Histology of the Pancreas Flashcards

1
Q

Where is the pancreas located?

What is it attached to?

A

located in the retroperitoneal space

attached to the duodenum and spleen
at level of ~2nd lumbar vertebra

oblique, transverse in position

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2
Q

What is the origin of the pancreas?

A

endodermal in origin

develops from ventral & dorsal pancreatic buds

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3
Q

What defines the border of the head and neck of the pancreas?

A

gastroduodenal artery defines border with neck

yields superior pancreaticoduodenal artery (SPDA)

  • divides into anterior & posterior SPDA
  • branches to duodenum and rt border of head.
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4
Q

What touches the anterior, posterior and inferior surface of the pancreas?

A

anterior surface separated from stomach by lesser sac

posterior surface related to:

aorta, lt. adrenal, lt. renal vessels, and upper 1/3rd of lt. kidney

splenic vein embedded in posterior surface

inferior surface is covered by tranverse mesocolon

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5
Q

Where does the pancreatic tail lie?

Where does the tail terminate?

When may it be injured?

A

short, narrow segment

lies at level of 12th thoracic vertebra

terminates at splenic hilum, within splenophrenic lig.

anteriorly, related to splenic flexure of colon

may be injured during splenectomy (fistula)

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6
Q

What is the main pancreatic duct?

Where does it run? Where does it drain (landmark)? How does it stop backflow?

What does the accessory duct drain?

A

main duct (duct of Wirsung)

runs length of pancreas, merges with common bile duct at ampulla of Vater

2–4mm diameter, ~20 secondary branches

ductal pressure is higher than in common bile duct to prevent backflow, damage

accessory duct (duct of Santorini)

drains superior portion of head & empties separately into duodenum

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7
Q

What are the arterial sources of the pancreas?

A

arterial sources

superior pancreaticoduodenal artery (from gastroduodenal artery)

inferior pancreaticoduodenal artery (from sup. mesenteric artery)

ant. & post. branches of each anastomose

dorsal pancreatic artery (from splenic artery)

great pancreatic artery (from splenic artery)

caudal pancreatic artery (from splenic artery)

numerous other small, un-named branches supply body & tail

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8
Q

What is the venous drainage of the pancreas?

A

generally follows arterial supply

ant. and post. arcades drain head & body

drain to SMV and/or to portal vein

splenic vein drains body & tail

ultimately, all drain into hepatic portal vein - significance?

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9
Q

What are the components of pancreatic exocrine microanatomy?

A

secretory acini and ducts
constitute ~98% of pancreatic mass

acini
20-40 secretory cells coalesce into a sac-like unit
cells secrete digestive enzymes

duct system
tubular network delivers exocrine secretions to duodenum

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10
Q

What do acinar cells secrete? Talk about the product.

A

acinar cells

secrete digestive enzymes

packaged in zymogen granules, released into acinar lumen
- includes amylase, lipase, and trypsinogen

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11
Q

What do ductal cells secrete? What do centroacinar and intercalated duct cells secrete? Where is mucin secreted?

A

ductal cells

secrete water and electrolytes

centroacinar & intercalated duct cells

secrete bicarbonate
  • in larger ducts, some cells secrete mucins
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12
Q

Describe the final digestive juice. Why does it have the pH that it has?

A

final digestive juice - alkaline fluid
- colorless, odorless, isosmotic

  • 500-800ml secreted per day

Enzymes activated in duodenum by acidic environment

pH neutralizes gastric acid & buffers intestinal pH

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13
Q

What are the 4 major cell types in the endocrine pancreas?

What does each one produce?

What are the percentages of cell types present?

A

4 major cell types

a (alpha) cells

25-35% of islet cells
produce glucagon

b (beta) cells

55-65% of islet cells

produce insulin, amylin

d (delta) cells

5-15% of islet cells
produce somatostatin

PP cells

<2% of islet cells

produce pancreatic polypeptide

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14
Q

3 minor cell types of the endocrine pancreas?

A

3 minor cell types

d-1 (delta-1) cells

1% of islet cells

produce VIP

also found in:

exocrine acini

ductal epithelium

EC (beta) cells

1% of islet cells

produce: secretin, motilin, substance P

also found in:

exocrine acini

ductal epithelium

e (epsilon) cells

1% of islet cells

produce ghrelin
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15
Q

What is the primary islet function?

Primary hormones released?

What are they released in response to?

What do they promote?

Stimulatory Inputs?

Inhibitory Inputs?

A

Primary islet hormones:

Insulin
released in response to glucose
promotes uptake of glucose into target tissues
(primarily liver, muscle and fat)

Glucagon
secreted in response to low blood glucose
counter-regulatory hormone
promotes production of glucose from
liver glycogen
glucose precursors

Stimulatory inputs:

glucose, amino acids, glucagon, GIP, CCK, sulfonylurea compounds, b-sympathetic fibers

Inhibitory inputs:

somatostatin, amylin, pancreastatin, α-sympathetic fibers (significance?) ONLY DR KETCHUM KNOWS.

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16
Q

What is the function of pancreatic polypeptide?

Vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP)

Secretin?

Motilin?

Substance P

Ghrelin?

A

Pancreatic polypeptide (regulatory peptide)

stimulates gastric chief cells

inhibits bile secretion and intestinal motility

inhibits pancreatic enzymes and HC03- secretion

Vasoactive Intestinal Peptide (VIP)

similar to action of glucagon (hyperglycemic & glycogenolytic)

also affects secretory activity & motility in gut

stimulates pancreatic exocrine secretion

Secretin

acts locally

stimulates HC03- secretion (in pancreatic juice)

stimulates pancreatic enzyme secretion

Motilin

increases gastric and intestinal motility

Substance P

has neurotransmitter properties

Ghrelin

stimulates appetite - from Greek, “to eat”

17
Q

What is the organization of islets? How does intercellular communication happen? What is the innervation?

A

Animal islets considered “mantle” islets

precise relationship among cells types
generally: b-cells form medulla
a-, d-, & PP-cells form thin cortex (mantle)

Human islets now viewed differently:

  • precise relationship among cells types
  • all cells “randomly” distributed but arrayed along vessels such that all cells see blood

Intercellular communication occurs via:

blood supply

paracrine relationships

junctional communications (gap junctions)

Innervation: sympathetics & parasympathetics

  • islet-acinar axis (islet acinar portal system)
18
Q

What does insulin regulate in addition to metabolism? What does insulin trigger the release of?

A

Islets of Langerhans within the exocrine pancreas have a specific purpose

  • insulin regulates both metabolism and secretion of pancreatic acinar nutrients in the gastrointestinal tract

Will stimulate insulin secretion via nervous and hormonal pathways

  • insulin released will not only regulate blood glucose, but will also potentiate exocrine pancreatic secretion
  • insulin also stimulates other acinar cell functions, such as transport of amino acids or glucose, as well as protein and enzyme synthesis
  • insulin directly regulates the acinar pancreas
  • endogenous insulin potentiates zymogen release
  • insulin has both short-term and long-term effects on the exocrine pancreas

A suppressive role of the islet-acinar axis via endogenous somatostatin and/or pancreatic polypeptide is suggested

19
Q

What is the first sign of pancreatic dysfunction?

A

Appearance of fat in the stool.

20
Q

What do delta-1 cells stimulate in the body?

A

vasodilation, increase arterial BP, heart contractility increases, increased glycogenolysis

21
Q

What percentage of the pancreas is taken up by endocrine cells? Where are these cells?

A

Endocrine pancreas

<2% of total cell mass is taken up by endocrine cells

cells sequestered in Islets of Langerhans