00:00:00
In the summer of 1822, a French-Canadian fur-trapper
named Alexis St. Martin was going about his
00:00:05
business near Lake Michigan, when he was shot
by a hunter, right in the stomach.
00:00:09
The wound was severe, and everyone expected
St. Martin to die that night.
00:00:14
But…he didn’t.
00:00:15
A local army doctor named William Beaumont
kept him alive.
00:00:19
In fact, Beaumont performed so many surgeries
on the injury over the next several months,
00:00:23
that he decided, somewhat questionably, to
just keep St. Martin’s stomach wound open.
00:00:29
St. Martin was left with a hole, or fistula,
in his abdominal wall, which allowed anyone
00:00:33
to see right into his stomach.
00:00:35
Now, it’s probably hard to work as a fur
trapper with a hole in your guts, but Beaumont
00:00:39
saw -- or possibly created -- an opportunity.
He hired St. Martin -- technically as a handyman,
00:00:46
but really as a guinea pig.
00:00:47
Over several years and some 238 experiments,
Beaumont recorded what St. Martin ate, and
00:00:53
what his stomach did to his meals.
00:00:55
Sometimes they just skipped the eating part
all together and just shoved some food, tied
00:00:59
to a string, right into the guy’s gut-hole.
00:01:02
Beaumont took samples of gastric juices and
had them analyzed by chemists -- something
00:01:06
no one else had done before -- and he also
noticed that St. Martin’s digestion slowed
00:01:10
at certain times, like when he was sick or
stressed.
00:01:12
I mean, like, beyond the stress of having
a gaping hole in your abdomen.
00:01:15
Through his somewhat questionable research,
Beaumont discovered some major secrets of
00:01:19
the digestive system, like that the stomach’s
extremely strong acids and muscular contractions
00:01:23
break down food, and that some foods are more
digestible or less digestible than others,
00:01:28
and that the brain can affect the stomach.
00:01:30
Beaumont’s findings -- as well as his methods of clinical
observation -- revolutionized the field of physiology.
00:01:36
And St. Martin? Don’t worry about him. He
lived to be 83 years old, in great health.
00:01:42
And a hole in his guts...
00:01:43
Now, I sincerely hope that you can’t actually
see what’s going on in your stomach, but
00:01:48
lemme tell you, the story there is epic.
00:01:50
In your digestive system’s mission to disassemble
food into its tiniest, most basic molecular
00:01:55
forms, the stretch that runs from your mouth
to your stomach unleashes all of the mechanical
00:02:00
and chemical powers at its disposal.
00:02:02
It physically roughs up food; douses it in
protein-loving, acid-triggered enzymes; reduces
00:02:07
it all into a creamy paste -- and as a bonus,
because it likes you, it also kills a whole
00:02:11
host of harmful invaders that, for whatever reason,
found their way through your face and into your tube.
00:02:16
But your stomach’s not the end of the line
for your food.
00:02:19
Unless…it is.
00:02:20
I mean, most of the time, everything from
your mouth to your stomach prepares food to
00:02:24
be absorbed by your tissues. But sometimes...food
finds its way back up.
00:02:28
Yeah, in case the story of Alexis St. Martin
didn’t make you wanna do this already,
00:02:31
now I’m talking directly about vomiting.
00:02:45
Let’s begin with the beginning: with your
mouth, aka your oral, or buccal, cavity.
00:02:50
Now we don’t usually think of it this way,
but that is where digestion starts -- the
00:02:53
mechanical and chemical breakdown of food
through chewing and enzyme-action.
00:02:58
The inside of your mouth is lined with a tough,
thick layer of stratified squamous epithelium
00:03:02
that can stand up to lots of friction, like
getting scraped by tortilla chips and, like,
00:03:06
grilled cheese sandwiches that maybe were
cooked a little too much on the top.
00:03:09
Your anterior hard palate and the flexible posterior
soft palate form the roof of your mouth.
00:03:14
The hard palate provides, like, a hard surface
for the tongue to mash food against, while
00:03:18
the soft palate forms a movable fold of flesh
that reflexively closes off the nasopharynx
00:03:23
when you swallow, so food gets directed down
your esophagus and not up into your nasal cavity.
00:03:28
We all know what teeth are for, and you have
roughly 32 of them in your basic types that
00:03:33
help you masticate, or chew your food.
00:03:35
The tongue lives on the floor of your mouth,
and is basically just a big muscle that grips
00:03:39
and constantly repositions your food as you
chew.
00:03:42
The resulting ball of mush actually has its
own special name -- it’s a bolus -- and
00:03:46
the tongue rolls it back to the pharynx, in
preparation for swallowing.
00:03:50
But that’s just the physical action that
goes on in your mouth. Just as much destruction
00:03:53
is taking place through chemistry.
00:03:55
The bolus is broken down with the help of
three major pairs of salivary glands that
00:04:00
churn out an average of 1.5 liters of slightly
acidic saliva every day.
00:04:05
More than four soda cans worth of spit. Per
day.
00:04:09
And all that saliva delivers enzymes like
salivary amylase, a digestive enzyme that
00:04:13
breaks down starches into glucose monomers.
00:04:16
Now, once the food enters the pharynx, it’s
propelled by peristalsis into the esophagus,
00:04:20
which, except for the little sphincter at
the end that keeps food moving in the right
00:04:24
direction, is really just a glorified laundry
chute lined with smooth muscle.
00:04:28
The only time you probably even remember that
you have an esophagus is when something’s
00:04:31
stuck in there, or if you’re feeling intense
heartburn, or if you just puked.
00:04:36
But, moving on.
00:04:37
Assuming you have not puked yet, then the
bolus moves on to Dr. Beaumont’s ticket
00:04:42
to fame: The stomach.
00:04:43
The stomach is the stretchiest part of your
digestive tube, capable of holding 2 to 4
00:04:47
liters of material at any given time.
00:04:49
TWO TO FOUR LITERS! That’s a lot of nachos.
Mixed with spit.
00:04:53
But of course it’s much more than just a
storage tank -- it’s lined with the same
00:04:57
four main layers found through most of the
GI tract -- the mucosa, submucosa, muscularis
00:05:02
externa, and serosa -- but it’s got a few
special modifications.
00:05:05
For one thing, the muscularis includes an
additional layer of smooth muscle that gives
00:05:09
it extra strength, allowing the stomach not just to
hold materials, but to actively smush them around.
00:05:15
And the inner mucosa is made up almost entirely
of mucous cells, which produce a protective
00:05:20
coat that keeps the stomach tissues from getting
digested along with your lunch.
00:05:24
This inner lining is dotted with millions
of tiny, deep gastric pits which lead down
00:05:29
to tubular gastric glands. These glands, in
turn, contain various types of secretory cells
00:05:35
that brew up some of the most potent chemicals
in your body.
00:05:37
For example, your stomach has parietal cells
that release hydrochloric acid -- a substance
00:05:41
more acidic than battery acid -- which lays
waste to most of the bacteria, viruses, and
00:05:46
other stuff that could make you sick.
00:05:47
It also helps denature, or change the shape of, proteins
to make it easier for enzymes to digest them.
00:05:52
And maybe more importantly, when the hydrochloric
acid is combined with pepsinogen, an inactive
00:05:57
enzyme that’s secreted by another kind of
stomach cell called chief cells, the mixture
00:06:02
creates the protein-digesting enzyme pepsin.
00:06:05
Together, this super-powered acid and protein-hungry
enzyme can annihilate nearly anything they encounter.
00:06:10
This was apparently something that Beaumont
observed first-hand, by dropping hunks of
00:06:14
meat into a cup filled with St. Martin’s
personal gastric fluids.
00:06:19
He watched the gobbits of food dissolve over
time, which is partly how he discovered the
00:06:23
stomach’s role in digestion was as much
chemical as mechanical.
00:06:27
But with so much mind-blowingly powerful stuff
at your stomach’s disposal, somebody down
00:06:31
there has to be in charge -- so your gastric
glands also contain enteroendocrine cells.
00:06:36
These cells release regulatory hormones, like
serotonin and histamine, which act locally
00:06:41
to trigger other cells, to, say, release more
acid, or contract muscle tissue. And when
00:06:46
the time comes to tamp the action down, they secrete
other hormones like somatostatin, to inhibit secretions.
00:06:51
And then there are G-cells, which produce
the most important hormone for stimulating
00:06:56
gastric activity: gastrin.
00:06:58
Most signals that increase stomach activity
get the job done by increasing the secretion
00:07:01
of gastrin, which then stimulates the release of other
gastric fluids, as well as stomach-muscle activity.
00:07:07
Now, if the smell of baking cookies has ever
made your mouth water and your belly grumble,
00:07:11
then it might not surprise you to learn that
these stomach secretions are ruled by neural
00:07:14
mechanisms as well hormonal ones.
00:07:17
In fact, stomach regulation occurs in three
phases, based on where the food is sensed
00:07:21
-- the brain, the stomach, and the small intestine.
00:07:24
The cephalic phase is the one ruled by your
brain, and it kicks in when you first see,
00:07:29
smell, taste, or even think about food.
00:07:32
That sensory input gets relayed to the hypothalamus,
which stimulates the medulla oblongata, which
00:07:36
then taps the parasympathetic fibers in the vagus nerve.
From there, the signals are sent to the stomach
00:07:41
with the word that, “Hey, we think that maybe cookies
are on the way, so you might want to prepare yourself.”
00:07:45
Now this is a conditioned reflex, so it only works
if you want to eat the food in question. If
00:07:51
I happen to be super-full, or not feeling
well, or somebody puts a pile of squid eyeballs
00:07:55
in front of me, the cephalic phase isn’t
gonna happen.
00:07:58
And no offense if squid eyeballs are totally
your thing, they’re just not my thing.
00:08:02
But say I eat the plate of squid eyeballs
anyway because, you know, I’m trying to
00:08:04
be polite. Well, even without the cephalic
warm up, when that food hits my stomach, local
00:08:10
mechanisms, both neural and hormonal jump
start the gastric phase.
00:08:13
For the next few hours, as my stomach grows
distended from the food, it activates stretch
00:08:18
receptors that again stimulate my medulla and get my
vagus nerves to tell my stomach to turn up the juice.
00:08:24
At the same time, the secretion of gastrin
is activated by other signals, like the rise
00:08:28
in alkalinity caused by the stomach acid getting
neutralized as it does its job.
00:08:32
Conversely, as stomach acidity increases,
it inhibits the release of gastrin.
00:08:36
Now, the third phase of gastric regulation
-- the intestinal phase -- speeds or slows
00:08:40
the rate in which your stomach empties, so
that the small intestine doesn’t get too
00:08:44
overloaded with too much acid -- or with the
creamy paste that your stomach turns your
00:08:49
food into, known as chyme.
00:08:51
Now remember, not a lot of absorption actually
occurs in the stomach.
00:08:55
The stomach is more like a decontamination
tank. Sure, it pummels your food down to a
00:08:59
paste, but it’s also where your body tries to
obliterate any nasties that could make you sick.
00:09:04
As long as food is still in there, your body
has a chance to kind of size it up, and feel
00:09:08
it out, and it reserves the right to eject
anything that it feels is potentially dangerous.
00:09:13
Lots of factors can trigger the stomach’s
urge to purge, or vomit, but the most common
00:09:18
are simply ingesting too much food, or eating
some kind of irritant or toxin, like those
00:09:23
produced by bad bacteria, too much alcohol,
certain drugs, or unappealing foods.
00:09:28
Of course if you’ve ever puked in a moment
of trauma or stress, you know how emotions
00:09:32
and anxiety can also trigger your stomach
to launch its lunch.
00:09:35
That’s the brain influencing the cephalic
phase of gastric regulation again, by sending
00:09:40
extra fight or flight signals to the stomach.
00:09:42
Beaumont noticed this mind-stomach connection
whenever St. Martin’s digestion was affected
00:09:46
by illness or stress -- something you’d
think he’d have felt every time that doctor
00:09:50
came at him with some meat on a string.
00:09:52
If you were able to keep down your lunch down
today, you learned how mechanical and chemical
00:09:55
digestion start in the mouth and continue
in the stomach, where food is pummeled by acids
00:10:00
and enzymes and turned into chyme. We also
looked at the stomach’s cephalic, gastric,
00:10:04
and intestinal phases of digestive regulation.
00:10:07
Thank you to all of our Patreon patrons who
help make Crash Course possible, not only
00:10:11
for themselves, but for everyone through their
monthly contributions. If you like Crash Course
00:10:15
and want to help us keep making videos like
this one, you can go to patreon.com/crashcourse.
00:10:20
Also, a big thank you to Sigmund Leirvåg,
Alexis & Brian Carpenter, and Luke Peterson
00:10:25
for co-sponsoring this episode of Crash Course
Anatomy and Physiology.
00:10:28
This episode was filmed in the Doctor Cheryl
C. Kinney Crash Course Studio, it was written
00:10:32
by Kathleen Yale, edited by Blake de Pastino,
and our consultant is Dr. Brandon Jackson.
00:10:36
It was directed and edited by Nicole Sweeney,
our script supervisor was Valerie Barr, Michael
00:10:40
Aranda was our sound designer, and the graphics
team is Thought Cafe.