The digestive system
Describes the alimentary canal, its accessory organs and a variety of digestive processes that prepare food eaten in the diet for absorption. The alimentary canal begins at the mouth, passes through the thorax, abdomen and pelvis and ends at the anus. It has a basic structure which is modified at different levels to provide for the processes occurring at each level.
The process of the digestive system
The digestive processes gradually break down the foods eaten until they are in a form suitable for absorption. For example, meat, even when cooked, is chemically too complex to be absorbed from the alimentary canal. Digestion releases its constituents:
amino acids, mineral salts, fat, and vitamins. Digestive enzymes responsible for these changes are secreted into the canal by specialized glands, some of which are in the walls of the canal and some outside the canal, but with ducts leading into it.
What happens after absorption?
After absorption, nutrients provide the raw materials for the manufacture of new cells, hormones, and enzymes. The energy needed for these and other processes, and for the disposal of waste materials, is generated from the products of digestion.
Ingestion
This is the taking of food into the alimentary tract, i.e., eating and drinking.
Propulsion
These mix and moves the contents along the alimentary tract.
Digestion
This consists of:
Absorption
This is the process by which digested food substances pass through the walls of some organs of the alimentary canal into the blood and lymph capillaries for circulation and use by body cells.
Elimination
Food substances that have been eaten but cannot be digested and absorbed are excreted from the alimentary canal as feces by the process of defecation
Organs of the digestive system
Also known as the gastrointestinal (GI) tract, this is essentially a long tube through which food passes. It commences at the mouth and terminates at the anus, and the various organs along its length have different functions, although structurally they are remarkably similar. The parts are:
Accessory organs
•Various secretions are poured into the alimentary tract, some by glands in the lining membrane of the organs, e.g., gastric juice secreted by glands in the lining of the stomach, and some by glands situated outside the tract. The latter are the accessory organs of digestion, and their secretions pass through ducts to enter the tract. They consist of:
-three pairs of salivary glands
-the pancreas
-the liver and biliary tract.
•The organs and glands are linked physiologically as well as anatomically in that digestion and absorption occur in stages, each stage being dependent upon the previous stage or stages.
The basic structure of the alimentary canal
•The layers of the walls of the alimentary canal follow a consistent pattern from the esophagus onwards. This basic structure does not apply so obviously to the mouth and the pharynx, which are considered later in the chapter.
•In the organs from the esophagus onwards, modifications of the structure are found which are associated with specific functions. The basic structure is described here and any modifications in structure and function are described in the appropriate section.
•The walls of the alimentary tract are formed by four layers of tissue:
-adventitia or serosa – outer covering
-muscle layer
-submucosa
-mucosa – lining.
Adventitia or serosa
This is the outermost layer. In the thorax, it consists of loose fibrous tissue and in the abdomen, the organs are covered by a serous membrane (serosa) called the peritoneum.
Peritoneum
Peritoneum, large membrane in the abdominal cavity that connects and supports internal organs. It is composed of many folds that pass between or around the various organs.
Muscle layer
With some exceptions, this consists of two layers of smooth (involuntary) muscle. The muscle fibers of the outer layer are arranged longitudinally, and those of the inner layer encircles the wall of the tube. Between these two muscle layers are blood vessels, lymph vessels, and a plexus (network) of sympathetic and parasympathetic nerves, called the myenteric plexus. These nerves supply the adjacent smooth muscle and blood vessels.
Submucosa
This layer consists of loose areolar connective tissue containing collagen and some elastic fibers, which bind the muscle layer to the mucosa. Within it are blood vessels and nerves, lymph vessels, and varying amounts of lymphoid tissue. The blood vessels are arterioles, venules, and capillaries. The nerve plexus is the submucosal plexus, which contains sympathetic and parasympathetic nerves that supply the mucosal lining.
Mucosa
This consists of three layers of tissue:
Mucous membrane
A mucous membrane, also known as a mucosa (plural: mucosae), is a layer of cells that surrounds body organs and body orifices. It is made from ectodermal tissue.
Nerve supply
The alimentary canal and its related accessory organs are supplied by nerves from both divisions of the autonomic nervous system, i.e., both parasympathetic and sympathetic parts. Their actions are generally antagonistic to each other and at any time one has a greater influence than the other, according to body needs, at that time. When digestion is required, this is normally through increased activity of the parasympathetic nervous system.
The parasympathetic
One pair of cranial nerves, the vagus nerves, supplies most of the alimentary canal and the accessory organs. Sacral nerves supply the most distal part of the tract. The effects of parasympathetic stimulation on the digestive system are:
The sympathetic supply
This is provided by numerous nerves that emerge from the spinal cord in the thoracic and lumbar regions. These form plexuses (ganglia) in the thorax, abdomen, and pelvis, from which nerves pass to the organs of the alimentary tract. The effects of sympathetic stimulation on the digestive system are to:
Mouth
Tongue
The tongue is composed of voluntary muscle. It is attached by its base to the hyoid bone and by a fold of its mucous membrane covering, called the frenulum, to the floor of the mouth. The superior surface consists of stratified squamous epithelium, with numerous papillae (little projections). Many of these contain sensory receptors (specialized nerve endings) for the sense of taste in the taste buds
The blood supply for the tongue
The main arterial blood supply to the tongue is by the lingual branch of the external carotid artery. Venous drainage is by the lingual vein, which joins the internal jugular vein.
Nerve supply for the tongue
The nerves involved are: