How your digestive system works Emma Bryce

Across the whole planet,

humans eat on average between
one and 2.7 kilograms of food a day.

That’s over 365 kilograms
a year per person,

and more than 28,800 kilograms
over the course of a lifetime.

And every last scrap makes its way
through the digestive system.

Comprised of ten organs
covering nine meters,

and containing
over 20 specialized cell types,

this is one of the most diverse
and complicated systems in the human body.

Its parts continuously work in unison
to fulfill a singular task:

transforming the raw materials
of your food

into the nutrients and energy
that keep you alive.

Spanning the entire length of your torso,

the digestive system
has four main components.

First, there’s the gastrointestinal tract,

a twisting channel
that transports your food

and has an internal surface area
of between 30 and 40 square meters,

enough to cover half a badminton court.

Second, there’s the pancreas,

gallbladder,

and liver,

a trio of organs that break down food
using an array of special juices.

Third, the body’s enzymes,

hormones,

nerves,

and blood

all work together to break down food,

modulate the digestive process,

and deliver its final products.

Finally, there’s the mesentery,

a large stretch of tissue that supports

and positions all your digestive organs
in the abdomen,

enabling them to do their jobs.

The digestive process begins
before food even hits your tongue.

Anticipating a tasty morsel,

glands in your mouth start
to pump out saliva.

We produce about 1.5 liters
of this liquid each day.

Once inside your mouth,

chewing combines with the sloshing saliva

to turn food into a moist lump
called the bolus.

Enzymes present in the saliva
break down any starch.

Then, your food finds itself

at the rim of a 25-centimeter-long tube
called the esophagus,

down which it must plunge
to reach the stomach.

Nerves in the surrounding
esophageal tissue

sense the bolus’s presence
and trigger peristalsis,

a series of defined muscular contractions.

That propels the food into the stomach,

where it’s left at the mercy
of the muscular stomach walls,

which bound the bolus,
breaking it into chunks.

Hormones, secreted by cells in the lining,
trigger the release of acids

and enzyme-rich juices
from the stomach wall

that start to dissolve the food
and break down its proteins.

These hormones also alert the pancreas,

liver,

and gallbladder

to produce digestive juices

and transfer bile, a yellowish-green
liquid that digests fat,

in preparation for the next stage.

After three hours inside the stomach,

the once shapely bolus is now
a frothy liquid called chyme,

and it’s ready to move into
the small intestine.

The liver sends bile
to the gallbladder,

which secretes it into the first portion of
the small intestine called the duodenum.

Here, it dissolves the fats
floating in the slurry of chyme

so they can be easily digested
by the pancreatic and intestinal juices

that have leached onto the scene.

These enzyme-rich juices break the fat
molecules down into fatty acids

and glycerol for easier
absorption into the body.

The enzymes also carry out
the final deconstruction

of proteins into amino acids

and carbohydrates into glucose.

This happens in the
small intestine’s lower regions,

the jejunum and ileum,

which are coated in millions
of tiny projections called villi.

These create a huge surface area
to maximize molecule absorption

and transference into the blood stream.

The blood takes them on the final
leg of their journey

to feed the body’s organs and tissues.

But it’s not over quite yet.

Leftover fiber,

water,

and dead cells
sloughed off during digestion

make it into the large intestine,
also known as the colon.

The body drains out most of the remaining
fluid through the intestinal wall.

What’s left is a soft mass called stool.

The colon squeezes this byproduct
into a pouch called the rectum,

where nerves sense it expanding

and tell the body when
it’s time to expel the waste.

The byproducts of digestion
exit through the anus

and the food’s long journey,

typically lasting between 30 and 40 hours,

is finally complete.

在整个地球上,

人类平均每天吃
1 到 2.7 公斤的食物。

每人每年超过 365 公斤

,一生超过 28,800 公斤

每一个废料都会
通过消化系统。

由十个器官组成,
覆盖九米,

包含二十多种特殊细胞类型

,是人体最多样化
和最复杂的系统之一。

它的各个部分不断地协同工作,
以完成一项独特的任务:

将食物的原材料转化为

维持生命的营养和能量。 消化系统

横跨整个躯干,

有四个主要组成部分。

首先是胃肠道,这

是一个输送食物的扭曲通道

,内部
表面积在 30 到 40 平方米之间,

足以覆盖半个羽毛球场。

其次是胰腺、

胆囊

和肝脏

,这三个器官
使用一系列特殊的果汁来分解食物。

第三,身体的酶、

荷尔蒙、

神经

和血液

共同作用,分解食物,

调节消化过程,

并提供最终产品。

最后是肠系膜,这

是一大片组织,支撑

和定位
腹部的所有消化器官,

使它们能够完成工作。

消化过程
在食物到达你的舌头之前就开始了。

期待美味的食物,

你嘴里的腺体
开始抽出唾液。

我们每天生产大约 1.5
升这种液体。

一旦进入你的嘴里,

咀嚼与晃动的唾液结合,

将食物变成一个潮湿的团块,
称为团块。

唾液中的酶会
分解任何淀粉。

然后,您的食物会发现自己

位于称为食道的 25 厘米长管的边缘

,它必须向下插入
才能到达胃部。

周围食道组织中的神经

感知食团的存在
并触发蠕动,这

是一系列明确的肌肉收缩。

这将食物推入胃中,

在那里它
受肌肉胃壁

的支配,胃壁将食团束缚住,
将其分解成块。

由内层细胞分泌的激素
触发胃壁释放酸

和富含酶的汁液

,开始溶解食物
并分解其蛋白质。

这些激素还提醒胰腺、

肝脏

胆囊产生消化液

并转移胆汁,这是一种消化脂肪的黄绿色
液体,

为下一阶段做准备。

在胃内三个小时后

,曾经形状匀称的食团现在
变成了一种叫做食糜的泡沫液体

,准备好
进入小肠。

肝脏将胆汁
输送到胆囊,胆囊

将胆汁分泌到小肠的第一部分,
称为十二指肠。

在这里,它溶解了
漂浮在食糜浆液中的脂肪,

因此它们很容易

被浸出到现场的胰液和肠液消化。

这些富含酶的果汁将脂肪
分子分解成脂肪酸

和甘油,更容易
被人体吸收。

这些酶还将蛋白质
最终解构

为氨基酸

,将碳水化合物最终解构为葡萄糖。

这发生在
小肠的下部区域,

即空肠和回肠,

它们被数百万个
称为绒毛的微小突起所覆盖。

这些创造了巨大的表面积,
以最大限度地吸收分子

并转移到血流中。

血液将他们带到
他们旅程的最后一站,

以喂养身体的器官和组织。

但这还没有结束。 消化过程中脱落的

剩余纤维、

和死细胞

进入大肠,
也称为结肠。

身体通过肠壁排出大部分剩余的
液体。

剩下的是一个叫做大便的软块。

结肠将这种副产物挤压
到一个称为直肠的小袋中,

神经在那里感觉到它的扩张

并告诉身体何时
该排出废物。

消化的副产品
通过肛门排出

,食物的漫长旅程(

通常持续 30 到 40 小时

)最终完成。