You Are What You Eat?
Well, Maybe...
Fully understanding the digestive system
may help you understand the importance of good
nutrition. Learn why digestion is
important, how food is digested, how the digestive
process is controlled and more. You will appreciate
great nutrition (and juicing) more than
ever before!
Your Digestive System and How It
Works
The digestive system is made up of the
digestive tract—a series of hollow organs joined in a long,
twisting tube from the mouth to the anus—and other organs that
help the body break down and absorb food (see figure).
Organs that make up the digestive tract are the mouth,
esophagus, stomach, small intestine, large intestine—also
called the colon—rectum, and anus. Inside these hollow organs
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. The digestive tract also contains a layer
of smooth muscle that helps break down food and move it along
the tract.
Two “solid” digestive organs, the liver and the pancreas,
produce digestive juices that reach the intestine through small
tubes called ducts. The gallbladder stores the liver’s
digestive juices until they are needed in the intestine. Parts
of the nervous and circulatory systems also play major roles in
the digestive system.
Why is digestion
important?
When you eat foods—such as bread, meat, and vegetables—they
are not in a form that the body can use as nourishment. 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 the body can
use them to build and nourish cells and to provide energy.
How is food
digested?
Digestion involves mixing food with digestive juices, moving
it through the digestive tract, and breaking down large
molecules of food into smaller molecules. Digestion begins in
the mouth, when you chew and swallow, and is completed in the
small intestine.
Movement of Food
Through the Digestive System
The large, hollow organs of the digestive tract contain a
layer of muscle that enables their walls to move. The movement
of organ walls can propel food and liquid through the system
and also can mix the contents within each organ. Food moves
from one organ to the next through muscle action called
peristalsis. Peristalsis looks like an ocean wave traveling
through the muscle. The muscle of the organ contracts to create
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 you are able to start swallowing by
choice, once the swallow begins, it becomes involuntary and
proceeds under the control of the nerves
Swallowed food is pushed into the esophagus, which connects
the throat above with the stomach below. At the junction of the
esophagus and stomach, there is a ringlike muscle, called the
lower esophageal sphincter, closing the passage between the two
organs. As food approaches the closed sphincter, the sphincter
relaxes and allows the food to pass through to the stomach.
The stomach has three mechanical tasks. First, it stores the
swallowed food and liquid. To do this, the muscle of the upper
part of the stomach relaxes to 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 kind of food and the degree of muscle action of the
emptying stomach and the small intestine. Carbohydrates, for
example, spend the least amount of time in the stomach, while
protein stays in the stomach longer, and fats the longest. As
the food dissolves into the juices from the pancreas, liver,
and intestine, the contents of the intestine are mixed and
pushed forward to allow further digestion.
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