Hunger contractions, Thirst, and Vomition
The act of grasping food into mouth is called prehension.
- Different methods are applied by different species for prehension, e.g. Dog and Cat: use their tongue, Horse and Goats through lips.
- For drinking purpose also, different techniques are applied by animals. E.g. Cat, cannines lap the water with their tongue, some sucks and some lap.
- 1st step of digestion
- Process of chewing ingested food and making it smaller when it mixed with saliva and making bolus ready to swallow
- Saliva play important role in mastication as it helps to soften the food and lubricate the food.
- Lower jaw movement with crushing part of teeth helps in chewing.
- Tongue and other Muscles like facial, elevator ,suprahyoidal helps in mastication
- Importance
- helps to convert food particles into smaller particles
- mixing of food
- helps to increase surface area for digestion and enzymatic action
- Help in forming bolus and make it easy for swallowing.
- The process of swallowing is called deglutition. It is a complex process
Stages:
I. Oral phase
- Tongue presses bolus into oropharynx
- Voluntary process
- Soft palate blocks entry to nasal cavity.
II. Pharyngeal phase
- When bolus reaches pharynx, several actions initiates.
- It involves movement of bolus from pharynx into esophagus.
- Vocal folds closed to prevent airway to lungs
- Larynx, pulled up with epiglottis to cover entry to trachea.
- Upper esophageal sphincter opens to allow passage to esophagus.
III. Esophageal phase
- Tongue presses backward and peristaltic contraction in pharynx occurs resulting in the movement of bolus into esophagus.
Note: When bolus is not delivered in ‘one pass’ secondary waves of peristalsis are initiated which will deliver bolus to stomach