GI Tract Basics
Stomach & Enzymes
Small Intestine
Accessory Organs
Hormones
100

This enzyme in saliva begins the chemical digestion of starch in the mouth.

What is salivary amylase

100

These stomach cells produce HCl, which drops the stomach pH to about 1.5–2.

Parietal cells

100

The three sections of the small intestine in order.

Duodenum, jejunum, ileum

100

The liver produces this substance that breaks up fat droplets so enzymes can digest them more easily.

Bile

100

This hormone from G cells in the stomach tells parietal cells to make more HCl.

Gastrin

200

The muscular tube that uses peristalsis to move a bolus to the stomach, measuring about 25 cm with no digestion occurring.

What is the esophagus?

200

These cells secrete pepsinogen, which gets activated into pepsin by HCl to digest proteins.

Chief cells

200

These tiny finger-like projections on the small intestine wall dramatically increase surface area for absorption.

Villi (and microvilli)

200

This small organ stores and concentrates bile between meals, releasing it when triggered by CCK.

gallbladder

200

Secretin is released when acidic chyme enters the duodenum. What does it tell the pancreas to do?

Secrete bicarbonate

300

Food, water, and air all pass through this shared passageway in the throat. The epiglottis covers the airway when you swallow.

What is The pharynx?

300

These stomach folds allow the stomach to expand — it can hold up to about 4 liters when full.

Rugae

300

The final section of the small intestine; the only place that absorbs vitamin B12 and recycles bile salts.

The ileum

300

This organ, the largest internal organ in the body, produces bile and detoxifies drugs and alcohol.

The Liver

300

This autoimmune disease is triggered by gluten and destroys the villi in the small intestine, causing severe malabsorption

Celiac disease

400

The approximate total length of the entire GI tract.

About 9 meters

400

Parietal cells also produce this molecule (not HCl) that is essential for absorbing vitamin B12.

Intrinsic factor

400

is the small intestine the primary absorption site?

True

400

When you eat a fatty meal, this hormone signals the gallbladder to contract and release bile

CCK

400

A deficiency of this brush-border enzyme causes undigested milk sugar to be fermented by gut bacteria, leading to bloating and diarrhea

Lactase (lactose intolerance)

500

This phase of swallowing is the ONLY one you can consciously control — your tongue pushes food to the back of the mouth.

The voluntary phase

500

The semi-liquid mixture of food and gastric juices that leaves the stomach through the pyloric sphincter.

Chyme

500

What does Bicarbonate in the Duodenum do?

Neutralize acids

500

This bicarbonate-rich fluid from the pancreas neutralizes the acidic chyme entering the duodenum.

Pancreatic juice

500

Dysfunction of the lower esophageal sphincter allows stomach acid to flow back up, causing this common condition

GERD