Reviewer Digestive System
Reviewer Digestive System
Reviewer Digestive System
Ingests food
Chews and mixes food Moistens and dissolves food,
allowing you to taste it
Begins chemical breakdown of
Mouth carbohydrates Cleans and lubricates the teeth
and oral cavity
Moves food into the pharynx
Has some antimicrobial activity
Begins breakdown of lipids via
lingual lipase
Digestive Processes
The processes of digestion include six activities: ingestion, propulsion, mechanical or
physical digestion, chemical digestion, absorption, and defecation.
The first of these processes, ingestion, refers to the entry of food into the alimentary
canal through the mouth. There, the food is chewed and mixed with saliva, which
contains enzymes that begin breaking down the carbohydrates in the food plus some
lipid digestion via lingual lipase. Chewing increases the surface area of the food and
allows an appropriately sized bolus to be produced.
Figure 1. Peristalsis moves food through the digestive tract with alternating waves of muscle contraction and
relaxation.
Food leaves the mouth when the tongue and pharyngeal muscles propel it into the
esophagus. This act of swallowing, the last voluntary act until defecation, is an example
of propulsion, which refers to the movement of food through the digestive tract. It
includes both the voluntary process of swallowing and the involuntary process of
peristalsis. Peristalsis consists of sequential, alternating waves of contraction and
relaxation of alimentary wall smooth muscles, which act to propel food along (Figure 1).
These waves also play a role in mixing food with digestive juices. Peristalsis is so
powerful that foods and liquids you swallow enter your stomach even if you are standing
on your head.
Digestion includes both mechanical and chemical processes. Mechanical digestion is
a purely physical process that does not change the chemical nature of the food. Instead,
it makes the food smaller to increase both surface area and mobility. It
includes mastication, or chewing, as well as tongue movements that help break food
into smaller bits and mix food with saliva. Although there may be a tendency to think
that mechanical digestion is limited to the first steps of the digestive process, it occurs
after the food leaves the mouth, as well. The mechanical churning of food in the
stomach serves to further break it apart and expose more of its surface area to digestive
juices, creating an acidic “soup” called chyme. Segmentation, which occurs mainly in
the small intestine, consists of localized contractions of circular muscle of the
muscularis layer of the alimentary canal. These contractions isolate small sections of
the intestine, moving their contents back and forth while continuously subdividing,
breaking up, and mixing the contents. By moving food back and forth in the intestinal
lumen, segmentation mixes food with digestive juices and facilitates absorption.
In chemical digestion, starting in the mouth, digestive secretions break down complex
food molecules into their chemical building blocks (for example, proteins into separate
amino acids). These secretions vary in composition, but typically contain water, various
enzymes, acids, and salts. The process is completed in the small intestine.
Food that has been broken down is of no value to the body unless it enters the
bloodstream and its nutrients are put to work. This occurs through the process
of absorption, which takes place primarily within the small intestine. There, most
nutrients are absorbed from the lumen of the alimentary canal into the bloodstream
through the epithelial cells that make up the mucosa. Lipids are absorbed into lacteals
and are transported via the lymphatic vessels to the bloodstream (the subclavian veins
near the heart). The details of these processes will be discussed later.
In defecation, the final step in digestion, undigested materials are removed from the
body as feces.
AGING AND THE DIGESTIVE SYSTEM: FROM APPETITE SUPPRESSION TO
CONSTIPATION
Age-related changes in the digestive system begin in the mouth and can affect virtually every
aspect of the digestive system. Taste buds become less sensitive, so food isn’t as appetizing as
it once was. A slice of pizza is a challenge, not a treat, when you have lost teeth, your gums are
diseased, and your salivary glands aren’t producing enough saliva. Swallowing can be difficult,
and ingested food moves slowly through the alimentary canal because of reduced strength and
tone of muscular tissue. Neurosensory feedback is also dampened, slowing the transmission of
messages that stimulate the release of enzymes and hormones.
Pathologies that affect the digestive organs—such as hiatal hernia, gastritis, and peptic ulcer
disease—can occur at greater frequencies as you age. Problems in the small intestine may
include duodenal ulcers, maldigestion, and malabsorption. Problems in the large intestine
include hemorrhoids, diverticular disease, and constipation. Conditions that affect the function of
accessory organs—and their abilities to deliver pancreatic enzymes and bile to the small
intestine—include jaundice, acute pancreatitis, cirrhosis, and gallstones.
In some cases, a single organ is in charge of a digestive process. For example,
ingestion occurs only in the mouth and defecation only in the anus. However, most
digestive processes involve the interaction of several organs and occur gradually as
food moves through the alimentary canal (Figure 2).
Figure 2. The digestive processes are ingestion, propulsion, mechanical digestion, chemical digestion,
absorption, and defecation.
Some chemical digestion occurs in the mouth. Some absorption can occur in the mouth
and stomach, for example, alcohol and aspirin.
Regulatory Mechanisms
Neural and endocrine regulatory mechanisms work to maintain the optimal conditions in
the lumen needed for digestion and absorption. These regulatory mechanisms, which
stimulate digestive activity through mechanical and chemical activity, are controlled both
extrinsically and intrinsically.
Neural Controls
The walls of the alimentary canal contain a variety of sensors that help regulate
digestive functions. These include mechanoreceptors, chemoreceptors, and
osmoreceptors, which are capable of detecting mechanical, chemical, and osmotic
stimuli, respectively. For example, these receptors can sense when the presence of
food has caused the stomach to expand, whether food particles have been sufficiently
broken down, how much liquid is present, and the type of nutrients in the food (lipids,
carbohydrates, and/or proteins). Stimulation of these receptors provokes an appropriate
reflex that furthers the process of digestion. This may entail sending a message that
activates the glands that secrete digestive juices into the lumen, or it may mean the
stimulation of muscles within the alimentary canal, thereby activating peristalsis and
segmentation that move food along the intestinal tract.
The walls of the entire alimentary canal are embedded with nerve plexuses that interact
with the central nervous system and other nerve plexuses—either within the same
digestive organ or in different ones. These interactions prompt several types of reflexes.
Extrinsic nerve plexuses orchestrate long reflexes, which involve the central and
autonomic nervous systems and work in response to stimuli from outside the digestive
system. Short reflexes, on the other hand, are orchestrated by intrinsic nerve plexuses
within the alimentary canal wall. These two plexuses and their connections were
introduced earlier as the enteric nervous system. Short reflexes regulate activities in
one area of the digestive tract and may coordinate local peristaltic movements and
stimulate digestive secretions. For example, the sight, smell, and taste of food initiate
long reflexes that begin with a sensory neuron delivering a signal to the medulla
oblongata. The response to the signal is to stimulate cells in the stomach to begin
secreting digestive juices in preparation for incoming food. In contrast, food that
distends the stomach initiates short reflexes that cause cells in the stomach wall to
increase their secretion of digestive juices.
Hormonal Controls
A variety of hormones are involved in the digestive process. The main digestive
hormone of the stomach is gastrin, which is secreted in response to the presence of
food. Gastrin stimulates the secretion of gastric acid by the parietal cells of the stomach
mucosa. Other GI hormones are produced and act upon the gut and its accessory
organs. Hormones produced by the duodenum include secretin, which stimulates a
watery secretion of bicarbonate by the pancreas; cholecystokinin (CCK), which
stimulates the secretion of pancreatic enzymes and bile from the liver and release of
bile from the gallbladder; and gastric inhibitory peptide, which inhibits gastric secretion
and slows gastric emptying and motility. These GI hormones are secreted by
specialized epithelial cells, called endocrinocytes, located in the mucosal epithelium of
the stomach and small intestine. These hormones then enter the bloodstream, through
which they can reach their target organs.
Chapter Review
The digestive system ingests and digests food, absorbs released nutrients, and
excretes food components that are indigestible. The six activities involved in this
process are ingestion, motility, mechanical digestion, chemical digestion, absorption,
and defecation. These processes are regulated by neural and hormonal mechanisms.
Uvula - the pendent fleshy lobe in the middle of the posterior border of the soft palate
As you might expect, secretion from the exocrine pancreas is regulated by both neural
and endocrine controls. During interdigestive periods, very little secretion takes place,
but as food enters the stomach and, a little later, chyme flows into the small intestine,
pancreatic secretion is strongly stimulated.
Like the stomach, the pancreas is innervated by the vagus nerve, which applies a low
level stimulus to secretion in response to anticipation of a meal. However, the most
important stimuli for pancreatic secretion comes from three hormones secreted by
the enteric endocrine system:
Pancreatic secretions are also the major mechanism for neutralizing gastric acid in the
small intestine. When acid enters the small gut, it stimulates secretin to be released,
and the effect of this hormone is to stimulate secretion of lots of bicarbonate. As
proteins and fats are digested and absorbed, and acid is neutralized, the stimuli for
cholecystokinin and secretin secretion disappear and pancreatic secretion falls off.