serosa
chemical digestion
mesenteries
a portal area
a) oral cavity, teeth, tongue;
b) liver;
c) gallblader
d) pancreas
e) large intestine
f) salivary glands
g) pharynx
h) esophagus
i) stomach
j) small intestine
k) anus
a) mucosa - mucous membrane - contain lamina propria - smooth muscle cells - secretory cells of mucous glands.
b) submucosa - submucosa plexus contains intrinsic nerve fibers and scattered neurons.
c) muscularis externa - also called muscularis - smooth muscle -
d) serosa -
simple columar
segmentation - most areas of the small intestine and some portions of the large intestine undergo cycles of contraction that churn and fragment the bolus, mixing the contents with intestinal secretions. This activity, called segmentation does not push materials along the tract in any one direction.
cholecystokinin
a) duodenum
b) jejunum
c) ileum
vitamins A, D, and E.
absorption of vitamins liberated by bacterial action
storage of fecal material prior to defecation
Vitamin K, biotin, and pantothenic acid
brush border enzymes of the intestinal microvilli
Digestion involves:
Layers of the digestive tract are:
Activities of the digestive tract are regulated by neutral, hromonal, and local mechanisms.
The three phases of swallowing - the buccal, pharyngeal, and esophageal phases - are controlled by the swallowing center of the mudulla oblongata via the trigeminal and glossopharyngeal cranial nerves. The motor commands originating at the swallowing center are distributed by cranial nerves V, IX, X, and XII. Along the esophagus, primary peristaltic contractions are coordinated by afferent and efferent fibers within the glossopharyngeal and vagus cranial nerves, but secondary peristaltic contractions occur in the absence of CNS instructions.
The pancreas provides digestive enzymes, plus bicarbonate ions that elevate the pH of the chyme. The liver produces bile and is also the primary organ involved n regulating the composition of circulating blood. The gallbladder stores and releases bile, which contains additional buffers and bile salts that aid the digestion and absorption fo lipids.
The hormones include the following: enterocrinin, which stimulates the submucosal glands of the duodenum; secretin, which stimulates the pancreas and liver to increase the secretion of water and bicarbonate ions; cholecystokinin (CCK), which causes an increase in the release of pancreatic secretions and bile into the duodenum, inhibits gastric activity, and appears to have CNS effects that reduce the sensation of hunger; gastric inhibitory peptide (GIP), which stimulates insulin release at pancreatic islets and the activity of the duodenal submucosal glands; vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP), which stimulates the secretion of intestinal glands, dilates regional capillaries, and inhibits acid production in teh stomach; gastrin, which is secreted by G cells in the duodenum when they are exposed to large quantities of incompletely digested proteins; and, in small quantities, motilin, which stimulates intestinal contractions, villikinin, which promotes the movement of villi and associated lymph flow, and somatostatin, which inhibits gastric secretion.
The large intestine reabsorbs water and compacts the intestinal contents into feces, absorbs important vitamins liberated by bacterial action, and stores fecal material prior to defecation.
Positive fee feedback loops in the defecation reflex involve:
none of the following: decreased motility decreased secretion decreased sensitivity of local reflexes decreased segmentation
secretin