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100

What are the 4 components of digestion?

Ingestion, taking in nutrients, digestion, breaking down nutrients (physical, chemical), Absorbtion, transporting digested nutrients by blood, and elimination, removal of undigested waste.

100

Saliva, what is it produced by, what are its two functions?

Produced by salivary glands. function 1, contains salivary amylase and they break down complex carbs. Function 2, dissolves food particles.

100

The stomach, what shape is it?

J-shaped

100

What does HCL convert pepsinogen into?

pepsin, protein enzyme.

100

What lines the stomach to protect it from burning?

Mucus

200

Where does the digestion of carbs begin, what is the teeth covered in and what is food formed into after chewing?

The mouth, enamel, bolus

200

What is the esophagus and what does the food bolus activate after entering the esophagus?

Tube from mouth to stomach, esophagus walls stretch, peristalsis is the muscle that moves food down, it squeezes and enters the stomach through the esophageal sphincter.

200

What are the main functions of the stomach and what is the pH of the stomach?

Site of food storage and initial protein digestion, it converts food into chyme. pH of stomach is very low, 1.0-3.0.

200

What are ulcers?

Mucus layer in stomach breaks down, burning the stomach wall, very painful, due to stress, diet, bacteria.

200

What are the three sections of the small intestine? Where does most digestion occur and how does food move through the stomach?

DJ Ice, Duodenum, Jejunum, Ileum. Duodenum is responsible for most of the digestion. Chyme moves from stomach through small intestine by peristalsis and segmentation. Peristalsis=squeezing, Segmentation= sloshing back and forth

300

What is the small intestine lined with and what is each villis supplied with?

Villi and Microvilli, ex finger is the villi and the hairs on it are microvillli they increase surface area. Each villus is supplied with lacteals.

300

What are lacteals?

capillary network and lymph vessels. they transport products of fat digestion.

300

What does the pancreas do?

Releases enzymes to small intestine, enzymes chemically digest, proteins (trypsin), carbs (amylase), lipids (lipase).

300

Protein digestion in the small intestine, main function?

HCL converts prosecretin into secretin, secretin tells pancreas to release bicarbonate ions.

300

Protein digestion in the small intestine, what are the three main parts?

Bicarbonate ions, made from pancreas and basic pH deactivates pepsin. Trypsinogen is converted into enterokimase released by small intestine. Made from pancreas. Erepsin, completes protein digestion, breaks down final short chain peptides.


400

Small intestine releases what enzyme and breaks them down into what?

Disaccharides into monosaccharides.

400

Pancreas releases lipases which break down lipids, what are the two types of lipases?

pancreatic lipases, breaks fats down into fatty acids and glycerol. phospholipases break down phospholipids.

400

What is the main function of the liver?

liver creates bile, converts glycogen into glucose, detoxifies harmful substances, ex. alcohol, and breaks down components of hemoglobin from blood.

400

What is stored in the gallbladder and when fats are present in small intestine what is released?

Bile salts from liver are stored in gallbladder, CCK is released when small intestine triggers release of bile from the gall bladder.

400

What are some liver and gallbladder problems?

Gallstones, hard masses in the gallbladder, Jaundice, build up of bile pigments, and cirrhosis, liver is destroyed due to alcohol.

500

What does the large intestine do?

concentrates and eliminates waste, undigested waste is passed down to the colon, remaining waste is passed to the rectrum, feces moves out via peristalsis.

500

Does digestion occur in the large intestine?

No

500

Can humans break down cellulose?

No

500

Where is the most water absorbed in the digestive system?

Small intestine.

500

What three hormones control digestion?

CCK, it slows digestion. Gastrin, signals cells of the stomach to release HCL. Secretin, released from duodenum, initiates release of bicarbonates.