Digestive System Flashcards
Purpose
To turn food into absorbable nutrients needed to survive
Key points
Ingestion- for entering the body
Chemical digestion - the chemical breakdown of food molecules
Mechanical digestion - the physical breakdown of food pieces into smaller pieces
Peristalsis - movement of food along the alimentary canal, muscle contraction and movement
Absorption - the movement of food into the body, from the alimentary canal into capillaries in the wall of the small and large intestine
Elimination - the removal of non-absorbed ingested food from the body
Alimentary canal
Tube that runs from the mouth to anus
Contains - mouth, oesophagus, stomach, small intestine and large intestine
Mouth
Ingestion occurs mouth
Different types of teeth are used to break food down - mechanical
Saliva and salivary glands are there for chemical breakdown of food - chemical
Tongue allows food to be moved around the mouth and swallowed
Epithelial tissue on the surface of the mouth is thin, repairs quickly and replaces itself frequently
Oesophagus
2 layers of muscle underneath the epithelial tissue
Circular - horizontal layer
Longitudinal - vertical layer
Peristalsis - muscle contracting in a wave-like motion, forcing food through the digestive tract
Epithelial cells secrete a mucus that assist in lubricating the oesophagus to allow food to move along it more easily
Stomach
3 layers of muscle under epithelial cells
Has circular and longitudinal muscle like the oesophagus but also has the,
oblique muscle, allowing food to be churned in variety of direction
The lining of stomach is wrinkled this both increases surface area and allow for expansion of the stomach
Epithelial muscle protects stomach
Small intestine
6 meters in length but smaller diameter then other intestine
Absorption of almost all nutrients occurs here
Combination of muscular and epithelial tissue allows for absorption, peristalsis and increase in surface area
Mucosa (lining) maximises SA as it is folded
Mucosa is covered by villi (finger like projections of epithelial tissue containing a capillary bed
Epithelial cells of the villi are covered in microvilli - designed to maximise SA for absorption
Large intestine
Wider diameter but only 1.5m long
Epithelial lining secretes mucus to allow faeces to move along more easily - no villi and microvilli
Material spends up to 24 hours in the large intestine ; the primary purpose of the large intestine is water reabsorption
Accessory organs
Organs that facilitate the digestive system that are not apart of the alimentary canal
Liver - produces bile to emulsify fats/ detoxifies alcohol/ filter blood
Gall bladder - stores the secretes into the stomach - mechanical digestion
Pancreas - secretes enzymes involved in chemical digestion into duodenum and small intestine