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  • Voiceover: Have you ever realized

  • that at your deepest, most inner core

  • you're not really you.

  • Well, think about it.

  • The minute you eat something and swallow it

  • and it passes in through your gastrointestinal tract,

  • that's the external environment.

  • That food that you just took in

  • was a part of the outside world,

  • and the tract that it's going to follow in through

  • from your mouth till the point that you

  • expel it in the bathroom

  • is actually not you.

  • That's the external environment.

  • How weird is that?

  • So in this video, we're going to do

  • an overview of the gastrointestinal tract.

  • I'll talk about each of the individual parts

  • and what they're main, overall functions are,

  • and then in subsequent videos I'll go through

  • each of these individual parts

  • and give a more detailed explaination

  • of how they do what they do.

  • All right, so starting off, of course,

  • the first place our food is ever going to go to

  • is our mouth, or the oral cavity.

  • The main functions that we have achieved in the mouth

  • include chewing, the morcellation of food.

  • Also very important is hydrolysis.

  • As you might recall from biochemistry,

  • hydrolysis is just the enzymatic digestion

  • or the enzymatic breakdown.

  • Where chewing is the physical breakdown,

  • hydrolysis is the enzyme-assisted breakdown of food.

  • So as we break down food, the goal here

  • is to make what's called a bolus,

  • just a sphere of digested food

  • that can then be swallowed

  • and passed on into our next structure.

  • After we swallow the food,

  • where do you think it goes?

  • This guy right here, and that's the esophagus,

  • the esophagus.

  • This, I think, is one of the more boring parts

  • of the GI tract, because all we do here

  • is just propel our bolus.

  • We just pass it on down to the next guy.

  • We don't even really do anything to it.

  • Kind of boring.

  • But the next guy is a little more exciting.

  • Now we get to the stomach.

  • A lot of action going on in the stomach,

  • one of my favorite parts of the GI tract.

  • The stomach is responsible for multiple things,

  • including churning, which is a lot like chewing,

  • except that there are sort of more dimensions

  • of contraction affecting the food

  • and breaking it down.

  • We also have hydrolysis going on here,

  • the enzyme-assisted breakdown of food.

  • In addition to that, you can store food in your stomach

  • if it's not time to pass it on

  • to the next component of your GI tract.

  • The overall goal here is to make what's called chyme.

  • So we take our bolus, and we sort of melt it down, per se,

  • into this more fluid type of substance

  • that we can pass on to our intestines.

  • So we're moving on now to our intestines.

  • Starting now from about this point right here,

  • we get our duodenum, and then this kind of

  • circulates around here,

  • and then we end up at this point.

  • Everything in between, I'll draw it way out here,

  • I'm just going to group together for right now

  • as the small intestine.

  • The small intestine.

  • There are three parts to this,

  • and we'll talk about that in a subsequent video,

  • but the main functions that we achieve here are

  • hydrolysis, and also the absorption of nutrients.

  • Notice this is kind of the first part of your GI tract

  • that you're finally taking in some of the break down

  • food products, and using them for nutrition

  • to make other products in your body.

  • Great. Now that we have gone through

  • the small intestine, what do you think shows up next?

  • Starting from after the small intestine ended,

  • all the way through this lined structure right here,

  • we are going to be passing through the large intestine.

  • The large intestine.

  • Do you guys remember the other name for the large intestine?

  • It starts with a C.

  • If you said "colon," absolutely right.

  • The colon is also one of the more

  • boring parts of the GI tract,

  • because really all we have going on here

  • is absorption, but not of nutrients per se,

  • more like things like water, or ions, or vitamin K,

  • just things like that are absorbed

  • in the large intestine, so not a very

  • high yield place for acquiring nutrients.

  • Then after that, we're going to pass food on

  • to this structure here.

  • This is called the rectum.

  • The rectum.

  • Kind of like the stomach of the GI tract,

  • the rectum serves for storage,

  • We hold on to our processed food,

  • if we can call it that anymore at this point,

  • and it's held there until we deem it

  • an appropriate time to expel the food.

  • So when it's time to expel the food,

  • it'll come out through the anus,

  • through expulsion, expulsion.

  • So those are all the key components

  • of our gastrointestinal tract.

  • There are some other accessory organs

  • that are involved here in digestion,

  • and I'll have videos that talk about them as well.

  • Those include things like the liver,

  • the gallbladder, the pancreas,

  • and those will come up in subsequent videos.

Voiceover: Have you ever realized

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胃腸との出会い!| (Meet the gastrointestinal tract! |)

  • 31 6
    Amy.Lin に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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