Grade 4 Chapter 5 Human Body Ebook 910228475 1730874803
Grade 4 Chapter 5 Human Body Ebook 910228475 1730874803
Teeth
and
Human Digestive
Body System
NPSNAFLNORTH|
KOCL|May2021
Content
My Teeth Page 3
Types of Teeth Page 4 - 11
Tooth Anatomy Page 12
Important Points – Teeth Page 13
Digestive System Page 14
Charaka Page 21
Flow Chart of Digestion Page 22
Points to remember Page 23
NPSNAFLNORTH|
KOCL|May2021
My Teeth
Hi! I'm your tooth, Dantu.
By the time you turned three years of age, Well, all is not lost because we
the milk teeth were about twenty in will be replaced by our
number. By your thirteenth birthday, you successors, the permanent teeth.
would have lost all of them. We range from 28 to 32 teeth.
Go to Contents page
Page | 3 Go to Contents page
Types of teeth
I am a molar, flat
I'm a canine and broader than
lodged the pre-molars.
beside the We are the last
incisors. We but not the least,
are four three teeth on
sharp teeth, both sides of your
two on either jaws. We do a
side of the great job by
incisors on crushing and
each jaw. We grinding those
tear food. crunchy carrots
you like so much!
Go to Contents page
Page | 5 Go to Contents page
Teeth
Come, let us see what I am made up of. Let's take a journey from the crown to
the root of the tooth. 4. Dentine – 2. Enamel –
the second outermost hard
5. The pulp contains the nerves
layer of the layer covering
and blood vessels of the tooth.
tooth the crown
It is underneath the dentine.
This is the bit which hurts when
1. The crown is the
you have a toothache!
part of the tooth above
the gum line.
6. Cementum
– outside
Bone
layer of the
root
7. The root is the part Blood vessel
of the tooth below the
gum line.
8. Nerve
3. Gum
Go to Contents page
Page | 6 Go to Contents page
1. The visible part of the tooth is called the crown.
2. The enamel is the tough, shiny, white outer surface of
the teeth.
3. The gums, a soft tissue, surrounds the base of the teeth.
4. The hard but porous tissue located under both the
enamel and cementum of the tooth is called the dentine.
It is harder than the bone below.
5. Pulp is the soft centre of a tooth which contains blood
vessels and nerves to nourish the dentine.
6. Cementum is a layer of tough, yellowish, bone-like tissue
that covers the root of a tooth. It helps hold the tooth in
the socket.
7. The root of the tooth is like an anchor which extends into
the jawbone.
8. The nerves around each tooth transmit signals
(conveying messages like hot, cold or pain) to and from
the brain. Blood vessels are tubes present in the centre
part of the tooth (pulp), through which blood circulates.
Go to Contents page
Page | 7 Go to Contents page
So, you see, we have a lot to be taken care of. We are called healthy only if we
are clean, strong and have healthy gums.
Go to Contents page
Page | 8 Go to Contents page
If you want to make your dentist happy, you can take care of us in three ways:
a. eating the right food to maintain healthy teeth
b. using the right brushing techniques and
c. maintain good oral hygiene
Chewing on fibre-rich
foods like carrots and
sugarcane gives us and
our gums good exercise!
Go to Contents page
Page | 9 Go to Contents page
Follow good brushing techniques to maintain good oral hygiene.
Go to Contents page
Page | 10 Go to Contents page
Dos Don’ts
Rinse your mouth with water after Do not eat anything, or drink
eating. sugary drinks after you brush your
teeth at night.
Brush your teeth in the morning Do not share your toothbrush with
and before going to bed. anyone.
Massage your gums with your Don’t use the same toothbrush for
finger. more than 6 months or after
getting sick.
Clean your tongue with a tongue Don’t use a hard bristled brush or
cleaner after brushing your teeth. a brush with too long a handle.
Replace your toothbrush when the
bristles begin to wear down.
Have dental check-up every six
months.
Go to Contents page
Page | 11 Go to Contents page
Tooth Anatomy
Go to Contents page
Page | 12 Go to Contents page
Let’s look at a few key words and some important points
Go to Contents page
Page | 13 Go to Contents page
DIGESTIVE SYSTEM
Now that you know about the importance of us (your teeth), who
help you chew and swallow your food, I would like to ask you - have
you wondered where your food goes after you eat it? Let us now
explore the interesting journey that the food you swallow follows:
The thought of sinking his teeth into it made him thrilled. The
flavours that were about to dance across his tongue made him want
to jump with joy.
Go to Contents page
Page | 14 Go to Contents page
Vinod took a big bite of his burger and
chomped it loudly using all the teeth
that he could engage. His teeth
chewed the food into smaller pieces
and the salivary glands produced a
digestive juice called Saliva.
It breaks down carbohydrates into simple sugars. A small flap of tissue, called the
Epiglottis, at the back of the mouth, prevents the food from entering the nasal
passages.
As the partially digested food called the Bolus travels down, the epiglottis covering
the throat prevents the food from entering the respiratory system.
Go to Contents page
Page | 15 Go to Contents page
Uvula
Tongue
The muscles in the oesophagus tighten and loosen one after the other, to push
the food into his stomach.
This wave like movement which allows the food to be pushed into the stomach
through the oesophagus is called as Peristalsis.
In the stomach, partial digestion takes place. The stomach is a hollow sac-like
organ which churns the burger into a fine paste called chyme (kahym)while
releasing acids and enzymes for the breakdown of the burger.
The acid kills harmful germs called bacteria that may be present in the burger.
Go to Contents page
Page | 17 Go to Contents page
The partially digested food from Vinod’s stomach is now pushed into the small
intestine.
The small intestine is the real hero of the digestive system, where juices of the
digestive organs mix with the food to continue the rest of digestion.
First, The liver produces bile, which absorbs and breaks down fats.
The anus is the opening at the lower end of the digestive tract that expels the
remaining undigested food, also called as the waste (faeces(fee-seez) / excreta).
Go to Contents page
Page | 19 Go to Contents page
Why is the small intestine the hero of the digestive system?
Go to Contents page
Page | 20 Go to Contents page
Charaka (1st Century AD)
Go to Contents page
Page | 21 Go to Contents page
Flow Chart
of Digestion
Go to Contents page
Page | 22 Go to Contents page
Points to remember
Points to remember
Vocabulary
digestive juice • Digestion is a process which changes food into simple
mouth substances, which the body is able to use.
epiglottis
• The mouth, food pipe, stomach, small intestine, large
saliva
food pipe intestine and rectum form the human digestive system.
stomach • Digestion of food is completed in the small intestine.
small intestine
liver • Useful substances from the digested food enter the blood
pancreas from the small intestine.
large intestine
• The undigested food is thrown out of the body through
rectum
anus the anus in the form of stools.
bacteria
Go to Contents page
Page | 23 Go to Contents page