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Chapter 6 Nutrition in Humans

Chapter 6 Nutrition in Humans. You Are what you Eat…. Nutrition. Have you wondered why do we eat?. Why do we eat?. Cos you’re hungry? Cos your tummy aches? Cos you just love to eat? Cos you live to eat? Cos you eat to live?. You Eat to LIVE!.

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Chapter 6 Nutrition in Humans

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  1. Chapter 6Nutrition in Humans You Are what you Eat….

  2. Nutrition • Have you wondered why do we eat?

  3. Why do we eat? • Cos you’re hungry? • Cos your tummy aches? • Cos you just love to eat? • Cos you live to eat? • Cos you eat to live?

  4. You Eat to LIVE! • We eat to supplement our body with nutrients. • So what type of nutrients do our body need? • Water • Carbohydrates • Fats • Proteins

  5. Why do we eat? • You have to realise that everything in our body is made from the very items that you eat. • Proteins are used to create enzymes, mRNA, antibodies & muscles. • Fats are used to transport materials within the body and protect vital organs. • Carbohydrates are used to provide energy in our body.

  6. Holozoic Nutrition • Holozoic means taking in complex organic matter such as proteins, carbohydrates and fats. • Nutrition is the process of taking in food & converting it into living matter.

  7. Nutrition : 4 Step Process • Feeding / Ingestion • food is taken into the body • Digestion • large food molecules broken down into simpler soluble substances • Absorption • simple molecules absorbed into body cells • Assimilation • absorbed substances are converted & used in the body

  8. Digestion • Physical Digestion • Mechanical break down of food into smaller particles. • Increases surface area of food for enzymes to act on. • Chemical Digestion • Break down of complex molecules into simple soluble molecules. • Eg : proteins  amino acids fats glycerol & 3 fatty acids

  9. Animation Time • Let’s take a look at a simple animation on the digestive system. • http://kitses.com/animation/swfs/digestion.swf

  10. Human Digestive System

  11. Mouth Simpler Form! My Oldest Son Smells Like a Rotten Apple Oesophagus Stomach MOSSiLiRA Small Intestines Large Intestines Rectum Anus

  12. Associated Organs • Associated Organs • Not in Digestive System • Has a role in Digestion • Liver • Gall Bladder • Pancreas

  13. Mouth

  14. Mouth • Teeth • Breaks large pieces into smaller pieces (Increase surface area) • Tongue • Mix food with saliva • Forms balls for easier swallowing • Salivary Glands • Ducts secrete saliva • Amylase and mucus

  15. What Happens in the Mouth? • Physical Digestion • Chewing by teeth breaks food into smaller pieces. • Increase surface area of food enables more sites for enzyme action. • Chemical Digestion • Saliva contains salivary amylase • Salivary amylase is active at pH 7 • Salivary amylase digests starch  maltose

  16. Parts of the Throat • Pharynx • Leads to both oesophagus and trachea (windpipe) • Trachea • Leads to lungs • Contains larynx (voice box) • Oesophagus • Leads to stomach • Epiglottis • Flap tissue that prevents food from entering the trachea.

  17. Food digested is softened by mucin and rolled by the tongue to form bolus. • Bolus is a small and slippery round mass • Bolus moves into the Pharynx. • Epiglottis covers trachea. • Bolus moves into oesophagus

  18. Swallowing Animation • http://leavingbio.net/Human%20Nutrition/Human%20Nutrition_files/image014.gif

  19. Question Time 1 • Why do we eat? • What are the nutrients that we take in? • State both their complex and simple natures • What does Holozoic mean? • What does Nutrition mean? • Name the 4 Steps of Nutrition. • Explain each step. • What is the difference between physical & chemical digestion? • State the major parts of the Digestive System. • In the mouth, what aids physical digestion? • Which enzyme is found in the mouth? State it’s optimum pH and it’s chemical reaction.

  20. FYI : Choking & Heimlich Manoeuvre

  21. Oesophagus • Narrow muscular tube • Connects mouth to stomach • Consists of 2 muscles • Longitudinal muscles • Circular muscles (inside of gut) • Moves food by Peristalsis • Gravity helps push food down • NO ENZYMES! (Digestion)

  22. Peristalsis • It is the rhythmic wave-like contractions of the gut walls. • Circular M contract, Longi M relax result in gut narrowing thus food is pushed forward. • Moves food by a series of muscular contractions and relaxations. • Helps mix food with digestive juices • Occurs for the entire alimentary canal

  23. Stomach • It is a thick muscular bag. • Distensible • Expand & Contracts • Walls lined with gastric glands • Secretes gastric juices • Gastric juices contain hydrochloric acid & proteases Pepsin & Rennin. • Food stays for 4 hours • Liquifies bolus to chyme

  24. Functions of HCL • Hydrochloric acid is at pH 2 (acidic) • Acid stops salivary amylase action by denaturing it (pH7) • Kills bacteria & harmful microorganisms • Provide optimum pH for enzymes • Activates proteases Pepsin & Rennin • Pepsinogen  Pepsin • Prorennin  Rennin

  25. What happens in the stomach? • Physical Digestion • Peristalsis in stomach churns & breaks food • Peristalsis mixes bolus with gastric juices • Chemical Digestion • Pepsin digest proteins to polypeptides • Rennin curdles milk into insoluble casein protein which is digested into polypeptides by pepsin. • The digested bolus turns into liquified chyme and moves into the duodenum (small intestines).

  26. FYI : Stomach Ulcers • Stomach ulcers thought to be caused by excess HCL. • 1982 - Australians Robin Warren & Barry J. Marshall self-experimented to show that Helicobacter pylori bacteria caused ulcers. • Marshall drank a petri dish of the bacteria to prove gastritis. • In 2005, both won a Nobel Prize in Medicine.

  27. Small Intestines

  28. Parts of the Small Intestines - DJI • Duodenum • Jejunum • ileum • 6m in length • Secretes digestive enzymes. • Adapted to absorb digested food

  29. What happens in the Small Intestines? • Chyme from stomach  duodenum • Chemical Digestion • Intestinal Juice – Maltase, Sucrase, Lactase, Lipase, Peptidase • Pancreatic Juice – Pancreatic amylase, lipase & trypsinogen(protease) • Physical Digestion • Bile – produced in the liver and secreted by gall bladder & emulsify fat into smaller globules • All juices are alkaline in nature to neutralise acids. • Absorption by villi into bloodstream

  30. Associated Organs • Associated Organs • Not in Digestive System • Has a role in Digestion • Liver (produce Bile) • Gall Bladder (secrete Bile) • Pancreas (digestive enzymes)

  31. maltase lactase sucrase Carbohydrate Digestion • Mouth: little starch digested by amylase to maltose. • Duodenum: most starch digested by pancreatic amylase to maltose. • maltose glucose • lactose glucose + galactose • sucrose glucose + fructose • Carbohydrates digested to Simple Sugars

  32. pepsin erepsin trypsin Protein Digestion • Proteins digested by Proteases • Stomach: Proteins digested to Polypeptides • Duodenum: Polypeptides digested to Amino Acids by peptidases from Pancreatic & Intestinal Juices • Stomach: proteins polypeptides • Duodenum • proteins polypeptides • polypeptides amino acids

  33. lipase Fat Digestion • Duodenum: Bile from gall bladder emulsify fats • Lipases by Pancreatic & Intestinal Juices • fats glycerol + fatty acids

  34. (2) Digestion  (3) Absorption • Duodenum – Food digested into simple soluble molecules • Simple Sugars – Glucose, fructose, galactose • Amino acids • Glycerol & fatty acids • After digestion, the simple soluble molecules can be absorbed by the small intestine villi. (Absorption Animation) • Nutrients move from small intestine villi(epithelial cell) hepatic portal vein  liver

  35. Small Intestines consists of many folds of villus, each villus are lined with epithelial intestinal cells that each have finger-like projections known as microvilli. Microvilli increases surface area to volume ratio of the cell to facilitate greater absorption of nutrients.

  36. Adaptations of Small Intestine for Absorption • Small Intestines (SI) have numerous folds • Each fold are villi • Each epithelial cell have finger-like projections • Villi have thin walls (one cell thick) • SI is long to allow more time for absorption of nutrients • SI have many blood capillaries to carry the nutrients through the hepatic portal vein to liver for detoxification.

  37. Rate of Absorption • Surface area of small intestines (villus) • Membrane of epithelial cell (one cell thick) • Concentration gradient

  38. Absorption in Intestines • Glucose & Amino acids are both passively & actively diffused into epithelial cells & blood capillary. • Glycerol & fatty acids passively diffuse into epithelial cells. Then transported into lacteals (lymphatic capillary) • Water & mineral salts absorbed by large intestines.

  39. Hepatic portal vein brings nutrients to the liver for assimilation and detoxification. • Hepatic artery gives oxygenated blood to the liver. • Hepatic vein carries deoxygenated blood from the liver to the inferior vena cava and finally the heart.

  40. Egestion : Rectum & Anus • Rectum • Food digested with it’s nutrients, water & mineral salts removed become faeces • Faeces are undigested & unabsorbed food • Faeces are temporarily stored • Anus • Site of removal of faeces by defecation

  41. FYI : Stool Indicator

  42. FYIWhy can’t we digest Cellulose? (Green Fibres)

  43. What happens to nutrients in the bloodstream? • Blood rich in nutrients from villi  hepatic portal vein  liver • Assimilation occurs in the liver • Simple molecules constructed into complex molecules • Example: Glucose • Glucose used as source of energy for cellular activities • Excess glucose in bloodstream is bad for the body • Glucose converted to glycogen and stored in liver

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