front 1 Digestive System | back 1 takes in food, breaks it down into nutrient molecules, absorbs these molecules into the bloodstream, and then rids the body of the indigestible remains. |
front 2 Alimentary Canal | back 2 also called the gastrointestinal (GI) tract or gut, is the continuous, muscular digestive tube that winds through the body. |
front 3 Digests Food | back 3 breaks it down into smaller fragments |
front 4 Accessory Digestive | back 4 organs are the teeth, tongue, gallbladder, and a number of large digestive glands, salivary glands, liver, and pancreas. Ingestion is simply taking food into the digestive tract, usually via the mouth. |
front 5 Propulsion | back 5 which moves food through the alimentary canal, includes swallowing, which is initiated voluntarily, and peristalsis an involuntary process. Peristalsis (peri = around; stalsis = constriction), the major means of propulsion, involves alternate waves of contraction and relaxation of muscles in the organ walls. Its main effect is to squeeze food along the tract, but some mixing occurs as well. In fact, peristaltic waves are so powerful that, once swallowed, food and fluids will reach your stomach even if you stand on your head. |
front 6 Mechanical digestion | back 6 physically prepares food for chemical digestion by enzymes. Mechanical processes include chewing, mixing of food with saliva by the tongue, churning food in the stomach, and segmentation, or rhythmic local constrictions of the small intestine (Figure 23.3b). |
front 7 Segmentation | back 7 mixes food with digestive juices and increases the efficiency of absorption by repeatedly moving different parts of the food mass over the intestinal wall. |
front 8 Chemical digestion | back 8 is a series of catabolic steps in which complex food molecules are broken down to their chemical building blocks by enzymes secreted into the lumen of the alimentary canal. Chemical digestion of foodstuffs begins in the mouth and is essentially complete in the small intestine. |
front 9 Absorption | back 9 is the passage of digested end products (plus vitamins, minerals, and water) from the lumen of the GI tract through the mucosal cells by active or passive transport into the blood or lymph. The small intestine is the major absorptive site. |
front 10 Defecation | back 10 eliminates indigestible substances from the body via the anus in the form of feces. |
front 11 peritoneum | back 11 of the abdominopelvic cavity is the most extensive of these membranes |
front 12 Visceral Peritoneum | back 12 covers the external surfaces of most digestive organs |
front 13 Parietal Peritoneum | back 13 lines the body wall. |
front 14 Peritoneal Cavity | back 14 a slitlike potential space containing a slippery fluid secreted by the serous membranes. |
front 15 Mesentery | back 15 is a double layer of peritoneum, a sheet of two serous membranes fused back to back—that extends to the digestive organs from the body wall. Mesenteries provide routes for blood vessels, lymphatics, and nerves to reach the digestive viscera; hold organs in place; and store fat. |
front 16 Retroperitoneal organs | back 16 organs not suspended by a mesentery. include most of the pancreas and parts of the small and large intestine. |
front 17 Intraperitoneal or Peritoneal organs – with mesentery | back 17 no data |
front 18 Peritonitis | back 18 inflammation of the peritoneum. It can arise from a piercing abdominal wound, from a perforating ulcer that leaks stomach juices into the peritoneal cavity, or from poor sterile technique during abdominal surgery, but most commonly it results from a burst appendix (that sprays bacteriacontaining feces all over the peritoneum). |
front 19 Splanchnic circulation | back 19 includes those arteries that branch off the abdominal aorta to serve the digestive organs and the hepatic portal circulation |
front 20 Mucosa | back 20 mucous membrane—the innermost layer—is a moist epithelial membrane that lines the alimentary canal lumen from mouth to anus. Its major functions are
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front 21 Simple Columnar epithelium | back 21 the typical tissue of the digestive mucosa, rich in mucus-secreting cells. |
front 22 Lamina Propria | back 22 (proprius = one’s own), which underlies the epithelium, is loose areolar connective tissue. Its capillaries nourish the epithelium and absorb digested nutrients. |
front 23 Muscularis Mucosae | back 23 a scant layer of smooth muscle cells that produces local movements of the mucosa. |
front 24 Submucosa | back 24 just external to the mucosa, is areolar connective tissue containing a rich supply of blood and lymphatic vessels, lymphoid follicles, and nerve fibers. |
front 25 Muscularis Externa | back 25 Surrounding the submucosa, this layer is responsible for segmentation and peristalsis. |
front 26 Serosa | back 26 the protective outermost layer of the intraperitoneal organs |
front 27 Adventitia | back 27 The adventitia is ordinary fibrous connective tissue that binds the esophagus to surrounding structures. |
front 28 Enteric Neurons | back 28 (enter = gut), which communicate widely with one another to regulate digestive system activity. |
front 29 Submucosal Nerve Plexus | back 29 occupies the submucosa. It includes sensory as well as motor neurons, and it chiefly regulates the activity of glands and smooth muscle in the mucosa. |
front 30 Myenteric Nerve Plexus | back 30 (“intestinal muscle”) lies between the circular and longitudinal muscle layers of the muscularis externa. Enteric neurons of this plexus provide the major nerve supply to the GI tract wall and control GI tract motility. |
front 31 Oral Cavity | back 31 mouth, a mucosa-lined cavity |
front 32 lips (labia) and cheeks | back 32 help keep food between the teeth when we chew, are composed of a core of skeletal muscle covered externally by skin. |
front 33 Palate | back 33 forming the roof of the mouth |
front 34 hard palate | back 34 underlain by the palatine bones and the palatine processes of the maxillae, and it forms a rigid surface against which the tongue forces food during chewing. |
front 35 soft palate | back 35 a mobile fold formed mostly of skeletal muscle that rises reflexively to close off the nasopharynx when we swallow. |
front 36 fauces | back 36 (fauc = throat), the arched area of the oropharynx that contains the palatine tonsils. |
front 37 Uvula | back 37 fingerlike, Projecting downward from the free edge of the soft palate |
front 38 Tongue | back 38 occupies the floor of the mouth and fills most of the oral cavity when the mouth is closed |
front 39 Bolus | back 39 a compact mass of food mixed with saliva by the tongue |
front 40 intrinsic muscles | back 40 are confined in the tongue and are not attached to bone. |
front 41 extrinsic muscles | back 41 extend to the tongue from their points of origin on bones of the skull or the soft palate |
front 42 lingual frenulum | back 42 secures the tongue to the floor of the mouth and limits posterior movements of the tongue. |
front 43 filiform papillae | back 43 give the tongue surface a roughness that aids in licking semisolid foods (such as ice cream) and provide friction for manipulating foods in the mouth |
front 44 fungiform papillae | back 44 are scattered widely over the tongue surface. Each has a vascular core that gives it a reddish hue. |
front 45 foliate papillae | back 45 are located on the lateral aspects of the posterior tongue. |
front 46 terminal sulcus | back 46 a groove that distinguishes the portion of the tongue that lies in the oral cavity (its body) from its posterior portion in the oropharynx (its root) |
front 47 Mumps | back 47 a common children’s disease, is an inflammation of the parotid glands caused by the mumps virus (myxovirus), which spreads from person to person in saliva. |
front 48 submandibular gland | back 48 lies along the medial aspect of the mandibular body. Its duct runs beneath the mucosa of the oral cavity floor and opens at the base of the lingual frenulum |
front 49 sublingual gland | back 49 lies anterior to the submandibular gland under the tongue and opens via 10–12 ducts into the floor of the mouth |
front 50 Serous cells | back 50 produce a watery secretion containing enzymes, ions, and a tiny bit of mucin |
front 51 Mucus | back 51 a stringy, viscous solution |
front 52 salivatory nuclei | back 52 in the brain stem triggers salivation |
front 53 halitosis | back 53 “bad breath” |
front 54 teeth | back 54 lie in sockets (alveoli) in the gum-covered margins of the mandible and maxilla. |
front 55 Deciduous Teeth | back 55 called milk or baby teeth. The first teeth to appear |
front 56 Permanent teeth | back 56 enlarge and develop, the roots of the milk teeth are resorbed from below, causing them to loosen and fall out between the ages of 6 and 12 years. |
front 57 incisors | back 57 adapted for cutting or nipping off pieces of food. |
front 58 premolars (bicuspids) and molars | back 58 have broad crowns with rounded cusps (tips) and are best suited for grinding or crushing. |
front 59 Canines | back 59 (cuspids or eyeteeth) tear and pierce. |
front 60 dental formula | back 60 shorthand way of indicating the numbers and relative positions of the different types of teeth in the mouth. This formula is written as a ratio, uppers over lowers, for one half of the mouth. Since the other side is a mirror image, the total dentition is obtained by multiplying the dental formula by 2. |
front 61 crown | back 61 the exposed part of the tooth |
front 62 gingiva | back 62 gum, which surrounds the tooth like a tight collar. |
front 63 Enamel | back 63 brittle ceramiclike material thick as a dime, directly bears the force of chewing. The hardest substance in the body, it is heavily mineralized with calcium salts, and its densely packed hydroxyapatite (mineral) crystals are oriented in force-resisting columns perpendicular to the tooth’s surface. |
front 64 Root | back 64 The portion of the tooth embedded in the jawbone |
front 65 Neck | back 65 The crown and root are connected by a constricted tooth region |
front 66 periodontal ligament | back 66 “around the tooth” This ligament anchors the tooth in the bony alveolus of the jaw, forming a fibrous joint called a gomphosis |
front 67 Dentin | back 67 a protein-rich bonelike material, underlies the enamel cap and forms the bulk of a tooth |
front 68 Pulp | back 68 supplies nutrients to the tooth tissues and provides for tooth sensation |
front 69 root canal | back 69 where the pulp cavity extends into the root |
front 70 odontoblast | back 70 “tooth former”, the cell type that secretes and maintains the dentin. |
front 71 Dental caries | back 71 “rottenness” or cavities, result from gradual demineralization of enamel and underlying dentin by bacterial action. |
front 72 dental plaque | back 72 film of sugar, bacteria, and other mouth debris adheres to the teeth. |
front 73 Tartar | back 73 dental plaque accumulates, it calcifies, forming calculus “stone” |
front 74 gingivitis | back 74 the gums are red, sore, swollen, and may bleed. |
front 75 periodontal disease | back 75 or periodontitis, affects up to 95% of all people over the age of 35 and accounts for 80–90% of tooth loss in adults |
front 76 esophagus | back 76 “carry food” a muscular tube about 25 cm (10 inches) long, is collapsed when not involved in food propulsion |
front 77 esophageal hiatus | back 77 “gap” to enter the abdomen. |
front 78 cardiac sphincter | back 78 which is a physiological sphincter , it acts as a valve, but the only structural evidence of this sphincter is a slight thickening of the circular smooth muscle at that point. |
front 79 Heartburn | back 79 the first symptom of gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD), is the burning, radiating substernal pain that occurs when the acidic gastric juice regurgitates into the esophagus. |
front 80 hiatal hernia | back 80 a structural abnormality (most often due to an abnormal relaxation or weakening of the gastroesophageal sphincter) in which the superior part of the stomach protrudes slightly above the diaphragm. |
front 81 Mastication | back 81 chewing |
front 82 Deglutition | back 82 swallowing, is a complicated process that involves coordinated activity of over 22 separate muscle groups. |
front 83 buccal phase | back 83 occurs in the mouth and is voluntary. In the buccal phase, we place the tip of the tongue against the hard palate, and then contract the tongue to force the bolus into the oropharynx |
front 84 pharyngeal | back 84 esophageal phase - The uvula and larynx rise to prevent food from entering respiratory passageways. The tongue blocks off the mouth. The upper esophageal sphincter relaxes, allowing food to enter the esophagus. |
front 85 Stomach | back 85 temporary “storage tank” where chemical breakdown of proteins begins and food is converted to a creamy paste called chime |
front 86 Rugae | back 86 When empty, the stomach collapses inward, throwing its mucosa (and submucosa) into large, longitudinal folds |
front 87 cardiac region | back 87 (“near the heart”), surrounds the cardiac orifice through which food enters the stomach from the esophagus. |
front 88 fundus | back 88 dome-shaped part, tucked beneath the diaphragm, that bulges superolaterally to the cardia. |
front 89 pyloric region | back 89 funnel-shaped region of the stomach |
front 90 pyloric antrum | back 90 more superior part of the pyloric region |
front 91 pyloric canal | back 91 where the stomach meets the duodenum |
front 92 pyloric valve or sphincter | back 92 which controls stomach emptying (pylorus = gatekeeper). |
front 93 greater curvature | back 93 The convex lateral surface of the stomach |
front 94 lesser curvature | back 94 concave medial surface of the stomach |
front 95 lesser omentum | back 95 runs from the liver to the lesser curvature of the stomach, where it becomes continuous with the visceral peritoneum covering the stomach |
front 96 greater omentum | back 96 drapes inferiorly from the greater curvature of the stomach to cover the coils of the small intestine. |
front 97 gastric pits | back 97 in the lining of the duodenum which lead into the tubular gastric glands |
front 98 gastric glands | back 98 produce the stomach secretion called gastric juice |
front 99 Mucous neck cells | back 99 found in the upper, or “neck,” regions of the glands, produce a thin, soluble mucus |
front 100 Parietal cells | back 100 found mainly in the middle region of the glands, simultaneously secrete hydrochloric acid (HCl) and intrinsic factor. Although the parietal cells appear spherical when viewed with a light microscope, they actually have three prongs that bear dense microvilli (they look like fuzzy pitchforks!). This structure provides a huge surface area for secreting H and Cl into the stomach lumen. HCl makes the stomach contents extremely acidic (pH 1.5–3.5), a condition necessary for activation and optimal activity of pepsin. The acidity also helps in food digestion by denaturing proteins and breaking down cell walls of plant foods, and is harsh enough to kill many of the bacteria ingested with foods. Intrinsic factor is a glycoprotein required for vitamin B12 absorption in the small intestine. |
front 101 Chief cells | back 101 occur mainly in the basal regions of the gastric glands. The chief cells produce pepsinogen, the inactive form of the protein-digesting enzyme pepsin. Chief cells also secrete insignificant amounts of lipases (fat-digesting enzymes). |
front 102 Enteroendocrine cells | back 102 (“gut endocrine”), typically located deep in the gastric glands, release a variety of chemical messengers directly into the interstitial fluid of the lamina propria. |
front 103 mucosal barrier | back 103 the stomachs aggressive counterattack to protect itself
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front 104 Peptic ulcers | back 104 specifically called gastric ulcers when they are erosions of the stomach wall |
front 105 Rennin | back 105 an enzyme that acts on milk protein (casein), converting it to a curdy substance that looks like soured milk. |
front 106 Intrinsic factor | back 106 required for intestinal absorption of vitamin B12, needed to produce mature erythrocytes. |
front 107 Reflex phase (cephalic) | back 107 few minutes prior to food entry: smell/taste |
front 108 Gastric phase | back 108 3–4 hours after food enters the stomach |
front 109 Intestinal phase | back 109 brief stimulatory effect as chyme enters the duodenum, followed by inhibitory effects (enterogastric reflex and enterogastrones): not too much now! |
front 110 Enterogastrones | back 110 a collection of hormones that inhibit gastric secretion when the stomach is very active. They include secretin, cholecystokinin (CCK), and vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP) |
front 111 Receptive relaxation | back 111 of smooth muscle in the stomach fundus and body occurs both in anticipation of and in response to food movement through the esophagus and into the stomach |
front 112 Gastric accommodation | back 112 an example of smooth muscle plasticity, is the intrinsic ability of visceral smooth muscle to exhibit the stress-relaxation response |
front 113 Cholecystokinin (CCK) | back 113 CCK mediates a number of physiological processes, including digestion and satiety. It is released by I cells located in the mucosal epithelium of the small intestine (mostly in the duodenum and jejunum), neurons of the enteric nervous system and neurons in the brain.
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front 114 Gastric inhibitory peptide (GIP) | back 114 It is now believed that the function of GIP is to induce insulin secretion, which is stimulated primarily by hyperosmolarity of glucose in the duodenum. After this discovery, some researchers prefer the new name of glucose-dependent insulinotropic peptide, while retaining the acronym "GIP." The amount of insulin secreted is greater when glucose is administered orally than intravenously. |
front 115 gastrin | back 115 a peptide hormone that stimulates secretion of gastric acid (HCl) by the parietal cells of the stomach and aids in gastric motility. |
front 116 Histamine | back 116 Activates parietal cells to release HCl |
front 117 Intestinal gastrin | back 117 Stimulates gastric glands and motility |
front 118 Motilin | back 118 Stimulates migrating motility complex |
front 119 Secretin | back 119 hormone that both controls the environment in the duodenum by regulating secretions of the stomach and pancreas, and regulates water homeostasis throughout the body. |
front 120 Serotonin | back 120 Causes contraction of stomach muscle |
front 121 Somatostatin | back 121 (also known as growth hormone-inhibiting hormone (GHIH) or somatotropin release-inhibiting factor (SRIF)) or somatotropin release-inhibiting hormone[citation needed] is a peptide hormone that regulates the endocrine system and affects neurotransmission and cell proliferation via interaction with G protein-coupled somatostatin receptors and inhibition of the release of numerous secondary hormones. |
front 122 Vasoactive intestinal peptide | back 122 VIP stimulates contractility in the heart, causes vasodilation, increases glycogenolysis, lowers arterial blood pressure and relaxes the smooth muscle of trachea, stomach and gall bladder. In humans, the vasoactive intestinal peptide is encoded by the VIP gene. |
front 123 Vomiting | back 123 emesis |
front 124 small intestine | back 124 the body’s major digestive organ.Within its twisted passageways, digestion is completed and virtually all absorption occurs. |
front 125 ileocecal valve | back 125 no data |
front 126 (sphincter) | back 126 in the right iliac region where sm intestines join the large intestine. |
front 127 duodenum | back 127 “twelve finger widths long”, which curves around the head of the pancreas, is about 25 cm (10 inches) long Although it is the shortest intestinal subdivision, the duodenum has the most features of interest. |
front 128 hepatopancreatic ampulla | back 128 The bile duct, delivering bile from the liver, and the main pancreatic duct, carrying pancreatic juice from the pancreas, unite at the wall of the duodenum in a bulblike point |
front 129 major duodenal papilla volcano | back 129 shaped region where the ampulla opens into the duodenum via. |
front 130 hepatopancreatic sphincter | back 130 smooth muscle valve that control the entry of bile and pancreatic juice |
front 131 jejunum | back 131 “empty”, about 2.5 m (8 ft) long, extends from the duodenum to the ileum. |
front 132 Ileum | back 132 “twisted”, approximately 3.6 m (12 ft) in length, joins the large intestine at the ileocecal valve. |
front 133 circular folds | back 133 or plicae circulares , are deep, permanent folds of the mucosa and submucosa |
front 134 Villi | back 134 “tufts of hair” are fingerlike projections of the mucosa, over 1 mm high, that give it a velvety texture, much like the soft nap of a towel |
front 135 microvilli | back 135 of the absorptive cells of the mucosa give the mucosal surface a fuzzy appearance called the brush border |
front 136 brush border enzymes | back 136 which complete the digestion of carbohydrates and proteins in the small intestine. |
front 137 intestinal crypts | back 137 crypts of Lieberkühn Crypt epithelial cells are primarily secretory cells that secrete intestinal juice, a watery mixture containing mucus that serves as a carrier fluid for absorbing nutrients from chyme. |
front 138 duodenal glands | back 138 (also called Brunner’s glands) are found in the submucosa of the duodenum only. These glands produce an alkaline (bicarbonate-rich) mucus that helps neutralize the acidic chyme moving in from the stomach. |
front 139 falciform ligament | back 139 separates the right and left lobes anteriorly and suspends the liver from the diaphragm and anterior abdominal wall |
front 140 round ligament | back 140 ligamentum teres “round”, a fibrous remnant of the fetal umbilical vein. |
front 141 porta hepatis | back 141 It transmits the hepatic portal vein (entering), hepatic artery proper (entering), Common hepatic duct (leaving) |
front 142 common hepatic duct | back 142 Bile leaves the liver through several bile ducts that ultimately fuse to form the large common hepatic duct |
front 143 cystic duct | back 143 draining the gallbladder |
front 144 lobules | back 144 The liver is composed of sesame seed–sized structural and functional units. |
front 145 Hepatocytes | back 145 liver cells |
front 146 central vein | back 146 running in the longitudinal axis of the lobule |
front 147 portal triad | back 147 region at six corners of a lobule |
front 148 liver sinusoids | back 148 leaky capillaries Between the hepatocyte plates are enlarged |
front 149 hepatic macrophages | back 149 called Kupffer cells remove debris such as bacteria and worn-out blood cells from the blood as it flows past. |
front 150 bile canaliculi | back 150 tiny canals Secreted bile flows through |
front 151 hepatitis | back 151 inflammation of the liver, is most often due to viral infection. |
front 152 Cirrhosis | back 152 “orange colored” is a progressive chronic inflammation of the liver that typically results from chronic alcoholism or severe chronic hepatitis |
front 153 portal hypertension | back 153 obstructed blood flow throughout the hepatic portal system |
front 154 Bile | back 154 a yellow-green, alkaline solution containing bile salts, bile pigments, cholesterol, triglycerides, phospholipids (lecithin and others), and a variety of electrolytes. Of these, only bile salts and phospholipids aid the digestive process. |
front 155 Bile salts | back 155 primarily cholic and chenodeoxycholic acids, are cholesterol derivatives. Their role is to emulsify fats |
front 156 enterohepatic circulation | back 156 recycling mechanism in which bile salts are conserved |
front 157 bilirubin | back 157 a waste product of the heme of hemoglobin formed during the breakdown of worn-out erythrocytes |
front 158 gallbladder | back 158 thin-walled green muscular sac about 10 cm (4 inches) long. The gallbladder stores bile that is not immediately needed for digestion and concentrates it by absorbing some of its water and ions. |
front 159 Gallstones | back 159 biliary calculi which obstruct the flow of bile from the gallbladder |
front 160 Pancreas | back 160 An accessory digestive organ, the pancreas is important to the digestive process because it produces enzymes that break down all categories of foodstuffs, which the pancreas then delivers to the duodenum. |
front 161 Pancreatic juice | back 161 drains from the pancreas |
front 162 Main pancreatic duct | back 162 duct which pancreatic juice drains from the pancreas |
front 163 zymogen granules | back 163 “fermenting” containing the digestive enzymes |
front 164 migrating motility complex | back 164 waves of activity that sweep through the intestines in a regular cycle during fasting state. |
front 165 Gastroileal reflex | back 165 a long reflex that enhances the force of segmentation in the ileum. |
front 166 Feces | back 166 poop |
front 167 Teniae coli | back 167 three bands of smooth muscle |
front 168 Haustra | back 168 pocketlike sacs of the large intestines |
front 169 appendages | back 169 “membrane covered”, small fat-filled pouches of visceral peritoneum that hang from ithe surface of the large intestine |
front 170 cecum | back 170 “blind pouch”, which lies below the ileocecal valve in the right iliac fossa, is the first part of the large intestine |
front 171 vermiform appendix | back 171 The appendix contains masses of lymphoid tissue, and as part of MALT it plays an important role in body immunity. |
front 172 Appendicitis | back 172 results from a blockage (often by feces) that traps infectious bacteria in its lumen. |
front 173 Ascending colon | back 173 travels up the right side of the abdominal cavity to the level of the right kidney. |
front 174 right colic flexure | back 174 hepatic, flexure the region the ascending colon makes a right angle turn into the transverse colon |
front 175 Transverse colon | back 175 colon travels across the abdominal cavity. |
front 176 left colic (splenic) flexure | back 176 the colon, Directly anterior to the spleen, it bends acutely into the descending colon. |
front 177 Descending colon | back 177 descends down the left side of the posterior abdominal wall |
front 178 Sigmoid colon – colon enters the pelvis, where it becomes the S | back 178 shaped |
front 179 Mesocolon – | back 179 no data |
front 180 Rectum | back 180 runs posteroinferiorly just in front of the sacrum. |
front 181 rectal valves | back 181 three lateral curves or bends in the rectum |
front 182 anal canal | back 182 the last segment of the large intestine, lies in the perineum, entirely external to the abdominopelvic cavity. |
front 183 Anus | back 183 region anal canal opens to the exterior |
front 184 internal anal sphincter | back 184 involuntary sphincters of the anal canal composed of smooth muscle |
front 185 external anal sphincter | back 185 voluntary sphincters of the anal canal composed of skeletal muscle |
front 186 Anal columns | back 186 number of vertical folds, produced by an infolding of the mucous membrane and some of the muscular tissue in the upper half of the lumen of the anal canal. |
front 187 Anal sinuses | back 187 recesses between the anal columns, exude mucus when compressed by feces, which aids in emptying the anal canal |
front 188 bacterial flora | back 188 community of bacteria that exists on or in the body |
front 189 haustral contractions | back 189 slow segmenting movements lasting about one minute that occur every 30 minutes |
front 190 Mass movements | back 190 (mass peristalsis) are long, slow-moving, but powerful contractile waves that move over large areas of the colon three or four times daily and force the contents toward the rectum. |
front 191 diverticula | back 191 small herniations of the mucosa through the colon walls. |
front 192 Diverticulitis | back 192 in which the diverticula become inflamed and may rupture, leaking feces into the peritoneal cavity |
front 193 Irritable bowel syndrome | back 193 (IBS) is a functional GI disorder not explained by anatomical or biochemical abnormalities.Affected individuals have recurring (or persistent) abdominal pain that is relieved by defecation, changes in the consistency |
front 194 defecation reflex. | back 194 initiated by stretching of the rectal wall |
front 195 diarrhea | back 195 result from any condition that rushes food residue through the large intestine before that organ has had sufficient time to absorb the remaining water |
front 196 constipation | back 196 when food remains in the colon for extended periods, too much water is absorbed and the stool becomes hard and difficult to pass |
front 197 Chemical digestion | back 197 is a catabolic process in which large food molecules are broken down to monomers |
front 198 Hydrolysis | back 198 The enzymatic breakdown of any type of food molecule |
front 199 Protein | back 199 •Amino acids are absorbed by cotransport with sodium ions.
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front 200 Fat | back 200 •Fatty acids and monoglycerides enter the intestinal cells via diffusion.
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front 201 Carbohydrate | back 201 •Monosaccharides (simple sugars), the monomers of carbohydrates, are absorbed immediately
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front 202 Nucleic Acid | back 202 •Units enter intestinal cells by active transport via membrane carriers.
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front 203 Salivary amylase | back 203 present in saliva, splits starch into oligosaccharides, smaller fragments of two to eight linked glucose molecules. Salivary amylase works best in the slightly acid to neutral environment |
front 204 Micelles | back 204 are collections of fatty elements clustered together with bile salts in such a way that the polar (hydrophilic) ends of the molecules face the water and the nonpolar portions form the core |
front 205 Chylomicrons | back 205 triglycerides are combined with lecithin and other phospholipids and cholesterol, and coated with a “skin” of proteins to form water-soluble lipoprotein droplets |
front 206 Lipoprotein lipase | back 206 an enzyme associated with the capillary endothelium of liver and adipose tissue |
front 207 Ferritin | back 207 protein that stores iron and releases it in a controlled fashion. |
front 208 Malabsorption | back 208 impaired nutrient absorption |
front 209 primitive gut | back 209 The epithelial lining of the developing alimentary canal |