Name: Santos, Lore Anne Mhae T. Date: - Instructor: Giovanni D. David, Edd, RN Score
Name: Santos, Lore Anne Mhae T. Date: - Instructor: Giovanni D. David, Edd, RN Score
Name: Santos, Lore Anne Mhae T. Date: - Instructor: Giovanni D. David, Edd, RN Score
Mouth. Food starts to move through your GI tract when you eat. When you swallow,
your tongue pushes the food into your throat. A small flap of tissue, called the epiglottis,
folds over your windpipe to prevent choking and the food passes into your esophagus.
Esophagus. Once you begin swallowing, the process becomes automatic. Your brain
signals the muscles of the esophagus and peristalsis begins.
Stomach. After food enters your stomach, the stomach muscles mix the food and liquid
with digestive juices. The stomach slowly empties its contents, called chyme, into your
small intestine.
Small intestine. The muscles of the small intestine mix food with digestive juices from
the pancreas, liver, and intestine, and push the mixture forward for further digestion. The
walls of the small intestine absorb water and the digested nutrients into your bloodstream.
As peristalsis continues, the waste products of the digestive process move into the large
intestine.
Large intestine. Waste products from the digestive process include undigested parts of
food, fluid, and older cells from the lining of your GI tract. The large intestine absorbs
water and changes the waste from liquid into stool. Peristalsis helps move the stool into
your rectum.
Rectum. The lower end of your large intestine, the rectum, stores stool until it pushes
stool out of your anus during a bowel movement
Liver. Your liver makes a digestive juice called bile that helps digest fats and some
vitamins. Bile ducts carry bile from your liver to your gallbladder for storage, or to the
small intestine for use.
ASIA PACIFIC COLLEGE OF ADVANCED STUDIES
A.H. Banzon St, Ibayo, Balanga City
Pancreas. Your pancreas makes a digestive juice that has enzymes that break down
carbohydrates, fats, and proteins. The pancreas delivers the digestive juice to the small
intestine through small tubes called ducts.
Gallbladder. Your gallbladder stores bile between meals. When you eat, your
gallbladder squeezes bile through the bile ducts into your small intestine.
2. Identify the accessory organs of the digestive system and the function of their secretions.
3. Describe the tissue layers that form the walls of the digestive tract.
ASIA PACIFIC COLLEGE OF ADVANCED STUDIES
A.H. Banzon St, Ibayo, Balanga City
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.
5. Compare the metabolism of carbohydrates, proteins, and lipids.
- metabolism of carbohydrates- is a fundamental biochemical process that ensures a
constant supply of energy to living cells. The most important carbohydrate is glucose,
which can be broken down via glycolysis, enter into the Kreb's cycle and oxidative
phosphorylation to generate ATP.
- metabolism of proteins- denotes the various biochemical processes responsible for
the synthesis of proteins and amino acids (anabolism), and the breakdown
of proteins by catabolism. In humans, non-essential amino acids are synthesized from
intermediates in major metabolic pathways such as the Citric Acid Cycle
- metabolism of lipids- entails the oxidation of fatty acids to either generate energy or
synthesize new lipids from smaller constituent molecules. Lipid metabolism is
associated with carbohydrate metabolism, as products of glucose (such as acetyl
CoA) can be converted into lipids.