Page:Encyclopædia Britannica, Ninth Edition, v. 17.djvu/729
Vomiting may, within certain limits, be inhibited by taking a
series of deep and rapid inspirations at a time when the sense of
nausea is becoming unbearable.
True vomiting seems to be impossible without the aid of the
abdominal muscles, as, for example, when the abdomen is laid
open. In such conditions emetics cause active opening of the car
diac orifice and movements of the stomach-walls, but not the full
and free expulsion of the contents. Vomiting is usually a reflex
act, the centre for which lies in the medulla oblongata near the
centre for respiration, though it is reasonable to suppose that it
may occur not only as a reflex act but as a result of direct stimula
tion of the centre or centres associated with it.
Secretions of the Alimentary Canal. Production of the
Alimentary Juices. We have described the movements of
the alimentary tube by which the food is triturated and
agitated, and finally propelled from mouth to anus. One
object of these movements is to mix together the food and
certain solvent juices which are poured upon the food at
various points. We have now to give an account of these
juices and their properties. They are produced in, or
by the agency of, the epithelium cells lining the interior
of glands which are either situated in the walls of the
alimentary canal or which empty their secretion into it.
Though these cells derive the materials necessary to their
metabolic activity from the blood, the substances which
they elaborate and which are characteristic of the secre
tions that they help to form are not found in the blood,
but are products of the activity of the protoplasm of the
cells themselves. The act of secretion is a function of the
living cell, and not a mere act of filtration or diffusion
through the vascular walls to the cell -substance. It often
involves the elaboration of entirely new substances. The
act of secretion is, or may be, under the control of the
nervous system ; it may be started, inhibited, and the
products of the secretion may be variously modified, by
the stimulation of distant nerves. In some glands cer
tainly, and possibly in all, the elaboration of the specific
secretion of the gland takes place in two well-defined
stages, and the two stages are indicated by differences in
the anatomical appearances of the gland-cells.
The characteristic constituents of the several juices
which are specially concerned in the chemical changes of
the alimentary canal are certain so-called "unorganized"
ferments, which we shall, following the suggestion of
Kiihne, denominate enzymes. Like all ferments, these
are capable, under suitable circumstances, of initiating
specific changes in certain bodies with which they are
brought into contact, changes which may be incommen-
surably great when contrasted with the magnitude of the
mass of the ferment engaged. "Unorganized " or, as they
have also been called, " unformed " ferments differ, how
ever, from the " organized " or " formed " in that, whilst
they are the products of the activity of living cells y when
once formed they cease to be living, are unconnected with
any organized form, and have no power of reproduction or
increase.
The enzymes for the most part exert their action un
impaired in the presence of certain bodies which kill the
great majority of organized ferments ; thus salicylic acid
does not hinder peptic and tryptic digestion, whilst it
prevents the putrefactive changes which are very apt to
occur in the latter case, and which are connected with the
development of organized ferments. Certain enzymes, as
the diastatic ferment of saliva and pancreatic juice, are,
however, destroyed by salicylic acid.
As will be shown in detail in the sequel, the secreting
cells of glands which produce enzymes exhibit marked
differences corresponding to different states of activity.
In the case of the secreting cells of the pancreas the
cells appear to produce and store up for a time a body, a
zymoyen, from which subsequently the tryptic enzyme
trypsin is set free. The progress of research may perhaps
establish the existence of zymogens corresponding to the
other enzymes.
Usually the glandular organs which produce the aliment
ary juices contain stored up within them their character
istic enzymes, which may be extracted by digesting the
comminuted organ in water, or still better in glycerin,
which dissolves them nearly all, and furnishes solutions
which preserve their activity long unimpaired. Enzymes
are all insoluble in strong alcohol, so that the tissues
from which they are to be extracted may be first de
hydrated by digestion in absolute alcohol and afterwards
extracted with glycerin. Solutions of enzymes are rendered
inactive by boiling or by exposure to a temperature above
70 C. The principal enzymes of the alimentary canal
belong either to the group of proteolytic or to that of
diastatic or amylolytic ferments : the enzymes of the first
group (pepsin and trypsin) dissolve proteids and effect
their more or less perfect decomposition ; the enzymes
of the second class (as ptyalin and the diastatic ferment
of the pancreas) dissolve starch and produce from it a
series of bodies which will be discussed in reference to the
action of saliva on starch.
Besides the proteolytic and amylolytic ferments, there
occur in the alimentary canal a curdling ferment, an
inverting ferment, and perhaps a fat-decomposing ferment.
All enzymes exert a more energetic action at a moder
ately high than at a low temperature, though the influence
of a rise in temperature is more marked in some cases
than in others. The reaction of the medium in which
they are placed influences remarkably the activity of cer
tain enzymes ; thus pepsin, the proteolytic ferment of the
stomach, is inactive in neutral or alkaline solutions, the pre
sence of a free acid being essential to its activity, whilst
trypsin, the proteolytic ferment of the pancreas, acts with
feebleness in solutions which are neutral or faintly acid,
since it needs for the full exercise of its powers a decidedly
alkaline medium. The enzymes appear to possess the power
of rapidly inducing, at the temperature of the animal body,
in bodies subjected to them similar chemical operations to
those which can be brought about with great slowness by
prolonged heating with dilute mineral acids, or by the
prolonged action of boiling water or superheated steam.
These operations are of the nature of hydrolytic decomposi
tions, that is to say, such as are connected with the union
of the elements of water with the decomposing body.
Salivary Glands and Secretion of Saliva. There are
no secreting glands in the body which have been sub
jected to so elaborate a study as the salivary glands,
whether we consider their structure or the circumstances
which influence or accompany the act of secretion. We
shall therefore give the results of researches on these
glands at much greater length than those referring to the
other glands concerned in the preparation of the aliment
ary juices.
As has been already said, the saliva is secreted by several
glands of which the ducts pour their secretion into the
cavity of the mouth, where it is mingled and constitutes
the "mixed saliva." The chief of these glands are the
parotid, the submaxillary, and the sublingual glands, though
their secretion is mixed with that of small glands (mucous
and serous) scattered through the mucous membrane of
the mouth and tongue, which are included under the term
" buccal " glands.
The salivary glands all belong to the group of acmous
or compound racemose glands. According to the researches
of Heidenhain, they may, however, be divided into two
groups, which he has denominated serous or albuminous
and mucous glands, according to the structure of the celb
of their acini, their chemical characters, and the nature
of the secretion which they elaborate.