Page:Structure and functions of the body; a hand-book of anatomy and physiology for nurses and others desiring a practical knowledge of the subject (IA structurefunctio00fiskrich).pdf/146

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minutes after the appearance of food there is no hydrochloric acid present and, the food being alkaline, salivary digestion continues. Then, called forth by the presence of the food, the hydrochloric acid appears and salivary digestion ceases in the acid medium. Little digestion of starches or fats takes place, the chief action being on proteins, which are converted into soluble peptones. For besides hydrochloric acid the gastric juice contains two ferments: 1. pepsin, which is particularly active in aiding the digestion of proteins, and 2. rennin, which especially affects milk. Neither hydrochloric acid nor pepsin seems capable of digesting food alone, but each is essential to the other. They are secreted by different types of cells, secretion depending upon the nerve supply and upon the presence of food. Gastric digestion is favored by minute subdivision of the food and by the right proportion of hydrochloric acid, which should be 0.2 per cent. Body temperature is also advantageous. Except that proteins are put in solution and partly digested, little digestion goes on in the stomach, and though the rugæ afford a large absorbing surface, little absorption takes place, although more takes place than in the mouth and in time most foods, except fats, can be absorbed. The time of digestion varies with different foods and in different poeple, but probably three to five hours are necessary. The food leaves the stomach as chyme, a fluid of about the consistency of pea soup.

Vomiting is more or less the reverse of swallowing and is generally preceded by a feeling of nausea, which starts up retching, a more or less involuntary effort of the stomach to throw off its contents. To relieve the retching a long breath is taken, followed by a deep expiration that opens the cardiac end of the stomach and allows the abdominal muscles to force the food out. After much vomiting and prolonged retching the pyloric end of the stomach may be affected and bile will then appear in the vomitus. Artificial vomiting may be produced by irrita-