/Anal Sphincter
Stomach Cells – How would these help the stomach lining? Mucus
How do these stomach cells work? • Fit tightly together to provide a barrier to substances • Columnar epithelial cells secrete mucus which provides a lining in the interior of the stomach which protects against acid
Take a minute… • Complete the flow chart using your organ system diagram • Start with the stomach • End with the blood stream/Out of the body • What organs do the water/nutrients/waste have to go through to get to the bloodstream/exit?
How does the digestive system give nutrients to the blood stream? • What do we call exchange points in the circulatory system? • Capillaries • Where do nutrients get absorbed? • Intestines (Small – Food, Large – Water) • Where else do these exchange points exist? • Every cell and the lungs
The Process of Nutrient Absorption • Food is broken down in the stomach to microscopic nutrients and released into small intestine dissolved in water • As the nutrients pass the villi, diffusion occurs through the extremely thin walls of the villi • Nutrients enter the capillaries and then start to circulate through the blood stream
The Importance of the Sphincter • Without a sphincter, the digestive track is really just a hole through your body • Sphincter – a ring of muscle that holds a biological opening closed • Over 50 different sphincters in the human body
Two Types of Sphincter’s • Voluntary - Controllable • Rectum – both voluntary and involuntary sphincter’s • Sphincter Urethrae - Urinary sphincter
2 Types of Sphincter’s • Involuntary - Not in your control • Ileocecal valve – closes off the small intestine so that food that has not fully broken down may not pass • Sphincter pylori – Holds food in the stomach until it is thoroughly mixed with stomach acid
Olestra • Fat substitute used in the 1980’s • zero calories, zero grams of cholesterol and zero grams of fat • gastrointestinal symptoms — including diarrhea, loose stools, nausea, gas • Olestra sometimes causes underwear staining • “greasy, hard-to-wipe-off fecal matter” • anal leakage (leakage of liquid olestra through the anal sphincter).
My Roomate • He did not have an esophogeal sphincter • Always got heart burn (acid moving up from your stomach into your esophagus) • Had a muscle from his leg fashioned into a sphincter to prevent it • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9bnIuKiHdDE
Demo • Digestion of Fat -
What’s wrong with me Doc? • Day 1: • Pain in stomach area • Answers: • Lot’s of fibre, good amount of veggies, not too much red meat • 2 days of on and off pain • Bowel movements – 1-2/day (regular)
What’s wrong with me Doc? • Day 2: Pain moves down and to the right side • Excrutiating pain when I walk • Some nausea and vomiting • Answers: • I know I have collitis. Do I have collitis? How could I test for it?
Purpose of the Circulatory System • Transports nutrients and oxygen to cells • Transports waste and carbon dioxide away from cells
Getting Around the Body • The heart pumps blood through the body • It pumps blood to the lungs to exchange gases and comes back to the heart • The heart then pumps blood around the rest of the body to transport gases to the cells
Veins vs. Arteries • Arteries – Pumps blood AWAY from the heart • Veins – Brings blood back to the heart
Capillaries – Act as an exchange point for gases and nutrients • These happen in the: • Lungs • Intestines • Every single cell in the body
Purpose of the Respiratory System • To provide all cells in the human body with Oxygen and remove Carbon Dioxide produced as waste by each cell
Fact • You breathe 15 times per minutes and move 10,000L of air in and out of your lungs each day • With every breath, you breath in at least one particle of air that Gandhi breathed in when he was alive
Carbon Monoxide Poisoning • When we breathe in Carbon monoxide, it takes the place of oxygen on the red blood cells • Since RBC’s cannot carry oxygen, the tissues in the human body start to malfunction • The brain relies on oxygen and is one of the first organs affected • You will feel nausea, head aches, loss of consciousness and more
Breathing • You breath without having to ask your body to do so • If you hold your breath too long, when you fall unconcious, your body will start to breathe again
Purpose • The musculoskeletal system supports the body, protects delicate organs and makes movement possible
Muscles • Bundles of long cells. • Contract and expand when signalled by nerve cells. • Skeletal muscle attached to bone by tendons
Muscles • Muscles contract – get shorter and thicker.
Muscles • Voluntary • Involuntary
Purpose of the Nervous System • To sense the environment and coordinate an appropriate response
Nervous System • The nervous systemis made up of the brain, spinal cord,and peripheral nerves. • It senses the environment and coordinates an appropriate response. • The core of the nervous system is the brain and the spinal cord.This is called the central nervous system.
Nerves are bundles of special cells called neurons,surrounded by connective tissue. • Neurons arecommunication specialists that send informationaround the body using electrical signals. • There are approximately 100 billion neurons in the human brain.
Neuron Facts Human brain has over 100 billion neurons If lined up, they’d make a line over 600 miles long Neurons do not undergo mitosis Signals can be sent as high as 180 miles/hour
The peripheral nervous systemconsists of the nerves that carry the signals between the central nervous system and the body.
Human Body is an Electrical Circuit • Let-go Voltage
Reflexes • Reflexes are actions that do not require the involvement of the brain: they occur without conscious thought. • The spinal cord acts as a short cut for reflexes.