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The digestive system

Hank takes us through the bowels of the human digestive system and explains why it's all about surface area. Created by EcoGeek.

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  • spunky sam blue style avatar for user Alex Wang
    If stomach acid is so strong, how does indigestion ever happen?
    (12 votes)
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    • male robot hal style avatar for user Yisrael F
      If there is enough basic material put into any acid, no matter how strong, there will be a big reaction between them. So even though stomach acid is really strong, if you have enough basic foods you may still suffer from the reactions that will happen between the acid and the food.

      Did that answer your question sufficiently?
      (21 votes)
  • piceratops ultimate style avatar for user The Morro Dragon
    What organs can you survive without?
    ( You can survive without gall bladder but if you take it out you can't eat oily, and spicy foods).
    (6 votes)
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    • aqualine ultimate style avatar for user rybo1337
      A human being could (in theory) live as just a brain in a vat with an external oxygen and blood supply, but since you are probably asking for the more practical aspect of this question, here is what I have found.

      You can live without:
      one kidney (both if you go on dialysis)
      one lung
      as you said, your gall bladder
      your stomach
      large parts of your intestines
      parts of your brain
      large parts of your liver (it actually grows back!)
      your sensory organs
      reproductive organs
      your spleen
      and your appendix

      Hope this answered your question!
      (18 votes)
  • male robot johnny style avatar for user Will  Halverson
    How do geese and ducks digest the grass (cellulose) they eat?
    (9 votes)
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    • aqualine ultimate style avatar for user Ryan Chandler
      first we need to know what cellulose is. Cellulose is a complex sugar that most plant-life use as a structure for their body. It is strong and flexible at their level and made up of many simple sugars. For animals like humans, its strand is so complex that the stomach and intestine can't digest it. But it is good for keeping the system clean and functioning. You may also know it as fiber, which is used to help ease constipation. However in ducks, geese, cows, and other such grass-eating animals they have another stomach that either has enzymes that can break down the cellulose, in some birds, hold rocks that they eat before hand that manually crush up the cellulose. A lil' freaky, but pretty dang cool. I hoped this helped. if not I'm glad to answer more questions. Stay curious.
      (14 votes)
  • orange juice squid orange style avatar for user Abraham George
    What part of our nervous system controls the peristalsis?
    (10 votes)
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    • piceratops ultimate style avatar for user John Hogue
      The gut has it's own nervous system (sometimes called the enteric nervous system)! It would control itself entirely if the other components of the autonomic nervous system didn't send modifying signals. The way the autonomic nervous system modifies peristalsis is to increase or decrease the strength of contraction, but not the pace. As was mentioned by norwoodpaul, the stomach contracts at a rate of 3 per minute, but the duodenum contracts at a rate of 10 - 12 per minute, and the pace gradually diminishes the further down the digestive tract you go. Interesting fact: the gut has as many nerves as the entire spinal chord.
      (5 votes)
  • orange juice squid orange style avatar for user Abraham George
    I thought that the pylorus was the first part of the small intestine?
    (6 votes)
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  • leafers seedling style avatar for user Samantha Louise
    At around 5 minutes, he mentions that salivary amylase breaks down starch into glucose... doesn't it break starch into maltose, though?
    (7 votes)
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    • aqualine ultimate style avatar for user Ryan Chandler
      Great understanding on the level of sugars. However saliva, for one, doesn't actually really break things down instantly. It only helps break things down so the work on the stomach and intestines are easier. Also, starch is not just maltose, it could be a chain of maltose, fructose, lactose, etc. But I'm sure that at one point during the breakdown to glucose saliva could pull apart a maltose. Does this help? If not I'm glad to add more. Stay curious.
      (7 votes)
  • leaf green style avatar for user sanannadas
    if the acid present in our stomach is of ph 1 then why our stomach is not harmed?
    (5 votes)
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  • aqualine ultimate style avatar for user Erron John Roy
    what happens if we dont digest quickly?
    (4 votes)
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    • female robot amelia style avatar for user nl
      ' Biological Molecules - you are what you eat' - Hank describes how all foods are essentially broken down into carbohydrates, lipids, proteins and nucleic acids. These molecules have varying rates at which they are digested based on how complex they are. At a chemical level, carbohydrates are the easiest to breakdown so they are processed the quickest. If it is a complex carbohydrate it will take a little longer. In comparison, proteins are much more complicated and it takes your body more work to break them own into usable amino acids. Fats are also pretty complex, with saturated fats being the most chemically stable and thus hardest for your body to break down. So a banana digest more quickly than a steak, because it is chemically less complex. Paced digestion is good. But if digestion is so slow that it's struggling, it's a sign that your body is having to work too hard to breakdown what you fed it.
      (4 votes)
  • mr pink red style avatar for user Ujaan Roy
    What is the scientific term for 'good bacteria' ?
    (2 votes)
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    • boggle blue style avatar for user Davin V Jones
      There isn't one. Science doesn't distinguish between good or bad because to do so, it would have to place a biased value on one thing over another. Bacteria beneficial to one organism may be benign or harmful to another.

      The marketing term used to pitch buying goods with what marketers define as good bacteria is probiotics.
      (7 votes)
  • leafers ultimate style avatar for user Jalia
    He said, at that there were enzymes in your saliva. Does the saliva itself create the enzymes or do they come from somewhere else?
    (4 votes)
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Video transcript

- Hi, I hope you don't mind that I'm eating. This is actually just my first course. For my birthday the writers wrote me a script where I just get to eat the whole time. And I can't think of a better way to demonstrate the workings of the digestive system, the series of hollow organs that we use to break down and process nutrients and energy we need to function. Though, wait a second, if I remember correctly digestion is actually pretty freakin' disgusting so maybe I shouldn't be eating right now. Oh whatever, waiter. (upbeat music) The digestive system is so fundamental that it's basically step number one in the guide to how to make an animal. You probably remember that during the embryonic development of most animals, the digestive tract is the very first thing that forms. When the blastula, that little wad of cells that we all used to be, turns into a little wad of cells with a tube running through it that tube is your digestive system. And pretty much every animal has a digestive system of some kind but they're not all alike. Far from it, in fact. Digestive tracts are specially adapted to animals' feeding behavior and diet. For instance, a housefly eats mostly liquid or very finely-granulated food, but before it does that it's got to puke its digestive juices all over its lunch and then let them digest it for a while before it sucks it up into its mouth. If we did it like that, first dates would be less common. Most vertebrates put food in one end of the tube and our digestive system processes it, and then it gets rid of the waste out the other end of the tube. No muss, no fuss. Well, actually there's a little bit of muss at the end. You may have noticed. But the beauty of it is that this whole process is run by our autonomic nervous system so we don't have to think about it until maybe the very last step when we're in traffic and just had two cups of coffee and a bran muffin. Then, we have to think about it a little bit. Among vertebrates, the digestive tract might be short or long or have organs that do different things depending on what its feeding habits are. For instance, dogs are mostly carnivores and also scavengers. They mostly eat meat but sometimes that meat's been dead for a while. So the dog's digestive system has developed to take food in, absorb as many nutrients as possible, and then deposit it on somebody's lawn all in a period of about six hours. Dogs have an extremely short digestive tract because if you're in the habit of eating rotten meat, you better be able to digest it fast. If you don't, the bad bacteria that's probably living on that armadillo carcass is going to take up residence in your gut and put you in a world of hurt. Cows on the other hand take a very, very, very long time to digest their food, around 80 hours because they have to process plants, mostly grass. Grass has a ton of cellulose in it and evolution has yet to produce an animal that can manufacture a stomach acid or enzyme tough enough to break down cellulose. So cows have microorganisms in their guts that break down the cellulose for them. This process takes a four-chambered stomach, each one with a slightly different microecology and a lot of cud chewing, or regurgitating and re-chewing of grass before it passes all the way through. So nature is full of crazy digestion stories and I honestly wish that I had time to tell them all. But let's focus on human digestion from now on mostly because you're probably a human, we don't assume anything here, and you'll be wanting to know how your body does all this stuff. And two, humans actually have a pretty good all-purpose digestive system. We're omnivores after all, we eat plants and meat so our systems are generalized to handle all kinds of stuff. Like most animals, humans have a bunch of different acids and enzymes in our digestive tracts that break down food so that it can be absorbed and used by our bodies. But the secret to successful digestion is maximizing the surface area, in more than one way actually. The first way we maximize surface area is on the food itself. So say I take a bite out of this apple. If I swallow this chunk whole right now not only would it hurt like heck, the rest of my digestive system would have a really hard time dealing with it because most of the enzymes and acids would have the same difficulty working all the way through this big solid hunk. But when I use my awesome teeth to chew up this hunk of apple, suddenly there's double, triple, quadruple the surface area on the food. I'm making up apple gravel from the apple boulder. Maybe even apple sand. For humans, chewing is key because breaking down our food into smaller and smaller bits allows enzymes and acids to get at them. And after our teeth have made the pieces small enough, the chemicals break them down further until they're fine enough for our bodies to absorb nutrients from them. But it's not just the surface area of the food that's important. The surface area of the digestive system is key to the whole process as well. Last time I talked about how we have a whole bunch of surface area in our lungs to absorb tons of oxygen all at once. Well, our digestive system works in much the same way. Most of the absorption of nutrients happens in our small intestines and the length of the average human adult's small intestine is about seven meters. Plus, inside our small intestines there are a bunch of little folds and little absorbing fibers with absorbing fibers on them, and no, I didn't misspeak. The fibers have fibers. That's how hard our intestines work to increase their surface area. Last episode, I was all impressed that lungs have a total surface area of 75 square meters. Well, the small intestine has a surface area of 250 square meters. It's kind of gross. I wouldn't wanna see it spread out over a tennis court or anything. But I'm getting ahead of myself here. Digestion does not start at the small intestine, people. It starts at the mouth. Now, as you can see, this hot pocket is surrounded by some kind of bread, if you can call it that. Bread is a starch which breaks down into glucose. When I start gnawing on a piece of bread, we could do the outside here so it's mostly bread. The glands in my mouth start creating saliva which contains salivary amylase, an enzyme designed to break down starch into glucose. The more I chew, the more amylase will get to all the different sides of the bread. And that's why the more you chew bread, the sweeter it tastes. Amylase doesn't really do much to the meat or the cheese in this thing. I've got other enzymes and acids that are gonna work on them later on in the system. But I am gonna chew all that stuff up real good right now so that those other enzymes can do their jobs later. I'm gonna swallow all this. So now the masticated hot pocket is passed down my pharynx or throat and into my esophagus, which leads to my stomach. There's actually this little cool flap of tissue called the epiglottis that blocks the trachea when I swallow so that the food doesn't end up in my respiratory system. So this ball of food that I just swallowed actually has a scientific name. It's called a bolus and it rides a kind of wave of muscle action down the esophagus into the stomach. This wavelike contraction of the smooth muscles around the tube of the esophagus is called peristalsis and it's basically how most of the movement in your digestive system is accomplished. Now, my hot pocket bolus is in my stomach now, which is where the food really starts getting manhandled. The stomach basically takes a scorched earth approach to digestion. It's not messing around. It's like a churning cement mixer that can contract and expand with these big accordion-like folds of muscle called rugae. Your stomach's job is to turn everything over and over, smooshing and mixing all the pieces up with its cocktail of acids and enzymes called gastric juice. Gastric juice is mainly made up of hydrochloric acid, an enzyme called pepsin, and some mucus and water. Hydrochloric acid has a pH of about one, which is strong enough that if you got it on your hand it would give you a chemical burn. So the acid breaks things down and hopefully kills most of the bacteria that you might find on your food. And the pepsin starts breaking down proteins into amino acids. Now, that mucus is important. It's there to protect your stomach so that it doesn't, like, digest itself. When you don't have enough of that mucus you get peptic ulcers, which happen when your stomach lining comes in direct contact with your stomach acid. And that water's just in there to make everything all soupy because what you want, by the time your food leaves your stomach, is chyme, which is a kind of liquid-y slop that you might be familiar with from the last time you had a stomach virus. You knew this conversation was gonna have to get a little bit gross and I didn't wanna bring diarrhea into it too much because, you know, I've been eating. But when something bad is going on in your digestive tract your body doesn't worry too much about absorbing nutrients. It just wants to get the chyme out of there. So chyme is what you see when you get the picture. Anyway, there's a little valve or sphincter between the stomach and the small intestine that regulates how much chyme gets into the small intestine and when it gets in there. The very beginning of the small intestine is called the duodenum. This is where a lot of the small intestine action happens, by which I mean lots of things get absorbed and also secreted, like bicarbonate, which neutralizes the gastric acid before it goes any further. Now, the coolness of the small intestine can't be overstated. It's ground zero for cellular exchange of nutrients in the breakdown of fats. And again, the reason it's so good at absorbing is because all of the surface area it's got going on. A lot of that surface area comes from the fact that despite its name your small intestine is frickin' long. In a human, it can range anywhere from 4.5 to 10.5 meters. But that's not all. The whole inside is lined with epithelial tissue that has tons of ridges and folds in it. Surface area to the max. And on those ridges and folds are these little hair-like fibers of flesh called villi. Each villus has capillaries on it so that it can absorb nutrients. And get this. Each villus, which is only like half a millimeter long, is covered in teeny-tiny little microvilli, providing even more surface area. In fact, apparently the small intestine has a texture kind of like velvet, which is, great, now I eat the milkshake, fantastic, okay. So another thing the small intestine does with the help of its friend the gallbladder is break down fatty stuff like this milkshake. Near the top of your small intestine is a little pipe where bile salt manufactured by the liver and stored by the gallbladder are squirted out into the small intestine. Bile works like dish detergent on a pan you just fried something in. It's an emulsifier. It takes hydrophobic fat molecules and breaks them up into fatty acids and monoglycerides, which can be absorbed by all that epithelial tissue. I've never had Chunky Monkey before. Nuts. After your food passes through those yards and yards of small intestine, the chyme goes through another sphincter and enters the cecum, the beginning of the large intestine. The large intestine's job is to remove most of the water and bile salts from the chyme so you don't have constant diarrhea, so you can thank it for that. It's called large because it's wider than the small intestine, but it's not nearly as long. It's basically just a one and a half meter victory lap around the outside of the small intestine and then it calls it good. Also should mention at the end of the cecum there's a little tube where the appendix comes in. For a long time we thought that the appendix was a worthless vestigial structure that we used to need at some point in our evolution but didn't need anymore. However, recent studies are finding that the purpose of the appendix in modern humans is probably to act as a safehouse for all of the good bacteria you need to help you digest your food. If you get a virus or food poisoning or something and all your digestive systems say, "Get it all "out of me," the appendix has a little sample of your gut bacteria that it spits out to help you recolonize after your illness. So I think you're probably familiar with the final step in the digestive system. That's the pooping. Your food can spend as long as three days in your digestive tract, and a lot of that time is spent in the large intestine, mostly reabsorbing the excess water from the chyme and prepping your poo for its great entrance into the world. When it's done, it passes through everybody's favorite sphincters, the anal sphincters, there are two of them and, you know, out in the world to live its own life. And that's the end of our little tale here that begins with the hot pocket. I hope you join us next time for more digustingness as we discuss the details of the excretory system. Until then, bon appetit.