Site icon DataFlair

Human Digestive System – Digestive Glands

Human Digestive System

Food is the basic necessity for living for all organisms present on this planet. Have you ever wondered how the food you eat gets digested and provides us energy and ensures our survival?

All we do is intake the food, but our body has several mechanisms and several organs that help to extract energy out of that food. Food takes about six to eight hours to pass through the stomach and small intestine.

But the entire digestive process takes about thirty-six long hours. Lets today discuss the human digestive system, various organs, and their functions.

What is Digestive System?

The digestive system is characterized by the gastrointestinal tract. It is a portal by which various nutrients enter our bodies. It plays a major role in the maintenance of the body. It starts from the mouth and ends in the anus.

It consists of various organs and structures – Oesophagus, stomach, small and large intestines. Along with these are present accessory organs which help in the process of digestion such as teeth, tongue, salivary glands, liver, pancreas.

The human digestive system basically involves the consumption of food and its conversion to energy. This energy is necessary for our survival. The conversion of food to energy is not a one-step process.

It is the process that involves the processing of the food to extract the nutrients from it and utilize it for energy generation. This whole process is what we call, digestion.

The process of digestion involves the functioning of the alimentary canal (GI tract), accessory organs, and some organ systems. The Monogastric nature of humans makes the process quite simple as compared to some other animals.

Humans have only one chamber in the stomach. Some animals have multiple chambers which makes the process complex. For example, Cows have 4 chambers, Camels have 3 chambers, and so on.

The nervous and circulatory system of humans also plays an important role in digestion. The union of nerves, blood, hormones, bacteria, and some other organs completes the process of digestion.

How Digestion of Food Takes Place?

Gastrointestinal Tract (Alimentary Canal)

  1. Buccal cavity
  2. Oesophagus
  3. Stomach
  4. Small intestine
  5. Large intestine
  6. Anus

These are the processes which occur in the GI tract –

  1. Starch [amylases] into monosaccharides
  2. Proteins [proteases] into Dipeptidases and Amino acid
  3. Fats [lipases] into monoglycerides and free fatty acids

Organization of Gastrointestinal Tract

GI Tract has the following layers from outside inwards.

  1. Serous Layer: It helps in the attachment of the Gastrointestinal Tract to surrounding structures.
  2. Smooth Muscle Layer: It consists of an inner circular and outer longitudinal muscle layer. This layer helps in mixing and propulsion of food.
  3. Submucosal layer: It consists of loose connective tissue, blood vessels, and lymphatics
  4. Mucous layer: It is lined by epithelium and its stroma consists of glands and muscularis mucosae.

Two important plexuses are also present:

Buccal Cavity (Oral Cavity)

Oesophagus (Food Pipe)

Stomach

  1. Chief or peptic or zymogen cells that secrete pepsinogen
  2. Parietal or oxyntic cells – secrete HCl
  3. G-cells/ gastrin cells release gastrin

Daily 2.5-3 liters of gastric juice is secreted. It has pH 1-2. It consists of electrolytes (cations and anions) along with Pepsin (digests protein), Rennin (curdles milk), Gastric lipase, Lysozyme, Urease, and Carbonic Anhydrase.

Small Intestine

Daily 3 liters of Intestinal Juice is secret. Its pH is 7.6. It comprises of enterokinase (it activates trypsinogen), Proteolytic Enzymes (like aminopeptidase and dipeptidase), Nuclease (Nucleotide and Nucleoside), Invertase (Sucrase), Maltase, Lactase, Intestinal Lipase, Alkaline phosphatase

Sucrose                         [Sucrase]                    Glucose and Fructose

Maltose                          [Maltase]                   Two molecules of Glucose

Lactose                          [Lactase]                    Glucose and Galactose

Alpha (symbol)-limiting dextrins  [alpha-limiting dextrinase] Glucose

Fats                                 [Lipase]                         monoglycerides + Fatty Acids

Peptones and Polypeptides    [Erepsin]          Amino Acids

Nucleic Acids              [Nucleases]                Purine and pyrimidine

Large Intestine

The processes occur in the following manner –
Ingestion -> Digestion -> Absorption -> Assimilation -> Egestion

Digestive Glands

The alimentary canal of the human body has three digestive glands, namely, the salivary glands, the liver, and the pancreas.

Salivary Glands

There are 3 parts of salivary glands

The salivary glands secrets the saliva in the oral cavity. The saliva breaks down the starch into sugar.

Liver

Secretion and composition of Bile

Daily 500-1000mL of Bile is secreted with a pH of 7.8-8.6 (alkaline)
It consists of water(97%), Bile Salt like sodium glycocholate and sodium taurocholate, Bile pigments –Bilirubin and Biliverdin, Cholesterol, and Electrolytes.

Pancreas
  1. Duct of Wirsung – The duct joins the common Bile Duct to form Ampulla of Vater which opens into the duodenum.
  2. Duct of Santorini – It is an accessory pancreatic duct. This too opens into a duodenum slightly higher than Ampulla of Vater.
  1. Pancreas daily secrets1200-1500ml of pancreatic juice with a pH of 7.8-8.4(alkaline).
  2. It consists of – cations (Na+, Ca2+, K+, Mg2+, Zn2+), Anions (KCO3-, Cl-), Enzymes(secreted by Acinar cells) such as Pancreatic amylase, Pancreatic lipase, and Proteolytic enzymes. Proteolytic enzymes are Trypsinogen, Chymotrypsinogen, Carboxypeptidase, Ribonuclease, and Deoxyribonuclease.

Trypsinogen(inactive)    [enterokinase]        Trypsin (active)

Chymotrypsinogen          [Trypsin]                    Chymotrypsin

Procarboxypeptidase     [Trypsin]                    Carboxypeptidase

These active forms hydrolyze peptides and help in the digestion of proteins.

Disorders of the Digestive System

Some disorders may occur in the digestive system due to various factors.

Conclusion

In this article, we learned about the human digestive system. We also learned how digestion takes place and what all are the organs involved in the digestion process. We learned about the detailed functions of all the organs and glands.

Try imagining how your body digests food using all these organs when next time you have food. It would be fun. Don’t you agree?

Exit mobile version