Organs pt. 2: Digestive, urine Flashcards
(23 cards)
Mechanical Digestion
Process of breaking large pieces of food into smaller ones. Increase surface area, for enzymes. Ex. Teeth/stomach muscles
Chemical digestion
Process of breaking down food by cleaving bonds using specialized enzymes. Ex. stomach/small intestine
Digestion
- Oral cavity (carbs - Amylase) (tongue - bolus)
- Pharynx (epiglottis)
- Esophagus (peristalsis)
- Stomach (proteins - Pepsin)
- Small intestine (lipids - Bile salts, lipase) (proteins - chymotrypsin/trypsin) (nucleic acid - nuclease) (enterocytes)
- Large intestine (water/mineral absorption) (bacteria - vitamins) (enterocytes)
- Rectum/anus
- Appendix (holds bacteria) (vestigial)
Small Intestine
Breaks down and absorbs. Duodenum (first part), jejunum (middle part), ileum (last part). Villi and microvilli
Large intestine
Colon: Ascending, transverse descending
Stomach
Stores 2L, Parietal cells secrete gastric acid (hydrochloric acid) (pH 2) to activate pepsin, denature proteins, No absorption (except alcohol and aspirin), mucus
Accessory organs
Liver, gall bladder, pancreas
Liver/gall bladder
Liver creates bile salts, gall bladder stores until needed. Liver stores glucose and detoxifies (ammonia to urea)
Pancreas
Creates enzymes: Amylase, lipase, nuclease, pepsin, trypsin, chymotrypsin (proteolytic enzymes)
Macromolecules
Carbs (sugars: glucose, fructose, galactose), Proteins (amino acids), Lipids (hydrocarbon chains, non-polar, monomer), Nucleic acid (nucleotides)
Glycogen
Way glucose is stored, has deviations. Body can break alpha-glyosidic linkages (but not beta, cellulose).
Protein
Quaternary: polypeptides bonded through covalent/disulfide bridges. Body can create 11 types of amino acids but all 20 are needed. 9 must be through food (essential amino acids).
Lipids
Store as fatty acid/triglyceride in Adipocyte cells. Absorb as triglyceride, 3 types of fatty acid and glycerol. Albumin (protein) carries
Types of feeder
Fluid: flesh fly, Suspension: blue whale, Substrate: Caterpillar, Bulk: humans
Kidneys
Filter blood, remove waste, regulate water concentration/pH, influence rbc creation and blood pressure. Weigh about 150g, retroperitoneal (between dorsal wall and peritoneum).
3 layers: Renal Cortex, Renal medulla (cone shaped tissue that secrete urine into sac-like tubules), Renal Pelvis (collects the urine, peristalsis).
Can hold over 20% of blood volume. Gets oxygenated blood through renal artery
Filter 120-140L
Nephron stages
Glomerular filtration: Squirts out anything small enough to fit through (not rbc/proteins, stay in peritubular capillaries/vasa recta), Glomerular Capsule
Tubular reabsorption: Water and other molecules are moved back into the capillaries, Proximal Convoluted Tubule, Loop of Henle
Tubular secretion: Molecules are moved into the filtrate such as hydrogen and potassium ions, Collecting Tubule
Parts of the nephron
- Glomerulus/Glomerular Capsule (most things moved to filtrate) (high blood pressure, self regulation)
- Proximal Convoluted Tubule (useful molecules reabsorbed through active transport, microvilli)
- Loop of Henle (reabsorb water using sodium concentration) (cortex, medulla, cortex) (ascending=sodium/descending=water) (interstitial space, water absorbed through aquaporin (apical - filtrate, basal - capillary)
- Distal Convoluted Tubule (reabsorb more molecules
- Collecting Tubule (H/K ions moved into filtrate) (more water, some urea move out) (aquaporin on basal, ADH triggers more on apical side)
Path of urine
- Nephrons
- Ureters
- Bladder
- Urethra
- Internal urethral sphincter (involuntary)
- Urogenital diaphragm
- External urethral sphincter (voluntary)
- Out of the body
Bladder
Retroperitoneal
500mL, 1L maz
Inner Mucosa, detrusor (muscle), outer membrane (fibrous, protective)
Transitional epithelium to stretch
Collapses when empty to triangle shape (rugae = folds)
When full, stretch receptors send signal to sacral region of spine, to Pons (pontine storage centre, stop) (pontine micturition center, allow, override), excite parasympathetic (inhibit sympathetic), detrusor muscle, sphincter opens
As baby, have to reroute neural pathway
Glycolosis
Using glucose to make ATP and pyruvate to make more ATP in kreb cycle
Alpha amino acid
An amino acid in which the R group is located on the carbon atom at the position α to the carboxy group
Urine composition
95% water, slightly acidic (pH 6), 3000 chemicals (urea, potassium ions, hydrogen ions, sodium ions, calcium)
Urine composition abnormalities
Leukocytes/pyuria: UTI
Glucose: glycosuria, diabetes
Erythrocytes: hematuria, bleeding in urinary tract
Proteins: proteinuria, albuminuria, working out too much, pregnancy, high BP, severe hypertension, heart failure