Your Digestive System and How It Works
The digestive system is a series of hollow organs joined
in a long, twisting tube from the mouth to the anus. Inside this tube is
a lining called the mucosa. In the mouth, stomach, and small intestine,
the mucosa contains tiny glands that produce juices to help digest food.
There are also two solid digestive organs, the liver
and the pancreas, which produce juices that reach the intestine through
small tubes. In addition, parts of other organ systems (for instance, nerves
and blood) play a major role in the digestive system.
Why Is Digestion Important?
When we eat such things as bread, meat, and vegetables,
they are not in a form that the body can use as nourishment. Our food and
drink must be changed into smaller molecules of nutrients before they can
be absorbed into the blood and carried to cells throughout the body. Digestion
is the process by which food and drink are broken down into their smallest
parts so that the body can use them to build and nourish cells and to provide
energy.
How Is Food Digested?
Digestion involves the mixing of food, its movement
through the digestive tract, and chemical breakdown of the large molecules
of food into smaller molecules. Digestion begins in the mouth, when we chew
and swallow, and is completed in the small intestine. The chemical process
varies somewhat for different kinds of food.
Movement of Food Through the System
The large, hollow organs of the digestive system contain
muscle that enables their walls to move. The movement of organ walls can
propel food and liquid and also can mix the contents within each organ.
Typical movement of the esophagus, stomach, and intestine is called peristalsis.
The action of peristalsis looks like an ocean wave moving through the muscle.
The muscle of the organ produces a narrowing and then propels the narrowed
portion slowly down the length of the organ. These waves of narrowing push
the food and fluid in front of them through each hollow organ.
The first major muscle movement occurs when food or
liquid is swallowed. Although we are able to start swallowing by choice,
once the swallow begins, it becomes involuntary and proceeds under the control
of the nerves.
The esophagus is the organ into which the swallowed food is pushed. It connects
the throat above with the stomach below. At the junction of the esophagus
and stomach, there is a ringlike valve closing the passage between the two
organs. However, as the food approaches the closed ring, the surrounding
muscles relax and allow the food to pass.
The food then enters the stomach, which has three mechanical tasks to do.
First, the stomach must store the swallowed food and liquid. This requires
the muscle of the upper part of the stomach to relax and accept large volumes
of swallowed material. The second job is to mix up the food, liquid, and
digestive juice produced by the stomach. The lower part of the stomach mixes
these materials by its muscle action. The third task of the stomach is to
empty its contents slowly into the small intestine.
Several factors affect emptying of the stomach, including the nature of
the food (mainly its fat and protein content) and the degree of muscle action
of the emptying stomach and the next organ to receive the stomach contents
(the small intestine). As the food is digested in the small intestine and
dissolved into the juices from the pancreas, liver, and intestine, the contents
of the intestine are mixed and pushed forward to allow further digestion.
Finally, all of the digested nutrients are absorbed through the intestinal
walls. The waste products of this process include undigested parts of the
food, known as fiber, and older cells that have been shed from the mucosa.
These materials are propelled into the colon, where they remain, usually
for a day or two, until the feces are expelled by a bowel movement.
Production of Digestive Juices
The glands that act first are in the mouth--the salivary
glands. Saliva produced by these glands contains an enzyme that begins to
digest the starch from food into smaller molecules.
The next set of digestive glands is in the stomach lining.
They produce stomach acid and an enzyme that digests protein. One of the
unsolved puzzles of the digestive system is why the acid juice of the stomach
does not dissolve the tissue of the stomach itself. In most people, the
stomach mucosa is able to resist the juice, although food and other tissues
of the body cannot.
After the stomach empties the food and its juice into the small intestine,
the juices of two other digestive organs mix with the food to continue the
process of digestion. One of these organs is the pancreas. It produces a
juice that contains a wide array of enzymes to break down the carbohydrates,
fat, and protein in our food. Other enzymes that are active in the process
come from glands in the wall of the intestine or even a part of that wall.
The liver produces yet another digestive juice--bile. The bile is stored
between meals in the gallbladder. At mealtime, it is squeezed out of the
gallbladder into the bile ducts to reach the intestine and mix with the
fat in our food. The bile acids dissolve the fat into the watery contents
of the intestine, much like detergents that dissolve grease from a frying
pan. After the fat is dissolved, it is digested by enzymes from the pancreas
and the lining of the intestine.
Absorption and Transport of Nutrients
Digested molecules of food, as well as water and minerals
from the diet, are absorbed from the cavity of the upper small intestine.
The absorbed materials cross the mucosa into the blood, mainly, and are
carried off in the bloodstream to other parts of the body for storage or
further chemical change. As noted above, this part of the process varies
with different types of nutrients.
Carbohydrates: An average American adult eats
about half a pound of carbohydrate each day. Some of our most common foods
contain mostly carbohydrates. Examples are bread, potatoes, pastries, candy,
rice, spaghetti, fruits, and vegetables. Many of these foods contain both
starch, which can be digested, and fiber, which the body cannot digest.
The digestible carbohydrates are broken into simpler molecules by enzymes
in the saliva, in juice produced by the pancreas, and in the lining of the
small intestine. Starch is digested in two steps: First, an enzyme in the
saliva and pancreatic juice breaks the starch into molecules called maltose;
then an enzyme in the lining of the small intestine (maltase) splits the
maltose into glucose molecules that can be absorbed into the blood. Glucose
is carried through the bloodstream to the liver, where it is stored or used
to provide energy for the work of the body.
Table sugar is another carbohydrate that must be digested to be useful.
An enzyme in the lining of the small intestine digests table sugar into
glucose and fructose, each of which can be absorbed from the intestinal
cavity into the blood. Milk contains yet another type of sugar, lactose,
which is changed into absorbable molecules by an enzyme called lactase,
also found in the intestinal lining.
Protein: Foods such as meat, eggs, and beans consist of giant molecules
of protein that must be digested by enzymes before they can be used to build
and repair body tissues. An enzyme in the juice of the stomach starts the
digestion of swallowed protein. Further digestion of the protein is completed
in the small intestine. Here, several enzymes from the pancreatic juice
and the lining of the intestine carry out the breakdown of huge protein
molecules into small molecules called amino acids. These small molecules
can be absorbed from the hollow of the small intestine into the blood and
then be carried to all parts of the body to build the walls and other parts
of cells.
Fats: Fat molecules are a rich source of energy for the body. The
first step in digestion of a fat such as butter is to dissolve it into the
watery content of the intestinal cavity. The bile acids produced by the
liver act as natural detergents to dissolve fat in water and allow the enzymes
to break the large fat molecules into smaller molecules, some of which are
fatty acids and cholesterol. The bile acids combine with the fatty acids
and cholesterol and help these molecules to move into the cells of the mucosa.
In these cells the small molecules are formed back into large molecules,
most of which pass into vessels (called lymphatics) near the intestine.
These small vessels carry the reformed fat to the veins of the chest, and
the blood carries the fat to storage depots in different parts of the body.
Vitamins: Another vital part of our food that is absorbed from the
small intestine is the class of chemicals we call vitamins. There are two
different types of vitamins, classified by the fluid in which they can be
dissolved: water-soluble vitamins (all the B vitamins and vitamin C) and
fat-soluble vitamins (vitamins A, D, and K).
Water and Salt: Most of the material absorbed from the cavity of
the small intestine is water in which salt is dissolved. The salt and water
come from the food and liquid we swallow and the juices secreted by the
many digestive glands. In a healthy adult, more than a gallon of water containing
over an ounce of salt is absorbed from the intestine every 24 hours.
How Is the Digestive Process Controlled?
Hormone Regulators
A fascinating feature of the digestive system is that
it contains its own regulators. The major hormones that control the functions
of the digestive system are produced and released by cells in the mucosa
of the stomach and small intestine. These hormones are released into the
blood of the digestive tract, travel back to the heart and through the arteries,
and return to the digestive system, where they stimulate digestive juices
and cause organ movement. The hormones that control digestion are gastrin,
secretin, and cholecystokinin (CCK):
Gastrin causes the stomach to produce an acid
for dissolving and digesting some foods. It is also necessary for the normal
growth of the lining of the stomach, small intestine, and colon.
Secretin causes the pancreas to send out a digestive
juice that is rich in bicarbonate. It stimulates the stomach to produce
pepsin, an enzyme that digests protein, and it also stimulates the liver
to produce bile.
CCK causes the pancreas to grow and to produce
the enzymes of pancreatic juice, and it causes the gallbladder to empty.
Nerve Regulators
Two types of nerves help to control the action of the
digestive system. Extrinsic (outside) nerves come to the digestive organs
from the unconscious part of the brain or from the spinal cord. They release
a chemical called acetylcholine and another called adrenaline. Acetylcholine
causes the muscle of the digestive organs to squeeze with more force and
increase the "push" of food and juice through the digestive tract. Acetylcholine
also causes the stomach and pancreas to produce more digestive juice. Adrenaline
relaxes the muscle of the stomach and intestine and decreases the flow of
blood to these organs.
Even more important, though, are the intrinsic (inside) nerves, which make
up a very dense network embedded in the walls of the esophagus, stomach,
small intestine, and colon. The intrinsic nerves are triggered to act when
the walls of the hollow organs are stretched by food. They release many
different substances that speed up or delay the movement of food and the
production of juices by the digestive organs.
Source: National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases, National Institutes of Health, December 1992
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