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Gross Anatomy of The Digestive System Lecture Notes Lecture 2

The document provides an overview of the gross anatomy of the digestive system. It describes the key parts and their functions, including the oral cavity, esophagus, stomach, small intestine, large intestine, liver, and pancreas. The digestive system extends from the oral cavity through the abdominopelvic cavity. Food is ingested and propelled through the tubular system where it is digested and absorbed before waste is excreted. Blood supply and innervation are also summarized.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
82 views

Gross Anatomy of The Digestive System Lecture Notes Lecture 2

The document provides an overview of the gross anatomy of the digestive system. It describes the key parts and their functions, including the oral cavity, esophagus, stomach, small intestine, large intestine, liver, and pancreas. The digestive system extends from the oral cavity through the abdominopelvic cavity. Food is ingested and propelled through the tubular system where it is digested and absorbed before waste is excreted. Blood supply and innervation are also summarized.

Uploaded by

Lorelie Asis
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Gross Anatomy Of The Digestive System - Lecture notes,


lecture 2
Digestive System (University of Birmingham)

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BMedSci Year 1: Module: Digestive System


Lecture 2: Gross Anatomy of the Digestive System

Overview

 Digestive System situated within thorax and abdominopelvic cavity


 Head and Neck Region comprises of oral cavity, pharynx, and beginning of oesophagus
 Oesophagus to posterior thoracic cavity
 Largest part of digestive system is the abdominopelvic cavity
 Abdominopelvic cavity lasts 2cm of oesophagus, the stomach, small intestine, large
intestine, rectum and anal canal
 Small intestine consists of duodenum, jejunum and ileum
 Large intestine consists of caecum and colon

Food

 Food is ingested and masticated in oral cavity


 Food is propelled through tubular digestive system where digested, absorbed into profuse
blood supply (at alimentary canal) and unwanted fragments are excreted

Oral Cavity

 Digestion starts at the oral cavity  food is ingested, lubricated, chewed and tasted
 Teeth and temporomandibular joint moved by mastication muscles
 Tongue, cheek, lips and salivary glands supplied by cranial nerves
 Salivary glands secrete fluid to initiate digestion, lubricate food and help bolus formation
 Sublingual gland lies in oral cavity
 Submandibular and parotid salivary glands lie outside oral cavity
 They both empty their secretions into the cavity via ducts
 A discrete bolus is formed by action of tongue against soft palate
 Bolus is swallowed when tongue pushes it backwards
 Reflex movements make sure that bolus enters oesophagus and not respiratory tract
(nasopharynx or larynx)
 There are lymphoid aggregations in the oral cavity – for example, the tonsil and
oropharyngeal isthmus are in the back of the tongue and assist in immunological defence of
oral cavity and pharynx

Oropharynx

 Oropharynx lies behind oral cavity


 Reflex activity elevates oropharynx to receive bolus and fluid from swallowing
 Oropharynx then recoils as the three stacked constrictor muscles propel the food down
toward the oesophagus
 Oesophagus conveys bolus via peristalsis down neck and thorax to stomach (by thoracic
organs)
 Oblique angle of entry of oesophagus to cardiac region of stomach + orientation of
diaphragmatic fibres form a sling around the oesophagus
 This creates a sphincteric mechanism which prevents gastric reflux into the oesophagus
 A hiatus hernia may occur is this system does not work properly

Stomach

 Stomach is distensible sac covered in peritoneum under left diaphragm


 Stomach relates with spleen, pancreas, duodenum, left kidney and blood vessels

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 Lesser sac of peritoneum lies between stomach and its bed – allows distension and mobility
of the stomach
 Gastric fluid contains acid and enzymes  secreted into lumen as bolus enters stomach
 Acid is mixed with incoming food by muscular walls of stomach  produce chime
 Neural controls (vagus nerve) of tone of pyloric sphincters – this opens to allow chime to
enter duodenum which is a short- C-shaped pat of small intestine
 Second part of duodenum receives pancreatic and bile juice – this neutralises acidic chime
and enables further digestions
 Jejunum and Ileum are suspended from posterior abdominal wall by mesentery
(peritoneum) – maintains nervous, vascular and lymphatic supply of tissue

Small and Large Intestine

 Small intestine ends as ileum enters caecum in right iliac fossa


 Appendix vermiformis (vestigial [degenerative] structure in humans) hangs off end of
caecum
 Appendix is cause of pain if inflamed (appendicitis)
 Ascending colon (retroperitoneal) becomes transverse colon at hepatic fixture – this has
mesentery and is mobile at splenic flexure – then at descending coon it is retroperitoneal
again
 Colon is highly absorptive of water and vitamins and produces of microbial fermentation
 Large intestine continues as sigmoid colon – runs into pelvis becoming the rectum  anal
canal
 Smooth muscle of anal canal = internal sphincter of anus – under ANS control
 External anal sphincter (skeletal muscle) under somatic control – learned in childhood so
that excretion at sociably acceptable time

The Liver and Pancreas

 Pancreas secretes alkaline solution of digestive proenzymes


 These aren’t activated until they reach duodenum
 Endocrine Islets of Langerhans secrete insulin and glucagon into blood stream
 Liver lies under right dome of diaphragm and extends across midline – protected by ribs
and costal margins
 Liver is responsible for bile synthesis – bile stored and concentrated in gall bladder and
secreted into duodenum via common bile duct
 Liver receives venous drainage of GI tract (stomach to rectum) and modulaes this blood for
good systemic circulation
 Liver functions are also detoxification, regulation of glucose concentration and protein
synthesis and breakdown

Blood Supply

 3 major branches of abdominal aorta supply stomach and intestines


 Coeliac trunk (below diaphragm) supplies lower oesophagus, stomach, first part of
duodenum, spleen, liver and pancreas
 Superior mesenteric artery supplies second part of duodenum to transverse colon
 Inferior mesenteric artery supplies transverse colon to anal canal
 Venous drainage passes to liver via hepatic portal vein

Enteric Nervous System

 Maintains peristaltic waves and other reflexes


 ANS modulates ENS
 PNS promotes digestion, absorption and peristalsis
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 SNS shuts down sphincters, decreases peristalsis and diverts blood from alimentary
tract to skeletal and cardiac muscle tissue

Notes from Lecture

Mouth Oesophagus

 Lips to isthmus of fauces  25-30cm (The teeth to the stomach is


 Ingestion, fragmentation and 40cm)
moistening for swallowing  It opens up for bolus
 Speech, facial expression, sensory  It is behind the trachea
reception and respiration  If there is hypertrophy of the heart,
this pushes back to oesophagus
Tongue
Stomach
 Very mobile – involves intrinsic and
extrinsic muscles  Fragments completed and digestion is
 Sensitive to touch and taste initiated
 Anterior 2/3 in oral cavity – controlled  The cardia and pylorus are fixed and
by CN 12 the remained is mobile-shape
 Posterior 1/3 in pharynx – where the  The pylroci sphincter controls the
circumvallate papillae are onwards passage
 The folds in the stomach are known as
Salivary Glands rugae which allow the stomach
muscle to stretch
 The parotid gland has serous watery
 The gadtric epithelium are simple,
fluid, goes from the cheek to the
columnar epithelia which has a thick
vestibule and controlled by CN 9
shiny mucous
 The submandibular gland is watery
 Gastric acid also contains bleach
fluid which goes to the duct to the
submandibular papilla, controlled by Small Intestine
CN 7
 The sublingual gland is in the mouth  This is the site of absorption
controlled by CN 7  The large surface area includes the
plachae circulares, villi and microvilli
Palate  It is made up of the duodenum,
jejunum and ileum (suspended on the
 Very hard (top of mouth)
mesentery)
 As you move back to the soft part, this
is important in swallowing Pancreas
 This is stratified squamous epithelia
which is not keratinized  The pancreas pushes out proenzymes
and bicarbonates
Pharynx  Proenzymes  duct  duodenum 
neutralise chime
 12cm long muscular tube
 Bile is usually green which allows lipid
 Is not involved in peristalsis
absorption
 Has constrictors: superior, middle and
inferior Large Intestine
 Also has air coming in
 The epiglottis is a flap covering the  The appendix is attached here
trachea to close of the larynx  There is haustrations (small patches),
 The laryngeal goes up when appendices epiploicae (fat pads for
swallowing energy) and taenae coli (ribbons of
smooth muscle)

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