B.
What is pulp?
Food and saliva ball.
What is a bolus?
The partially digested food, mucus, and acid mixture.
What is chyme?
C.
What is the greater curvature?
The taking in of food.
What is ingestion?
One of the three salivary glands.
What are the Parotid glands, Submandibular glands, Sublingual glands.
The type of digestion that occurs as the teeth physically tear the food into smaller pieces.
What is mechanical?
Enzyme produced by the salivary glands.
What is salivary amylase?
The thin layer of microbes, mucus, and immune system molecules —most pronounced in the appendix.
What is biofilm?
Another word for chewing.
What is mastication?
The hardest biologically-made substance.
What is enamel?
They produce cavities.
What is bacteria?
The duodenum receives secretions from these two organs.
What are the gallbladder and pancreas?
H.
What is the frenulum?
The five functions of the digestive system.
What are ingestion, digestion, absorption, secretion, and excretion?
It closes off the opening to the larynx and trachea.
What is the epiglottis?
The function of pepsin.
What is digest proteins into amino acids?
They break up fat globules.
What are bile salts?
#2
What are the submandibular glands?
This disease results from overworking insulin production cells, damaging them so they don’t produce enough.
What is type 2 diabetes?
The outer layer of the stomach is lined with gastric pits. They are the three types of cells they contain.
What are mucous cells, parietal cells, and chief cells.
Insulin and glucagon are produced here.
What are the Islets of Langerhans?
It is an erosion of the lining of the digestive tract, specific to the stomach.
What are peptic ulcers?
The four sections of the stomach.
What are the cardiac, fundus, body, and the pyloric?
Chief cells produce this.
What is pepsinogen?