HUMAN ANATOMY: Digestive System

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digestive system

function is to break down food/drink into smaller units of absorbable nutrients which are used by your own body to generate energy

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alimentary canal

structures form long tube that break down food (usually 24 hours: mouth, pharynx, esophagus, stomach, small intestine, and large intestine

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accessory digestive organs

participate in digestive process but food does not pass through these structures; tongue, salivary glands, liver, gallbladder, and pancreas

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ingestion

put food into mouth; extracellular process

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propulsion

movement of food through canal; extracellular process

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peristalsis

an organized contraction and relaxation of smooth muscle layers that propels food through the alimentary canal in one direction

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mechanical digestion

physical break down of food particles; extracellular process

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segmentation

contractions of smooth muscle move chyme back and forth within canal to allow mixing and further break down

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chemical digestion

enzymes break down food particles; extracellular process

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absorption

particles (sugars, fatty acids, etc) transported from canal into blood and lymph capillaries

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defecation

indigestible products eliminated from body as feces; extracellular process

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lumen

inside space of tubular structure

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mucosa

innermost layer of alimentary canal and lines the lumen; has three sublayers

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submucosa

second innermost layer of alimentary canal; higher concentration of collagen fibers for more support, highly vascularized, glands, submucosal nerve plexus

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muscularis externa

second outermost layer of alimentary canal; two layers of smooth muscle (circular and longitudinal) and myenteric nerve plexus

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serosa (visceral peritoneum)

outer surface of alimentary canal

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epithelium

sublayer of mucosa; continuous with many digestive glands and functions include mucus production, absorption, protection, etc.

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lamina propria

sublayer of mucosa; loose areolar connective tissue, capillary rich (absorption), MALT

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MALT

mucosa associate lymphoid tissue; provides defense against bacteria

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muscularis mucosa

sublayer of mucosa; thin layer of smooth muscle specializes in localized movements

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submucosal nerve plexus

control of muscle cells, glandular secretions, etc

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circular musclaris externa

inner layer, typically squeezes tube

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longitudinal musclaris externa

outer layer, typically shortens tube; peristalsis and segmentation

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serous membrane

simple squamous epithelium within a loose areolar connective tissue

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adventita

fibrous CT that forms outer layer of esophagus (does not have serosa)

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myenteric nerve plexus

controls peristalsis and segmentation; within muscularis externa

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nerve plexuses

allow for localized response within visceral organs

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oral cavity

chemical and physical digestion; stratified squamous epithelium and no muscularis externa or serosa/adventita

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lips

margin between skin and oral cavity; not as keratinized as skin

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teeth

accessory digestive organs

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heterodont dentition

different shapes of teeth for different jobs

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deciduous teeth

20 total erupt typically between ages 6 months to 6 years

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permanent teeth

32 total that gradually deciduous

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mandible

jaw

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incisors

four pairs with one root; surface good for cutting and shearing food

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canines

two pairs with one root; surface good for holding and tearing

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premolars

four pairs with at least two cusps and 1 or 2 roots; rounded broad surface for grinding

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molars

six pairs with four to five cusps and two to three roots; grinding surface

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crown

portion of tooth above the gumline

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neck

portion of tooth contained within gum tissue

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root

portion of tooth contained within bone

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pulp

layer of tooth composed of loose areolar CT, provides nutrients and sensation, odontoblasts

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odontoblasts

create dentin

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dentin

largest layer of tooth; collagen and minerals, no cells or blood vessels, harder than bone

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enamel

layer of tooth that is 99% calcium; no cells or blood vessels, ameloblasts

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ameloblasts

create enamel

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cementum

layer of tooth that anchors tooth into place; calcified connective tissue similar to bone

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cementoblasts

continually replace cementum

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periodontal ligaments

dense connective tissues that attaches cementum of tooth to bony socket

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cavity

enamel and dentin erode when plaques made of sugars and and bacteria form on teeth; bacteria feed on sugars and produce acids that demineralize tooth surface

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root canal

when pulp of canal is infected nerves and blood vessels are removed; pulp is removed and filled

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tongue

skeletal muscle covered in keratinized stratified squamous epithelium; moves food, helps mix with saliva to form bolus

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filiform papilla

rough surface of tongue

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fungiform and circumvallate papilla

contain taste buds

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lingual frenulum

fold of mucosa layer that connects tongue to floor of mouth

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tongue tied

lingual frenulum extends too far forward, tip of tongue can’t move and speech is difficult

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salivary glands

accessory digestive organs; exocrine glands, produce saliva (cleans teeth, taste, digestive enzymes, mucus), serous and mucous cells

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mucous cells

secrete mucus, lubricant

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serous cells

secrete digestive enzymes

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parotid gland and duct

largest contains serous cells, furthest away (longer ducts) more of a watery secretion

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submandibular gland

approximately 50/50 serous to mucus cells; ducts open lateral to lingual frenulum

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sublingual gland and duct

mucous cells with several shorter ducts that empty below tongue

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pharynx

connects oral cavity to esophagus and nasal cavity

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oropharynx

stratified squamous epithelium

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laryngopharynx

stratified squamous epithelium

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esophagus

stratified squamous epithelium; connects pharynx to stomach, mucous glands in submucosa and mucosa secrete mucus to lubricate as bolus of food passes through

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upper muscularis externa of esophagus

skeletal muscle

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middle muscularis externa of esophagus

mix of skeletal and smooth muscle

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lower muscularis externa of esophagus

smooth muscle

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stomach

mechanic and chemical digestion takes four hours to turn food into chyme, absorbs primarily water and drugs; simple columnar epithelium, abundant mucous cells

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rugae

folds of mucosa that increase surface area and allow stomach to expand

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sphincters

thickened regions of muscularis externa

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cardiac sphincter

prevents food from moving back to esophagus

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pyloric sphincter

controls release of chyme into duodenum

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oblique muscularis externa

innermost; exists only in the stomach

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gastric pits

regions where epithelium pushes dow into gastric gland

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gastric gland

connected to lumen through gastric pit; specialized cells

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mucous neck cells

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parietal cells

produce/secrete HCl which destroys bacteria and gastric intrinsic factor which helps with absorption

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gastric intrinsic factor

absorption and transportation of vitamin B12

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chief cells

produce/secrete pepsinogen

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enteroendocrine gland

releases hormones; ex. gastrin signals both parietal and chief cells

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pepsin

breaks down proteins in food; created when pepsinogen (chief cells) and HCl (parietal cell) mix which is stimulated by gastrin

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undifferentiated stem cells

found at junction between gastric pits and gastric glands

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gastric fistula

abnormal connection between stomach and skin that left open hole into stomach

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small intestine

simple columnar epithelium; 9 to 15 ft long where most absorption and chemical digestion occurs, chyme moves through peristalsis and segmentation

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duodenum

shortest (5%) and busiest part of small intestine; receives chyme from stomach, digestive enzymes from pancreas and bile from liver/gallbladderj

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jejunum

where majority of absorption occurs; 40%

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ileum

longest portion (55%); absorption also occurs here and drains into large intestine

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gallbladder

stores bile and breaks down fat; sphincters relax to let bile in; right below the right lobe of the liver

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pancreas

empties directly into duodenum and adds digestive enzymes; pancreatic juices neutralize chyme

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hepatopancreatic sphincter

the final control ‘valve’; controls bile and pancreatic juices

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plicae circulares

easily visible folds of mucosa and submucosa in the small intestine

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villi

folds of mucosa in small intestine and muscularis mucosa is responsible for localized movements; lamina propria, capillaries, lacteals

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lacteals

transports fats that are too large to enter capillaries

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enterocytes (absorptive cells)

transports nutrients across, majority of epithelial cells; protein pumps and endocytosis

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protein pumps

move sugars, amino acids, etc

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endocytosis

moves macromolecules

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goblet cells

secrete mucus on to lumen to protect epithelium

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