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Digestive System

Description: icse biology
Number of Questions: 20
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Tags: icse biology Animal Anatomy
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How many teeth are present in milk teeth set?

  1. 20

  2. 32

  3. 44

  4. 16

  5. 28


Correct Option: A
Explanation:

Any of the temporary first teeth of a young mammal is called milk tooth, baby tooth or primary tooth. The number of baby teeth is 20 (ten at every jaw) that is much less than the number of adult teeth. The primary teeth get replaced at a baby's later age by a set of 32 permanent teeth.

The soft connective tissue present in the central space of tooth is called

  1. ivory

  2. pulp

  3. dentine

  4. enamel

  5. cement


Correct Option: B
Explanation:

The dental pulp is the part in the centre of a tooth, which is made up of living connective tissues and cells, called odontoblasts.

What is the hardest substance in the body that covers the crown of each tooth?

  1. Dentine

  2. Cement

  3. Ivory

  4. Pulp

  5. Canines


Correct Option: C
Explanation:

Ivory is the material from which the teeth and tusks of animals are made. It is also called as enamel. It covers the surface of the tooth or tusk. 

The process of movement of food particles from oesophagus to stomach is called

  1. epiglottis

  2. ingestion

  3. peristalsis

  4. digestion

  5. swallowing


Correct Option: C
Explanation:

Peristalsis is a distinctive pattern of smooth muscle contractions that propels food distally through the oesophagus and intestines. It is an automatic and important process that moves food through the digestive system.

The back part of the roof of the mouth cavity is called

  1. tongue

  2. soft palate

  3. larynx

  4. parotid gland

  5. enamel


Correct Option: B
Explanation:

The soft palate, known as velum or muscular palate is the soft tissue constituting the back of the roof of the mouth in mammals. It is movable, and consists of muscle fibres sheathed in mucous membrane.

Which of the following salivary glands can secrete the acidic fluid saliva?

  1. Sublingual gland

  2. Peridontal membrane

  3. Pulp cavity

  4. Alimentary canal

  5. Digestive gland


Correct Option: A
Explanation:

The sublingual gland is the smallest of the three glands. It is situated beneath the mucous membrane of the floor of the mouth at the side of the fraenulum, in contact with the sublingual depression on the inner surface of the mandible. It is narrow, flattened, shaped somewhat like an almond and weighs nearly 2 gm.

How much quantity of food can be carried by our stomach?

  1. 2 to 3 L

  2. 1 to 1.5 L

  3. 1 to 2 L

  4. 0 to 1 L

  5. 3 to 4 L


Correct Option: A
Explanation:

The stomach when completely full can be stretched to hold about 2 to 3 litres of food. The average time for gastric emptying is about 4 hours that varies according to the quantity and type of food consumed. A light meal can be emptied from the stomach in about 2 hours, while a large heavy meal may require up to 6 hours.

The muscular tube that starts with mouth and ends at the anus is called

  1. digestive gland

  2. alimentary canal

  3. oesophagus

  4. molars

  5. vermiform appendix


Correct Option: B
Explanation:

Alimentary canal, called digestive tract is the pathway by which food enters the body and solid wastes are released. The alimentary canal includes the mouth, pharynx, oesophagus, stomach, small intestine, large intestine and anus.

The opening of stomach into the intestine is called

  1. sphincter

  2. ileum

  3. villi

  4. jejunum

  5. pylorus


Correct Option: E
Explanation:

The pylorus is the region of stomach that connects to duodenum. The internal surface of pylorus is covered with a mucous membrane lining that secretes gastric juice.

Which of the following enzymes is present in mouth?

  1. Amylase

  2. Pepsinogen

  3. Trypsin

  4. Maltase

  5. Lactase


Correct Option: A
Explanation:

Amylase is secreted by salivary ducts in the mouth, and helps to digest starch into simple cabohydrates.

The yellowish-green, watery fluid produced in the liver is called

  1. plasma

  2. CSF

  3. saliva

  4. lymph

  5. bile


Correct Option: E
Explanation:

Bile or gall is a bitter tasting, dark green to yellowish brown fluid produced by the liver of most vertebrates that aids the process of digestion of lipids in the small intestine. In many species, it is stored in the gallbladder and is discharged into the duodenum during digestion.

The enzyme present in the saliva is called

  1. lipase

  2. rennin

  3. ptyalin

  4. sucrase

  5. pepsin


Correct Option: C
Explanation:

Ptyalin or amylase present in saliva catalyses the hydrolysis of starch into maltose and dextrin.

Which of the following is a part of intestinal ileum?

  1. Duodenum

  2. Jejunum

  3. Villi

  4. Bile

  5. Rectum


Correct Option: C
Explanation:

Intestinal villi are small, finger like projections that protrude from the epithelial lining of the intestinal wall. Each villus is approximately 0.5 to 1.6 (millimetres) in length and has many microvilli. The villi increase the surface area of the ileum for absorption.

The enzyme required for the conversion of soluble milk protein to insoluble paracasein is called

  1. pepsin

  2. rennin

  3. sucrase

  4. lipase

  5. maltase


Correct Option: B
Explanation:

Rennin is a proteolytic enzyme synthesised by chief cells in the stomach. Its role in digestion is to curdle or coagulate milk in stomach.

Which of the following is not the function of saliva?

  1. Acts as solvent in dissolving food particles

  2. Digests starch

  3. Aids in water balance in the body

  4. Cleans the mouth

  5. Covers and fixes the root in position


Correct Option: E
Explanation:

It is the function of cement, a bone like structure covering and fixing the root in position. The function of the cement is not only to seal the restoration on the tooth, but also in some cases to support the retention of the restoration.

The narrow, worm-shaped tube that projects from the blind end of the caecum of large intestine is called

  1. vermiform appendix

  2. pylorus

  3. alimentary canal

  4. sublingual gland

  5. parotid gland


Correct Option: A
Explanation:

The vermiform appendix is a small, finger-sized structure found at the end of our small caecum, and it is located near the beginning of the large intestine.

The product of digestion formed by the action of the enzyme ptyalin on the substrate starch in the mouth is called

  1. polypeptide

  2. glucose

  3. maltose

  4. fructose

  5. glycerol


Correct Option: C
Explanation:

The saliva contains ptyalin or salivary amylase, which starts degrading the starch where the chain is linear. It is an enzyme that breaks the bond joining two sugars together and forms fragments of soluble starches. It then breaks these down further, and the final product is a unit of two glucose molecules known as maltose. This substance is then broken down to glucose in the intestine.

The pulp like form attained by the food when it stays in the stomach for about 3 hours is called

  1. chyme

  2. epiglottis

  3. pylorus

  4. villi

  5. sphincter


Correct Option: A
Explanation:

Chyme is a thick semifluid mass of partially digested food and digestive secretion, i.e. formed in the stomach and intestine during digestion. 

What is the function of bile during the process of digestion?

  1. Breakdown of peptides into amino acids

  2. Emulsification of proteins

  3. Breakdown of starch into glucose

  4. Emulsification of fats

  5. Breakdown of proteins into peptides


Correct Option: D
Explanation:

Bile does not contain any enzymes for the breakdowm of complex food material. They simply emulsify the fats.

The pigments present in the digestive fluid bile are called

  1. carotenoids

  2. haemoglobin

  3. erythrocytes

  4. biliverdin and bilirubin

  5. chlorophyll


Correct Option: D
Explanation:

Biliverdin and bilirubin are the pigments that give bile its colour. These are produced by the breakdown of the dead and worn out red blood cells. Biliverdin is a green pigment formed by the catabolism of haemoglobin, and converted to bilirubin in the liver. It may also arise from oxidation of bilirubin.

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