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The Digestive System

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Page 1: The Digestive System. Homework Chapter 6.3 – Practice Problems 1-3 Section 6.4 – Practice Problems 1-5 Section 6.5 – Practice Problems 1-6 Copy Figure

The Digestive System

Page 2: The Digestive System. Homework Chapter 6.3 – Practice Problems 1-3 Section 6.4 – Practice Problems 1-5 Section 6.5 – Practice Problems 1-6 Copy Figure

Homework

• Chapter 6.3 – Practice Problems 1-3 • Section 6.4 – Practice Problems 1-5• Section 6.5 – Practice Problems 1-6

• Copy Figure 2 (p. 217) into your notes in your own words

• Copy Figure 3 (p. 217) into your notes.

Page 3: The Digestive System. Homework Chapter 6.3 – Practice Problems 1-3 Section 6.4 – Practice Problems 1-5 Section 6.5 – Practice Problems 1-6 Copy Figure

This week• Today – Powerpoint Digestive System• Tuesday – Quiz (Label the Dig. System)

– Villi, Absorption, Proteins, Carbs and Lipids– Extra Help After School

• Wednesday – Review • Thursday – Worm Overview/ Test Review

Sheets• Friday – Worm Lab• Sunday – Extra online help• Monday – Unit Test

Page 4: The Digestive System. Homework Chapter 6.3 – Practice Problems 1-3 Section 6.4 – Practice Problems 1-5 Section 6.5 – Practice Problems 1-6 Copy Figure

4 Functions of the digestive system

• INGESTION•DIGESTION•ABSORPTION•EGESTION

Page 5: The Digestive System. Homework Chapter 6.3 – Practice Problems 1-3 Section 6.4 – Practice Problems 1-5 Section 6.5 – Practice Problems 1-6 Copy Figure

Digestion

• Starts in the mouth• Ends in the anus• Food can be broken down mechanically

(chewing) and chemically (with enzymes) to be digested (broken down).

Page 6: The Digestive System. Homework Chapter 6.3 – Practice Problems 1-3 Section 6.4 – Practice Problems 1-5 Section 6.5 – Practice Problems 1-6 Copy Figure

Absorption• Digested food into the bloodstream

through the walls of the small intestine.• Cells burn the energy (sugar, fatty acids,

and amino acids) in the presence of oxygen to release stored energy within the food.

Page 7: The Digestive System. Homework Chapter 6.3 – Practice Problems 1-3 Section 6.4 – Practice Problems 1-5 Section 6.5 – Practice Problems 1-6 Copy Figure

Absorption

• Cells also use larger proteins to help build larger protein molecules needed for growth and development.

Page 8: The Digestive System. Homework Chapter 6.3 – Practice Problems 1-3 Section 6.4 – Practice Problems 1-5 Section 6.5 – Practice Problems 1-6 Copy Figure

Elimination

• The digestive system eliminates materials that cannot be used in the body via elimination.

• The large intestine concentrates these solid wastes, called FECES, and finally the waste passes out of the body through the anus.

Page 9: The Digestive System. Homework Chapter 6.3 – Practice Problems 1-3 Section 6.4 – Practice Problems 1-5 Section 6.5 – Practice Problems 1-6 Copy Figure

Inside the Oral Cavity

• The gastrointestinal tract (GI tract) begins with the oral cavity.

• Oral (or/o = pertaining to the mouth)• The cheeks form the walls of the oval

shaped oral cavity, and the lips surround the opening of the cavity.

• The hard palate form the anterior portion of the roof of the mouth.

• The soft palate consists of the muscular membrane that lies posterior to it.

Page 10: The Digestive System. Homework Chapter 6.3 – Practice Problems 1-3 Section 6.4 – Practice Problems 1-5 Section 6.5 – Practice Problems 1-6 Copy Figure

The Oral Cavity

Page 11: The Digestive System. Homework Chapter 6.3 – Practice Problems 1-3 Section 6.4 – Practice Problems 1-5 Section 6.5 – Practice Problems 1-6 Copy Figure

The Oral Cavity

• The uvula is the small tissue projection that hangs from the soft palate (hangy ball)

• The uvula helps with the production of the sounds of speech.

• The tongue covers the floor of the oral cavity, aids in moving the food during mastication (chewing) and deglutition (swallowing).

• Ruage are the bumps on the top of the hard palate.

Page 12: The Digestive System. Homework Chapter 6.3 – Practice Problems 1-3 Section 6.4 – Practice Problems 1-5 Section 6.5 – Practice Problems 1-6 Copy Figure

The Oral Cavity

Page 13: The Digestive System. Homework Chapter 6.3 – Practice Problems 1-3 Section 6.4 – Practice Problems 1-5 Section 6.5 – Practice Problems 1-6 Copy Figure

The Oral Cavity

• Papillae, small raised bumps on the tongue, contains taste buds.

• Sensitive to food chemicals and allow discrimination of different tastes as the food moves across the tongue.

Page 14: The Digestive System. Homework Chapter 6.3 – Practice Problems 1-3 Section 6.4 – Practice Problems 1-5 Section 6.5 – Practice Problems 1-6 Copy Figure

Papillae

• Some people think that every bump on their tongue is, itself, a taste bud, but that is NOT true.  – Each papillae has many taste buds within it.  – In addition, we have taste buds that are not

even on our tongues.  – Some taste buds are found in our throats,

cheeks, and in the roof of our mouths.

Page 15: The Digestive System. Homework Chapter 6.3 – Practice Problems 1-3 Section 6.4 – Practice Problems 1-5 Section 6.5 – Practice Problems 1-6 Copy Figure

Papillae

Page 16: The Digestive System. Homework Chapter 6.3 – Practice Problems 1-3 Section 6.4 – Practice Problems 1-5 Section 6.5 – Practice Problems 1-6 Copy Figure

Taste Regions

Page 17: The Digestive System. Homework Chapter 6.3 – Practice Problems 1-3 Section 6.4 – Practice Problems 1-5 Section 6.5 – Practice Problems 1-6 Copy Figure

Tonsillitis

Page 18: The Digestive System. Homework Chapter 6.3 – Practice Problems 1-3 Section 6.4 – Practice Problems 1-5 Section 6.5 – Practice Problems 1-6 Copy Figure

The Oral Cavity• The gums are fleshy tissue that surrounds

the sockets of the teeth.• The adult human has 32 teeth (16

permanent teeth top/16 bottom arch).

Central incisor (1)

Lateral incisor (2)

Canine (3)

First premolar (4)

Second premolar (5)

First molar (7)

Third Molar (wisdom tooth) (8)

Page 19: The Digestive System. Homework Chapter 6.3 – Practice Problems 1-3 Section 6.4 – Practice Problems 1-5 Section 6.5 – Practice Problems 1-6 Copy Figure

Salivary Glands

• 3 pairs in the oral cavity• Produce Saliva, that

contain digestive enzymes.

• Saliva is released from the parotid gland, submandibular gland and sublingual gland on EACH side of the mouth.

• Narrow ducts carry saliva into the oral cavity.

Page 20: The Digestive System. Homework Chapter 6.3 – Practice Problems 1-3 Section 6.4 – Practice Problems 1-5 Section 6.5 – Practice Problems 1-6 Copy Figure

The Oral Cavity

• Together the teeth and saliva breakdown food in the oral cavity.

Page 21: The Digestive System. Homework Chapter 6.3 – Practice Problems 1-3 Section 6.4 – Practice Problems 1-5 Section 6.5 – Practice Problems 1-6 Copy Figure

Components of the Digestive System

• Esophagus• Stomach• Small Intestine• Large Intestine• Gall bladder• Liver• Pancreas

Page 22: The Digestive System. Homework Chapter 6.3 – Practice Problems 1-3 Section 6.4 – Practice Problems 1-5 Section 6.5 – Practice Problems 1-6 Copy Figure

Esophagus

• the tube that connects your mouth and your stomach

Page 23: The Digestive System. Homework Chapter 6.3 – Practice Problems 1-3 Section 6.4 – Practice Problems 1-5 Section 6.5 – Practice Problems 1-6 Copy Figure

Esophagus

• Muscular tube• 9-10 inches from the pharynx to the

stomach• Peristalsis is the involuntary, progressive,

rhythmic contraction of muscles in the walls of the esophagus (and other gastrointestinal organs) propelling a bolus (mass of food) toward the stomach.

Page 24: The Digestive System. Homework Chapter 6.3 – Practice Problems 1-3 Section 6.4 – Practice Problems 1-5 Section 6.5 – Practice Problems 1-6 Copy Figure

Food Passage thus far

1. Oral cavity (teeth, tongue, saliva)

2. Pharynx

3. Esophagus

4. Stomach

Page 25: The Digestive System. Homework Chapter 6.3 – Practice Problems 1-3 Section 6.4 – Practice Problems 1-5 Section 6.5 – Practice Problems 1-6 Copy Figure

Stomach• A stretchy bag that holds your food

after you eat

• Helps to break food into smaller pieces so your body can use it for energy and nutrition

Page 26: The Digestive System. Homework Chapter 6.3 – Practice Problems 1-3 Section 6.4 – Practice Problems 1-5 Section 6.5 – Practice Problems 1-6 Copy Figure

Stomach

Esophagus

Page 27: The Digestive System. Homework Chapter 6.3 – Practice Problems 1-3 Section 6.4 – Practice Problems 1-5 Section 6.5 – Practice Problems 1-6 Copy Figure

The Stomach• From the esophagus into the stomach• 3 parts: Fundus (upper portion)

Body (middle section)

Antrum (lower portion)FUNDUS

BODY

ANTRUM

Page 28: The Digestive System. Homework Chapter 6.3 – Practice Problems 1-3 Section 6.4 – Practice Problems 1-5 Section 6.5 – Practice Problems 1-6 Copy Figure

Inside the Stomach

• Folds in the lining of the stomach are called rugae.

• The rugae contain digestive glands that produce the enzyme pepsin (to begin digestion of proteins) and hydrochloric acid.

• Food leaves the stomach in 1 to 4 hrs or longer, depending on the type/amount of food eaten.

Page 29: The Digestive System. Homework Chapter 6.3 – Practice Problems 1-3 Section 6.4 – Practice Problems 1-5 Section 6.5 – Practice Problems 1-6 Copy Figure

Sphincters• Rings of muscles • Control the opening and

closing of the stomach• Lower esophageal

sphincter (cardiac sphincter) relaxes and contracts to move food from the esophagus to the stomach.

• Pyloric sphincter allows food to move from the stomach to the intestine.

Page 30: The Digestive System. Homework Chapter 6.3 – Practice Problems 1-3 Section 6.4 – Practice Problems 1-5 Section 6.5 – Practice Problems 1-6 Copy Figure

Small Intestine• Tube that is 20 feet long.

• Continues to digest food

• Food stays in your small intestine for 4 to 8 hours

Page 31: The Digestive System. Homework Chapter 6.3 – Practice Problems 1-3 Section 6.4 – Practice Problems 1-5 Section 6.5 – Practice Problems 1-6 Copy Figure

Small Intestine

Page 32: The Digestive System. Homework Chapter 6.3 – Practice Problems 1-3 Section 6.4 – Practice Problems 1-5 Section 6.5 – Practice Problems 1-6 Copy Figure

Small Intestine

• 20 feet from the pyloric sphincter to the first part of the large intestine.

3 parts of the small intestine:

1. DUODENUM2. JEJENUM3. ILEUM

Page 33: The Digestive System. Homework Chapter 6.3 – Practice Problems 1-3 Section 6.4 – Practice Problems 1-5 Section 6.5 – Practice Problems 1-6 Copy Figure

The Small Intestine

• Lined with VILLI• Tiny microscopic

projections • Microscopic blood

vessels in the villi absorb the digested nutrients into the bloodstream and lymph vessels.

Page 34: The Digestive System. Homework Chapter 6.3 – Practice Problems 1-3 Section 6.4 – Practice Problems 1-5 Section 6.5 – Practice Problems 1-6 Copy Figure

Duodenum• 1 foot long• Receives food from the stomach • Bile from the liver• Bile from the gallbladder• Pancreatic juice from the pancreas

• Enzymes and bile help digest food before it passes to the second part of the small intestine.

Page 35: The Digestive System. Homework Chapter 6.3 – Practice Problems 1-3 Section 6.4 – Practice Problems 1-5 Section 6.5 – Practice Problems 1-6 Copy Figure

Large Intestine• Tube that is 5 feet long

• Gets waste from small intestine

• Waste stays for 10 to 12 hours

Page 36: The Digestive System. Homework Chapter 6.3 – Practice Problems 1-3 Section 6.4 – Practice Problems 1-5 Section 6.5 – Practice Problems 1-6 Copy Figure

The Large Intestine• Receives the fluid waste from digestion

(the material that is unable to pass into the bloodstream).

• It stores the waste until they can be released from the body.

Page 37: The Digestive System. Homework Chapter 6.3 – Practice Problems 1-3 Section 6.4 – Practice Problems 1-5 Section 6.5 – Practice Problems 1-6 Copy Figure

Large Intestine

Page 38: The Digestive System. Homework Chapter 6.3 – Practice Problems 1-3 Section 6.4 – Practice Problems 1-5 Section 6.5 – Practice Problems 1-6 Copy Figure

Large Intestine• From the small intestine to the anus• 6 sections

– The APPENDIX hangs from the large intestine. • The appendix has no clear function but can

become inflammed and infected when clogged or blocked.

• Thought to be involved with breakdown of plants during primitive life.

Page 39: The Digestive System. Homework Chapter 6.3 – Practice Problems 1-3 Section 6.4 – Practice Problems 1-5 Section 6.5 – Practice Problems 1-6 Copy Figure

Large Intestine Sections

Page 40: The Digestive System. Homework Chapter 6.3 – Practice Problems 1-3 Section 6.4 – Practice Problems 1-5 Section 6.5 – Practice Problems 1-6 Copy Figure

The Large Intestine

• Absorbs water within the waste material allowing the body to expel solid feces (stools).

• Defecation is the expulsion or passage of feces from the body through the anus.

• Diarrhea, or watery stools, results from reduced water absorption into the bloodstream through the walls of the large intestine.

Page 41: The Digestive System. Homework Chapter 6.3 – Practice Problems 1-3 Section 6.4 – Practice Problems 1-5 Section 6.5 – Practice Problems 1-6 Copy Figure

Gall Bladder• Storage tank for bile (a greenish-yellow

liquid) that helps your body break down and use fats

• Located under your liver

• Shaped like a pear

Page 42: The Digestive System. Homework Chapter 6.3 – Practice Problems 1-3 Section 6.4 – Practice Problems 1-5 Section 6.5 – Practice Problems 1-6 Copy Figure

Gall Bladder

Page 43: The Digestive System. Homework Chapter 6.3 – Practice Problems 1-3 Section 6.4 – Practice Problems 1-5 Section 6.5 – Practice Problems 1-6 Copy Figure

Gallbladder

• Pear-shaped sac • Stores and concentrates bile for a later

use.• After you eat the gallbladder contracts,

forcing the bile into the cystic duct into the common bile duct.

Page 44: The Digestive System. Homework Chapter 6.3 – Practice Problems 1-3 Section 6.4 – Practice Problems 1-5 Section 6.5 – Practice Problems 1-6 Copy Figure

Liver• Factory for antibodies and bile

• Stores vitamins and sugars until your body needs them

Page 45: The Digestive System. Homework Chapter 6.3 – Practice Problems 1-3 Section 6.4 – Practice Problems 1-5 Section 6.5 – Practice Problems 1-6 Copy Figure

The Liver• Produces BILE (a thick,

orange-black, sometimes greenish fluid).

• Bile contains cholesterol (a fatty substance), bile acid, and bile pigments.

• Bilirubin – produced from the breakdown of RBCs in normal RBC destruction.

• Bilirubin travels to the liver through the bloodstream, where it is conjugated with another substance and added to bile.

• Bilirubin enters the intestine with bile.

• Bacteria in the colon breakdown bilirubin into pigments that gives feces its brown color.

• Bilirubin and bile leave the body in feces.

Page 46: The Digestive System. Homework Chapter 6.3 – Practice Problems 1-3 Section 6.4 – Practice Problems 1-5 Section 6.5 – Practice Problems 1-6 Copy Figure

Liver

Page 47: The Digestive System. Homework Chapter 6.3 – Practice Problems 1-3 Section 6.4 – Practice Problems 1-5 Section 6.5 – Practice Problems 1-6 Copy Figure

Other Functions of the Liver

1. Maintain proper sugar levels (glucose)

2. Manufacture blood proteins (blood clotting)

3. Releasing Bilirubin, a pigment in bile

4. Remove Poisons (toxins) from the blood.

Page 48: The Digestive System. Homework Chapter 6.3 – Practice Problems 1-3 Section 6.4 – Practice Problems 1-5 Section 6.5 – Practice Problems 1-6 Copy Figure

Jaundice

• Occurs when bilirubin can’t leave the body.• Causes a yellowish discoloration of the

skin, whites of the eyes, and mucous membranes.

Page 49: The Digestive System. Homework Chapter 6.3 – Practice Problems 1-3 Section 6.4 – Practice Problems 1-5 Section 6.5 – Practice Problems 1-6 Copy Figure

Pancreas• Helps you digest

food by breaking down sugars

Page 50: The Digestive System. Homework Chapter 6.3 – Practice Problems 1-3 Section 6.4 – Practice Problems 1-5 Section 6.5 – Practice Problems 1-6 Copy Figure

Functions

• Digest the food we eat

• Take the nutrients out of your food so your body can use it

Page 51: The Digestive System. Homework Chapter 6.3 – Practice Problems 1-3 Section 6.4 – Practice Problems 1-5 Section 6.5 – Practice Problems 1-6 Copy Figure

Food Passage thus far

1. Oral cavity (teeth, tongue, saliva)

2. Pharynx

3. Esophagus

4. Stomach

5. Small Intestine (duodenum, jejunum, ileum)

6. Large Intestine (6 sections)

7. Liver

Page 52: The Digestive System. Homework Chapter 6.3 – Practice Problems 1-3 Section 6.4 – Practice Problems 1-5 Section 6.5 – Practice Problems 1-6 Copy Figure

Recap..can you

remember the food

path?

Page 53: The Digestive System. Homework Chapter 6.3 – Practice Problems 1-3 Section 6.4 – Practice Problems 1-5 Section 6.5 – Practice Problems 1-6 Copy Figure

Food PathwayFood Enters the …• Oral Cavity• Pharynx

• Esophagus• Stomach

• Duodenum• Jejunum• Ileum• Cecum

• Ascending Colon• Transverse Colon• Descending Colon

• Sigmoid Colon• Rectum• Anus

Feces Leaves the body

LIVER

GALLBLADDER

BILE

PANCREAS

ENZYMES

LARGE INTESTINE

SMALL INTESTINE

Page 54: The Digestive System. Homework Chapter 6.3 – Practice Problems 1-3 Section 6.4 – Practice Problems 1-5 Section 6.5 – Practice Problems 1-6 Copy Figure

Hernia• A hiatal hernia occurs when the upper

part of the stomach protrudes upward through the diaphragm. This condition can lead to GERD (gastroesophageal reflux disease).

Page 55: The Digestive System. Homework Chapter 6.3 – Practice Problems 1-3 Section 6.4 – Practice Problems 1-5 Section 6.5 – Practice Problems 1-6 Copy Figure

Heartburn• Has nothing to do with the heart - it is a

digestive problem • Heartburn is a pain behind the breast bone,

often described as ‘burning’ in quality. • Acid is present in the stomach to digest food.

Heartburn occurs when small amounts of this acid rise up into the esophagus - the tube which carries food from the mouth to the stomach. This is called reflux.

• The gullet, unlike the stomach, does not have a protective lining. So when it is exposed to the acid, it can become inflamed and painful.

Page 56: The Digestive System. Homework Chapter 6.3 – Practice Problems 1-3 Section 6.4 – Practice Problems 1-5 Section 6.5 – Practice Problems 1-6 Copy Figure

Anorexia• Lack of appetite (-orexia = appetite)• A sign of malignancy or liver disease.• It is a loss of appetite caused by emotional problems such as

anger, anxiety, and fear.• It is an eating disorder classified as a refusal to maintain a

minimally normal body weight. • The individual is intensely afraid of gaining weight and has a

disturbance in the perception of the shape or size of his/her body.

• Predominantly affects adolescent females, and its principal symptom is a conscious, relentless attempt to diet along with excessive, compulsive over activity, such as exercise, running, or gymnastics.

• Most postmenarchal females with this disorder are amenorrheic.

Page 57: The Digestive System. Homework Chapter 6.3 – Practice Problems 1-3 Section 6.4 – Practice Problems 1-5 Section 6.5 – Practice Problems 1-6 Copy Figure

Bulimia• Bulimia Nervosa (bulimia means abnormal

increase in hunger) is characterized by binge eating (uncontrolled indulgence in food) followed by purging (eliminating food from the body).

• Individuals maintain normal or nearly normal weight because after binging they engage in inappropriate purging. – E.g. self-induced vomiting and the misuse of

laxatives or enemas.