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How your digestive system works - Emma Bryce

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    Across the whole planet,
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    humans eat on average between
    one and 2.7 kilograms of food a day.
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    That's over 365 kilograms
    a year per person,
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    and more than 28,800 kilograms
    over the course of a lifetime.
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    And every last scrap makes its way
    through the digestive system.
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    Comprised of ten organs
    covering nine meters,
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    and containing
    over 20 specialized cell types,
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    this is one of the most diverse
    and complicated systems in the human body.
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    Its parts continuously work in unison
    to fulfill a singular task:
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    transforming the raw materials
    of your food
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    into the nutrients and energy
    that keep you alive.
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    Spanning the entire length of your torso,
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    the digestive system
    has four main components.
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    First, there's the gastrointestinal tract,
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    a twisting channel
    that transports your food
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    and has an internal surface area
    of between 30 and 40 square meters,
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    enough to cover half a badminton court.
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    Second, there's the pancreas,
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    gallbladder,
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    and liver,
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    a trio of organs that break down food
    using an array of special juices.
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    Third, the body's enzymes,
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    hormones,
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    nerves,
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    and blood
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    all work together to break down food,
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    modulate the digestive process,
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    and deliver its final products.
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    Finally, there's the mesentery,
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    a large stretch of tissue that supports
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    and positions all your digestive organs
    in the abdomen,
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    enabling them to do their jobs.
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    The digestive process begins
    before food even hits your tongue.
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    Anticipating a tasty morsel,
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    glands in your mouth start
    to pump out saliva.
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    We produce about 1.5 liters
    of this liquid each day.
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    Once inside your mouth,
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    chewing combines with the sloshing saliva
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    to turn food into a moist lump
    called the bolus.
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    Enzymes present in the saliva
    break down any starch.
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    Then, your food finds itself
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    at the rim of a 25-centimeter-long tube
    called the esophagus,
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    down which it must plunge
    to reach the stomach.
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    Nerves in the surrounding
    esophageal tissue
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    sense the bolus's presence
    and trigger peristalsis,
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    a series of defined muscular contractions.
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    That propels the food into the stomach,
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    where it's left at the mercy
    of the muscular stomach walls,
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    which bound the bolus,
    breaking it into chunks.
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    Hormones, secreted by cells in the lining,
    trigger the release of acids
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    and enzyme-rich juices
    from the stomach wall
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    that start to dissolve the food
    and break down its proteins.
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    These hormones also alert the pancreas,
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    liver,
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    and gallbladder
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    to produce digestive juices
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    and transfer bile, a yellowish-green
    liquid that digests fat,
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    in preparation for the next stage.
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    After three hours inside the stomach,
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    the once shapely bolus is now
    a frothy liquid called chyme,
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    and it's ready to move into
    the small intestine.
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    The liver receives bile
    from the gallbladder
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    and secretes it into the first portion of
    the small intestine called the duodenum.
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    Here, it dissolves the fats
    floating in the slurry of chyme
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    so they can be easily digested
    by the pancreatic and intestinal juices
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    that have leached onto the scene.
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    These enzyme-rich juices break the fat
    molecules down into fatty acids
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    and glycerol for easier
    absorption into the body.
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    The enzymes also carry out
    the final deconstruction
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    of proteins into amino acids
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    and carbohydrates into glucose.
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    This happens in the
    small intestine's lower regions,
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    the jejunum and ileum,
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    which are coated in millions
    of tiny projections called villi.
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    These create a huge surface area
    to maximize molecule absorption
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    and transference into the blood stream.
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    The blood takes them on the final
    leg of their journey
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    to feed the body's organs and tissues.
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    But it's not over quite yet.
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    Leftover fiber,
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    water,
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    and dead cells
    sloughed off during digestion
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    make it into the large intestine,
    also known as the colon.
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    The body drains out most of the remaining
    fluid through the intestinal wall.
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    What's left is a soft mass called stool.
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    The colon squeezes this byproduct
    into a pouch called the rectum,
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    where nerves sense it expanding
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    and tell the body when
    it's time to expel the waste.
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    The byproducts of digestion
    exit through the anus
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    and the food's long journey,
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    typically lasting between 30 and 40 hours,
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    is finally complete.
Title:
How your digestive system works - Emma Bryce
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TED-Ed
Duration:
04:57
  • Hello, I wonder about a sentence in this video, at 3.05: "The liver receives bile from the gall bladder, and secretes it into the first portion of the small intestine." Is this correct? I thought the bile moved the other way; was produced in the liver, got stored in the gall bladder and then was secreted from there onwards.

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