Dictionary Definition
digestion
Noun
1 the process of decomposing organic matter (as
in sewage) by bacteria or by chemical action or heat
2 the organic process by which food is converted
into substances that can be absorbed into the body
3 learning and coming to understand ideas and
information; "his appetite for facts was better than his
digestion"
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Pronunciation
Noun
- The process, in the gastrointestinal tract, by which food is converted into substances that can be utilized by the body.
- The result of this process.
- The ability to use this process.
- The processing of decay in organic matter assisted by microorganisms.
- The assimilation and understanding of ideas.
Translations
process in gastrointestinal tract
- Chinese: 消化 (xiāo huà)
- Czech: trávení
- Dutch: spijsvertering , vertering
- Esperanto: digesto
- Finnish: ruoansulatus, alt. spelling: ruuansulatus
- French: digestion
- German: Verdauung
- Hebrew: עיכול ('ykul)
- Italian: digestione
- Indonesian: pencernaan
- Polish: trawienie
- Russian: пищеварение (piščevarénije) , переваривание (perevarivánije)
- Slovene: prebava
- Telugu: జీర్ణము
result of this process
- Italian: digestione
ability to use this process
processing of decay in organic matter assisted
by microorganisms
- Dutch: vertering , verteren
- Italian: decomposizione , digestione
assimilation and understanding of ideas
- Dutch: verwerven , verwerving , assimilatie
- Italian: assimilazione
- Telugu: హరాయించుకొను
Extensive Definition
Digestion is the breaking down of foodstuffs in
the body into a form that can be absorbed and used or excreted. It
is also the process by which the body breaks down food into smaller
components that can
be absorbed by the blood
stream. In mammals,
preparation for digestion begins with the cephalic
phase in which saliva
is produced in the mouth
and digestive
enzymes are produced in the stomach. Mechanical and chemical
digestion begin in the mouth where food is chewed, and
mixed with saliva to
break down starches. The
stomach continues to break food down mechanically and chemically
through the churning of the stomach and mixing with enzymes.
Absorption
occurs in the stomach and gastrointestinal
tract, and the process finishes with excretion.
Overview
Digestion is usually divided into mechanical processing to reduce the size of food particles and chemical action to further reduce the size of particles and prepare them for absorption. In most vertebrates, digestion is a multi-stage process in the digestive system, following ingestion of the raw materials, most often other organisms. The process of ingestion usually involves some type of mechanical and chemical processing. Digestion is separated into four separate processes:- Ingestion: placing food into the mouth
- Mechanical digestion & chemical digestion: mastication to tear and crush food, and churning of the stomach. Addition of chemicals (acid, bile, enzymes, and water) to break down complex molecules into simple structures
- Absorption: movement of nutrients from the digestive system to the circulatory and lymphatic capillaries through osmosis, active transport, and diffusion
- Egestion: Removal of undigested materials from the digestive tract through defecation
Underlying the process is muscle movement
throughout the system, swallowing and peristalsis.
Digestion starts in the mouth. In digestion the
food we eat is basically broken down into energy that our cells can
use. Every organism digests in a very different way and time for
digestion could be between minutes or hours depending on the food
consumed. Some animals like tiger, lions are mainly able to digest
soft food or meat whiles other animals like coyotes may even digest
bones. It may seem easy to digest but the entire process of
digestion is very complicated. The mouth is the beginning of the
digestion tract. Smell of food triggers salivary glands to produces
saliva. At the first taste of the food, more saliva will be
produced to help with the chewing process. After chewing the food
into smaller particles, the food is swallowed down the esophagus
into the stomach. The pharynx receives the food from the mouth; the
esophagus branching off the pharynx receives the food. The tongue
also helps in pushing food down through the pharynx. Peristalsis is
a series of contractions that pushes the food through the esophagus
to the stomach. The stomach is like a sac, with muscle lining,
which doesn’t just hold the food but also grind them (Offei, 95).
From the stomach after food is grinded, it moves to the small
intestines. At this point in the digestion process the part of the
food that cannot be digested are sent through other parts of the
intestines to be eliminated. The small intestine is made of the
duodenum, the jejunum and the ileum “it breaks down food using the
enzyme from the pancreas and bile from the saliva” (foods journey,
page 65). Peristalsis is also active in this organ. The duodenum
breaks the food further whiles the jejunum and ileum absorbs the
food into the bloodstream. Also in the small intestines, nutrients
in the food diffuse through the wall linings to the bloodstream.
Whatever is left is moved to the large intestines or the colon. The
colon is a 4 to 7 foot long muscular vessel and connects small
intestines to rectum. The large intestines basically process waste
before it is defecated to make it easy to come out. Once again, the
waste passes through the colon by peristalsis, first in liquid form
then the solid. It normally takes about 37 hours for food to get
through the colon.
Human digestion process
Phases of Gastric Secretion
- Cephalic phase - This phase occurs before food enters the stomach and involves preparation of the body for eating and digestion. Sight and thought stimulate the cerebral cortex. Taste and smell stimulus is sent to the hypothalamus and medulla oblongata. After this it is routed through the vagus nerve and release of acetylcholine. Gastric secretion at this phase rises to 40% of maximum rate. Acidity in the stomach is not buffered by food at this point and thus acts to inhibit parietal (secretes acid) and G cell (secretes gastrin) activity via D cell secretion of somatostatin.
- Gastric phase - This phase takes 3 to 4 hours. It is stimulated by distention of the stomach, presence of food in stomach and increase in pH. Distention activates long and myentric reflexes. This activates the release of acetylcholine which stimulates the release of more gastric juices. As protein enters the stomach, it binds to hydrogen ions, which raises the pH of the stomach to around pH 6. Inhibition of gastrin and HCl secretion is lifted. This triggers G cells to release gastrin, which in turn stimulates parietal cells to secrete HCl. HCl release is also triggered by acetylcholine and histamine.
- Intestinal phase - This phase has 2 parts, the excitatory and the inhibitory. Partially-digested food fills the duodenum. This triggers intestinal gastrin to be released. Enterogastric reflex inhibits vagal nuclei, activating sympathetic fibers causing the pyloric sphincter to tighten to prevent more food from entering, and inhibits local reflexes.
Oral cavity
In humans, digestion begins in the oral cavity
where food is chewed.
Saliva is
secreted in large amounts (1-1.5 litre/day) by three pairs of
exocrine salivary glands (parotid, submandibular, and sublingual)
in the oral cavity, and is mixed with the chewed food by the
tongue. There are two types of saliva. One is a thin, watery
secretion, and its purpose is to wet the food. The other is a
thick, mucous secretion, and it acts as a lubricant and causes food
particles to stick together and form a bolus. The saliva serves to clean
the oral cavity and moisten the food, and contains digestive
enzymes such as salivary
amylase, which aids in
the chemical
breakdown of polysaccharides such as
starch into disaccharides such as
maltose. It also
contains mucin, a glycoprotein which helps
soften the food into a bolus.
Swallowing
transports the chewed food into the esophagus, passing through the
oropharynx and
hypopharynx. The
mechanism for swallowing is coordinated by the swallowing center in
the medulla
oblongata and pons. The
reflex is initiated by touch receptors in the pharynx as the bolus
of food is pushed to the back of the mouth.
Esophagus
The esophagus, a narrow, muscular tube about 30 centimeters (12 inches) long, starts at the pharynx, passes through the larynx and diaphragm, and ends at the cardiac orifice of the stomach. The wall of the esophagus is made up of two layers of smooth muscles, which form a continuous layer from the esophagus to the rectum and contract slowly, over long periods of time. The inner layer of muscles is arranged circularly in a series of descending rings, while the outer layer is arranged longitudinally. At the top of the esophagus, is a flap of tissue called the epiglottis that closes during swallowing to prevent food from entering the trachea (windpipe). The chewed food is pushed down the esophagus to the stomach through peristaltic contraction of these muscles. It takes only seconds for food to pass through the esophagus, and little digestion actually takes place.Stomach
The food enters the stomach after passing through
the cardiac
orifice. In the stomach, food is further broken apart, and
thoroughly mixed with a gastric acid
and digestive enzymes that break down proteins. The acid itself
does not break down food molecules, rather, the acid provides an
optimum pH for the reaction of the enzyme pepsin. The parietal
cells of the stomach also secrete a glycoprotein called
intrinsic
factor which enables the absorption of vitamin
B-12. Other small molecules such as alcohol are absorbed
in the stomach as well by passing through the membrane of the
stomach and entering the circulatory
system directly.
The transverse section of the alimentary canal
reveals four distinct and well developed layers called serosa,
muscular coat, submucosa and mucosa. Serosa: It is the
outermost thin layer of single cells called mesothelial cells.
Muscular
coat: It is very well developed for churning of food. It has
outer longitudinal, middle smooth and inner oblique muscles.
Submucosa: It has
connective tissue containing lymph vessels, blood vessels and
nerves. Mucosa: It contains
large folds filled with connective tissue. The gastric glands have
a packing of lamina propria. Gastric
glands may be simple or branched tubular secreting mucus,
hydrochloric acid, pepsinogen and renin.
Small intestine
After being processed in the stomach, food is
passed to the small
intestine via the Pyloric sphincter.
The majority of digestion and absorption
occur here as chyme enters
the duodenum. Here it
is further mixed with three different liquids:
- bile, which emulsifies fats to allow absorption, neutralizes the chyme, and is used to excrete waste products such as bilin and bile acids (which has other uses as well). It is not an enzyme, however. The bile juice is stored in a small organ called the gall bladder.
- pancreatic juice made by the pancreas.
- intestinal enzymes of the alkaline mucosal membranes. The enzymes include: maltase, lactase and sucrase, to process sugars; trypsin and chymotrypsin are also added in the small intestine
Most nutrient absorption takes place in the small
intestine. As the acid level changes in
the small intestines, more enzymes are activated to split apart the
molecular structure of the various nutrients so they may be
absorbed into the circulatory or lymphatic systems. Nutrients pass
through the small intestine's wall, which contains small,
finger-like structures called villi, each of which
is covered with even smaller hair-like structures called microvilli. The
blood, which has absorbed
nutrients, is carried away from the small intestine via the
hepatic portal vein and goes to the liver for filtering, removal of
toxins, and nutrient processing.
The small intestine and remainder of the
digestive tract undergoes peristalsis to transport
food from the stomach to the rectum and allow food to be mixed with
the digestive juices and absorbed. The circular muscles and
longitudinal muscles are antagonistic muscles, with one contracting
as the other relaxes. When the circular muscles contract, the
lumen
becomes narrower and longer and the food is squeezed and pushed
forward. When the longitudinal muscles contract, the circular
muscles relax and the gut dilates to become wider and shorter to
allow food to enter. In the stomach there is another phase that is
called Mucus which promotes easy movement of food by wetting the
food. It also nullifies the effect of HCL on the stomach by wetting
the walls of the stomach as HCL has the capacity to digest the
stomach.
Large intestine
After the food has been passed through the small
intestine, the food enters the large
intestine. The large intestine is roughly 1.5 meters long, with three parts: the
cecum at the junction with
the small
intestine, the colon,
and the rectum. The colon
itself has four parts: the ascending
colon, the transverse
colon, the descending
colon, and the sigmoid
colon. The large intestine absorbs water from the bolus
and stores feces until it
can be egested. Food
products that cannot go through the villi, such as cellulose (dietary
fiber), are mixed with other waste products from the body and
become hard and concentrated feces.The feces is stored in the
rectum for a certain period and then the stored feces is egested
due to the contraction and relaxation through the anus. The exit of this waste
material is regulated by the anal
sphincter.
Carbohydrate digestion
Carbohydrates
are formed in growing plants and are found in grains, leafy
vegetables, and other edible plant foods. The molecular structure
of these plants is complex, or a polysaccharide; poly is a
prefix meaning many. Plants form carbohydrate chains during growth
by trapping carbon from the atmosphere, initially carbon
dioxide (CO2). Carbon is stored within the plant along with
water (H2O) to form a complex starch containing a combination of
carbon-hydrogen-oxygen in a fixed ratio of 1:2:1
respectively.
Plants with a high sugar content and table sugar
represent a less complex structure and are called disaccharides, or two sugar
molecules bonded. Once digestion of either of these forms of
carbohydrates are complete, the result is a single sugar structure,
a monosaccharide.
These monosaccharides can be absorbed into the blood and used by
individual cells to produce the energy compound adenosine
triphosphate (ATP).
The digestive system starts the process of
breaking down polysaccharides in the mouth through the introduction
of amylase, a digestive
enzyme in saliva. The
high acid content of the stomach inhibits the enzyme activity, so
carbohydrate digestion is suspended in the stomach. Upon emptying
into the small intestines, potential hydrogen (pH) changes
dramatically from a strong acid to an alkaline content. The pancreas
secretes bicarbonate
to neutralize the acid from the stomach, and the mucus secreted in
the tissue lining the intestines is alkaline which promotes
digestive enzyme activity. Amylase is present in the small
intestines and works with other enzymes to complete the breakdown
of carbohydrate into a monosaccharide which is absorbed into the
surrounding capillaries of the villi.
Nutrients in the blood are transported to the
liver via the hepatic
portal circuit, or loop, where final carbohydrate digestion is
accomplished in the liver.
The liver accomplishes carbohydrate digestion in response to the
hormones insulin and
glucagon. As blood
glucose levels increase following digestion of a meal, the pancreas
secretes insulin causing the liver to transform glucose to glycogen, which is stored in
the liver, adipose
tissue, and in muscle cells, preventing hyperglycemia. A few hours
following a meal, blood glucose will drop due to muscle activity,
and the pancreas will now secrete glucagon which causes glycogen to
be converted into glucose to prevent hypoglycemia.
Note: In the discussion of digestion of
carbohydrates; nouns ending in the suffix -ose usually indicate a
sugar, such as lactose.
Nouns ending in the suffix -ase indicates the enzyme that will
break down the sugar, such as lactase. Enzymes usually begin
with the substrate
(substance) they are breaking down. For example: maltose, a
disaccharide, is
broken down by the enzyme maltase (by the process of hydrolysis), resulting in a
two glucose molecules, a
monosaccharide.
Fat digestion
The presence of fat in the small intestine
produces hormones which stimulate the release of lipase from the pancreas and bile
from the gallbladder. The lipase
(activated by acid) breaks down the fat into monoglycerides and
fatty
acids. The bile emulsifies the fatty acids so
they may be easily absorbed.
Short-
and medium
chain fatty acids are absorbed directly into the blood via
intestine capillaries and travel through the portal vein
just as other absorbed nutrients do. However, long
chain fatty acids are too large to be directly released into
the tiny intestinal capillaries. Instead they are absorbed into the
fatty walls of the intestine villi and reassembled again into
triglycerides. The
triglycerides are coated with cholesterol and protein
(protein coat) into a compound called a chylomicron.
Within the villi, the chylomicron enters a
lymphatic capillary
called a lacteal, which
merges into larger lymphatic vessels. It is transported via the
lymphatic system and the thoracic
duct up to a location near the heart (where the arteries and
veins are larger). The thoracic duct empties the chylomicrons into
the bloodstream via the left subclavian
vein. At this point the chylomicrons can transport the
triglycerides to where they are needed.
Digestive hormones
There are at least four hormones that aid and
regulate the digestive system:
- Gastrin - is in the stomach and stimulates the gastric glands to secrete pepsinogen(an inactive form of the enzyme pepsin) and hydrochloric acid. Secretion of gastrin is stimulated by food arriving in stomach. The secretion is inhibited by low pH .
- Secretin - is in the duodenum and signals the secretion of sodium bicarbonate in the pancreas and it stimulates the bile secretion in the liver. This hormone responds to the acidity of the chyme.
- Cholecystokinin (CCK) - is in the duodenum and stimulates the release of digestive enzymes in the pancreas and stimulates the emptying of bile in the gall bladder. This hormone is secreted in response to fat in chyme.
- Gastric inhibitory peptide (GIP) - is in the duodenum and decreases the stomach churning in turn slowing the emptying in the stomach. Another function is to induce insulin secretion.
Significance of pH in digestion
Digestion is a complex process which is
controlled by several factors. pH plays a crucial role
in a normally functioning digestive tract. In the mouth, pharynx,
and esophagus, pH is typically about 6.8, very weakly acidic.
Saliva
controls pH in this region of the digestive tract. Salivary
amylase is contained in saliva and starts the breakdown of
carbohydrates into monosaccharides. Most
digestive enzymes are sensitive to pH and will not function in a
low-pH environment like the stomach. Low pH (below 5) indicates a
strong acid, while a high pH (above 8) indicates a strong base;
the concentration of the acid or base, however, does also play a
role.
pH in the stomach is very acidic and inhibits the
breakdown of carbohydrates while there.
The strong acid content of the stomach provides two benefits, both
serving to denature
proteins for further digestion in the small intestines, as well as
providing non-specific
immunity, retarding or eliminating various pathogens.
In the small intestines, the duodenum provides
critical pH balancing to activate digestive enzymes. The liver
secretes bile into the duodenum to neutralise the acidic conditions
from the stomach. Also the pancreatic
duct empties into the duodenum, adding bicarbonate to neutralize
the acidic chyme, thus
creating a neutral environment. The mucosal tissue of the small
intestines is alkaline, creating a pH of about 8.5, thus enabling
absorption in a mild alkaline in the environment.
Specialized organs in non-human animals
Organisms have evolved
specialized organs to aid in the digestion of their food, modifying
tongues, teeth, and other
organs to assist in digestion. Certain insects may have a crop or
enlarged esophagus,
while birds and cockroaches have developed gizzards to assist in the
digestion of tough materials. Herbivores have
evolved cecums (or an
abomasum in the case of
ruminants) to break
down cellulose in
plants.
See also
References
Other references
External links
digestion in Arabic: هضم
digestion in Catalan: Digestió
digestion in Czech: Trávení
digestion in Danish: Fordøjelse
digestion in German: Verdauung
digestion in Spanish: Digestión
digestion in Esperanto: Digestado
digestion in French: Digestion
digestion in Korean: 소화 (생물학)
digestion in Croatian: Probava
digestion in Icelandic: Melting
digestion in Italian: Digestione
digestion in Hebrew: עיכול
digestion in Pampanga: Pamaglaso pamangan
digestion in Kazakh: Асқорыту
digestion in Lithuanian: Virškinimas
digestion in Macedonian: Варење
digestion in Dutch: Spijsvertering
digestion in Japanese: 消化
digestion in Norwegian: Fordøyelse
digestion in Polish: Trawienie
digestion in Portuguese: Digestão
digestion in Russian: Пищеварение
digestion in Simple English: Digestion
digestion in Slovenian: Prebava
digestion in Serbian: Варење
digestion in Finnish: Ruoansulatus
digestion in Swedish: Matspjälkning
digestion in Tagalog: Dihestiyon
digestion in Thai: การย่อยอาหาร
digestion in Ukrainian: Травлення
digestion in Yiddish: פארדייאונג
digestion in Chinese: 消化作用
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
ablation, absorbency, absorbent, absorption, adsorbent, adsorption, assimilation, attrition, bile, blending, blotter, blotting, blotting paper,
burning up, chemisorption, chemosorption, consumption, depletion, digestive system,
drain, eating up, endosmosis, engrossment, erosion, exhaustion, exosmosis, expending, expenditure, finishing, gastric juice,
gastrointestinal tract, imbibing, impoverishment, infiltration, ingestion, intestinal juice,
liver, maceration, mastication, osmosis, pancreas, pancreatic digestion,
pancreatic juice, percolation, predigestion, pulpefaction, pulpification, pulping, saliva, salivary digestion,
salivary glands, secondary digestion, seepage, soaking-up, sorption, spending, sponge, sponging, squandering, taking-in,
using up, wastage,
waste, wastefulness, wasting away,
wearing away, wearing down