Category Zoology

What are the pathways in the brain?

The brain’s white matter shows the many nerve pathways between different areas. White matter is made up of nerve fibres, called axons, which use electrical signals to carry information.

The blue-coloured nerve pathways connect the cerebrum, at the top of the brain, to the brainstem at the bottom. Those shown in green connect the front and back of the brain. And those coloured red are nerve connections between the brain’s left and right sides.

When you learn something, it is actually these synapses whose efficiency increases, thus facilitating the passage of nerve impulses along a particular circuit. For example, when you are exposed to a new word, you have to make new connections among certain neurons in your brain to deal with it: some neurons in your visual cortex to recognize the spelling, others in your auditory cortex to hear the pronunciation, and still others in the associative regions of the cortex to relate the word to your existing knowledge.

 

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What is brain?

The brain is our most complex organ and the centre of operations for the whole body, controlling our thinking, memory, feelings, intelligence, and actions.

The brain’s billions of neurons work simultaneously to form an incredible data-processing network, which is a million times more efficient than a computer of the same size. Most of the brain works to process our conscious thoughts and movements, while the remaining, smaller area controls the body’s automatic functions, such as breathing.

Brain cells

Brain cells are the complex network that forms the cerebral cortex. Also known as grey matter, it makes up the outer layer of the cerebrum.

 

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What is Reproductive system?

The reproductive system consists of the body parts used to create new life. Humans cannot reproduce on their own – both male and female cells are needed to make a baby. The reproductive organs are different in men and women, as they have different roles in the reproductive process.

Adults have special sex cells called gametes. The creation of a new baby begins when a male sex cell (Sperm) unites with a female sex cell (egg). This process is called fertilization. The male reproductive system makes the sperm to fertilize the female egg. The female system produces eggs and sustains the baby during its development in the uterus. After a baby is born, the mother’s mammary glands, in the breasts, produce milk to feed the baby.

The major function of the reproductive system is to ensure survival of the species. Other systems in the body, such as the endocrine and urinary systems, work continuously to maintain homeostasis for survival of the individual. An individual may live a long, healthy, and happy life without producing offspring, but if the species is to continue, at least some individuals must produce offspring.

 

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What is urinary system?

As well as delivering nutrients around the body, the blood also collects waste products from cells and delivers them to two hardworking organs called kidneys. There, waste and excess fluids are filtered out and processed into a liquid called urine, then passed out of the body.

The urinary system also keeps the volume and pressure of the blood stable by holding water back when there is a shortage, and making more urine when there is too much. This system also maintains a healthy balance of minerals and salts in the body.

The primary organs of the urinary system are the kidneys, which are bean-shaped organs that are located just below the rib cage in the middle of the back. The kidneys remove urea — waste product formed by the breakdown of proteins — from the blood through small filtering units called nephrons, according to the Cleveland Clinic. Each nephron consists of a ball formed of small blood capillaries, called a glomerulus, and a small tube called a renal tubule. Urea, together with water and other waste substances, forms the urine as it passes through the nephrons and down the renal tubules of the kidney.

 

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How long does it take for food to be digested and pooped out?

It may only take you five minutes to eat your dinner, but the food takes 24 hours or more to journey through about 7 m (23 ft) of digestive system.

Meal time

Chewing crushes food and saliva softens it.

+10 seconds

Swallowed food travels to the stomach where it is churned into chyme.

+4 hours

Partially digested chyme passes from the stomach to the small intestine to be broken down even more.

+7 hours

As digested food squeezes through the small intestine, nutrients enter the bloodstream.

+9 hours

Waste passes to the large intestine where excess water is re-absorbed.

+24-72 hours

Undigested waste finally leaves the body as faeces.

 

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What is digestive system in anatomy?

There are four main stages along the digestive tract. The first is the mouth, which cuts and chews food into small chunks. The second is the stomach, where food is churned into a liquid called chyme. Inside the small intestine, the chyme is broken down into nutrients that can be absorbed and carried to the body’s cells. Finally, anything not used enters the large intestine, where it dries out to become faeces.

Mouth

The mouth is the beginning of the digestive tract. In fact, digestion starts here as soon as you take the first bite of a meal. Food is chewed up inside the mouth.

Parotid gland

This is the largest salivary gland.  In humans, the two parotid glands are present on either side of the mouth and in front of both ears. They are the largest of the salivary glands. Each parotid is wrapped around the mandibular ramus, and secretes serous saliva through the parotid duct into the mouth, to facilitate mastication and swallowing and to begin the digestion of starches.

Teeth

The teeth grind down food, making it easier to swallow.  Teeth are like bones, but they are a lot stronger. They have four tissues: enamel, dentin, cementum, and pulp.

Epiglottis

The epiglottis is a flexible flap at the superior end of the larynx in the throat. It acts as a switch between the larynx and the esophagus to permit air to enter the airway to the lungs and food to pass into the gastrointestinal tract. A flap of cartilage stops food or liquid entering the trachea (windpipe) during swallowing.

Tongue

Food moves to the back of the mouth where the tongue helps push it down the throat. When you’re ready to swallow, the tongue pushes a tiny bit of mushed-up food called a bolus toward the back of your throat and into the opening of your esophagus, the second part of the digestive tract.

Pharynx

The pharynx, or throat, connects the mouth to the oesophagus. Branching off the pharynx is the esophagus, which carries food to your stomach, and your trachea or windpipe, which carries air to your lungs.

Salivary glands

These glands release saliva into the mouth during chewing. It also helps break down carbohydrates (with salivary amylase, formerly known as ptyalin) and lubricates the passage of food down from the oro-pharynx to the esophagus to the stomach.

Oesophagus

Muscles in this tube push swallowed food from the throat to the stomach. When you swallow food, the walls of the oesophagus squeeze together (contract). This moves the food down the oesophagus to the stomach.

Liver

The liver has many functions, but two of its main functions within the digestive system are to make and secrete bile, and to cleanse and purify the blood coming from the small intestine containing the nutrients just absorbed.

Stomach

Food is churned by muscle contractions and broken down by acid juices into creamy chyme. When it leaves the stomach, food is the consistency of a liquid or paste. From there the food moves to the small intestine.

Gallbladder

The gallbladder is a pear-shaped reservoir that sits just under the liver and stores bile. Bile is made in the liver then if it needs to be stored travels to the gallbladder through a channel called the cystic duct. A green fluid, called bile, is released by the gallbladder to help break down fatty foods.

Pancreas

The pancreas releases enzymes, which help to digest food, into the small intestine. These enzymes break down protein, fat, and carbohydrates from the food we eat.

Small intestine

Most digestion takes place in the small intestine, where nutrients are absorbed by the bloodstream. The small intestine continues the process of breaking down food by using enzymes released by the pancreas and bile from the liver. Bile is a compound that aids in the digestion of fat and eliminates waste products from the blood. 

Ascending colon

This is the first part of the large intestine. It is usually located on the right side of the body, extending from the cecum upward. Although the colon is a continuous structure, the piece that is considered the ascending colon ends where the colon bends, just below the liver and gallbladder.

Large intestine

Watery waste from the small intestine is absorbed into the large intestine to form faeces. The ileocecal valve of the ileum (small intestine) passes material into the large intestine at the cecum. Material passes through the ascending, transverse, descending and sigmoid portions of the colon, and finally into the rectum. From the rectum, the waste is expelled from the body.

Descending colon

This is the last part of the large intestine. Its function is to reabsorb fluids and process waste products from the body and prepare for its elimination. The colon consists of four parts: descending colon, ascending colon, transverse colon, and sigmoid colon. 

Appendix

The appendix sits at the junction of the small intestine and large intestine. It’s a thin tube about four inches long. Normally, the appendix sits in the lower right abdomen. Digestive bacteria are stored here in case levels in the intestines need topping up.

Rectum

The rectum is an 8-inch chamber that connects the colon to the anus. This muscular chamber holds and expels faeces.

Anus

The anus is the last part of the digestive tract. It consists of the pelvic floor muscles and the two anal sphincters (internal and external muscles). Faeces leave through this opening at the end of the digestive tract.

 

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