Digestive System Flashcards
(29 cards)
What is digestion?
The breaking down of the nutrients (food/macro nutrients) we eat into simpler organic compounds that can be absorbed by the body
What are the two processes in digestion?
Mechanical
Chemical (involving digestive enzymes)
Name the three mechanical processes in the mouth
-Swallowing
-Chewing
Name the enzyme that performs chemical digestion in the mouth, and its products
EZYME: Salivary Amalyse
PRODUCTS: Polysaccharides (starch) -> disaccharides (maltose/sugar)
Define peristalsis
Wave like contraction of the muscular wall of the alimentary canal that pushes food along the digestive tract
Name the two mechanical processes in the stomach:
-Muscular churning mixes food with gastric juices (forms chyme)
-Rennin (infants only) curdles milk
Name the substances involved in chemical digestion in the stomach and describe their roles and products.
HCl - Activates perpinsogen (-> pepsin)
ENZYME: Pepsin
PRODUCTS: Proteins -> peptones
What absorption occurs in the stomach?
Limited absorbtion of water, glucose, alcohol and some drugs
Name the mechanical processes that occur in the Duodenum
Bile salts emulsify fats (reduces large fat globules to small droplets, increasing surface area for enzyme action)
Name the enzymes that performs chemical digestion in the duodenum, and its products
ENZYME: Amalyse
PRODUCT: Disaccharides -> glucose
EZYME: Lipase
PRODUCT: Fats + oils -> fatty acids + glycerol
ENZYME: Trypsin
PRODUCT: Peptones -> polypeptides
Name the mechanical processes that occur in the Small Intestine
Absorbtion:
-Glucose, amino acids, water + minerals are absorbed into the blood capillaries
-Fatty acids + glycerol are absorbed into the lacteals (forming chyle)
Name the enyzmes that performs chemical digestion in the Small Intestine, and its products
ENZYME(s): Maltase, Lactase, Sucrase
PRODUCT: Glucose
ENZYME: Lipase
PRODUCT: Fatty acids + glycerol
ENZYME: Peptidases
PRODUCT: Polypeptides -> amino acids
State the processes that occur in the Large Intestine
-Further absorption of water + some salts
-Bacterial activity - trillions of resident bacteria in large intestine; several roles in addition to digesting cellulose in plant foods + synthesising some vitamins (e.g. folic acid)
State the processes that occur in the Liver
-Deaminates amino acids
-Converts glucose to glycogen
-Produces bile
-Stores iron, and vitamins A, B12, D, E & K
-Synthesises vitamin A & plasma proteins
-Detoxifies drugs (including alcohol) and other toxins
-Stores Glycogen
What is the Alimentary Canal
The alimentary canal is the continuous tube that runs from the mouth to the anus. Together with associated organs such as the pancreas and the gall bladder, the alimentary canal makes up the digestive system.
The lining of the alimentary canal is the surface through which nutrients are absorbed
Describe the characteristics of the Oesophagus
The oesophagus is a tube about 23–25 cm long that connects the pharynx to the stomach. The wall of the oesophagus, like the rest of the alimentary canal, has a double layer of muscle. Circular muscle has muscle fibres arranged in a circle, and longitudinal muscle has fibres arranged along the length of the canal
How does the Oesophagus move food?
As the lump of food enters the pharynx and oesophagus, the circular muscle behind it contracts to narrow the tube. The contraction of successive bands of circular muscle causes the constriction to move in a wave called peristalsis. This movement pushes the food in front of it, assisted by the secretion of mucus that lubricates the inner lining
State the enzymes present in pancreatic juice
-Pancreatic Amalyse
-Trypsin
-Pacreatic Lipases
-Ribonuclease
-Deoxyribosnuclease
What is the purpose of the large intestine?
Moves material at a slow rate (18-24 hours) for elimination from the body. During this, excess water is absorbed to solidify material and bacteria breaks down remaining oraganic compounds for absorption through the walls into the blood
How does the Small Intestine maximise absorption?
-Large surface area (villi, microvilli)
-One cell thick walls
-Rich blood supply (capillaries + Lacteals)
-Efficient transport mechanisms
-Facilitated by length
What does HCl do in the Stomach?
-Converts the enzyme pepsinogen into the active form, pepsin
-Denature proteins (easier for enzymes to break down)
-Maintains PH for optimal functioning of enzymes + kills harmful microorganisms that may enter with food
What is Bile?
-Produced by the liver
-Stored in the gallbladder
-Secreted into the small intestine via the common bile duct
-Bile salts necessary for mechanical digestion of fats (act as a detergent + emulsify fat, breaking them down into tiny droplets)
-Form of mechanical digestion
What is coeliac disease?
People are unable to tolerate the protein gluten (found in wheat, rye, barley). If consumed immune system attacks and damages/kills villi.
What is Constipation?
-a condition characterized by infrequent or difficult bowel movements, often involving hard, dry stools that are painful to pass, and a feeling of incomplete evacuation
-caused by insufficeint fibre/water intake (results in excessive water absorption)