E-Learning - Technical/Medical Demo

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Elearning
51
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Description

Digestive System

Vocal Characteristics

Language

English

Voice Age

Middle Aged (35-54)

Accents

North American (General) North American (US General American - GenAM)

Transcript

Note: Transcripts are generated using speech recognition software and may contain errors.
Welcome to the module overview of the digestive system. The digestive system is Available Science Lab, in which dynamic mechanical operations and staggeringly complex chemical reactions initiate a chain of events that fuel the body. This module introduces you to the functions of the digestive system, the organs that connect to form the gastrointestinal G I tract and the tissues that comprise the G I tract. It also acquaint you with the structure that helps keep the organs in place the peritoneum. By the end of this module, you will be able to define digestion and identify the major functions and organs of the digestive system. Compare the tissue layers that comprise the walls of the G I tract. Explain how food moves through the G I system. Describe the para Tony um, and its function. The term digestion refers to the operation of converting food to fuel. It includes the chemical and mechanical processes that decompose food into products the body uses for growth and cellular regeneration. Biologists call the digestive system and open system, which implies the exchange of energy energy conversion. The digestive system takes one form of energy food and changes it into other forms of energy. Click each tab to learn more, starting at the outside surface and moving forward into the Lumen. The walls of the G I tract are made up of four layers of issues. These 40 she layers air found in all major sections of the Alma Terry track, except for the esophagus, where the outermost layer is referred to as the Aventine idea rather than the sea Rosa. Depending on the function of the organ, the cellular configuration of the organs can also differ. Locate each of the tissue layers in this cross section of the small intestine. Click each highlighted tab to learn more.