Pancreas and Liver Flashcards

1
Q

What is the role of the exocrine pancreas and liver?

A

+ Accessory organs for intestines
- provide excretions (digestive enzymes, HCO3) directly into intestine lumen, to digest CHO, protein, lipid in small intestine

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2
Q

What are the physical features of the pancreas?

A

+ Lies retroperitoneal (except tail), close to major blood vessels, difficult to access

+ Lies in C-shaped curve of duodenum with a head, neck, body, tail and uncinate process

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3
Q

Where does the pancreatic blood supply come from?

A

+ Mainly via the splenic artery (from coeliac trunk)

+ Pancreatico-duodenal arteries (from SMA (superior mesenteric artery) or coeliac trunk)

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4
Q

What are the primary functions of the exocrine pancreas?

A

+ Neutralise acid; digestive pro-enzymes secreted via pancreatic duct to 2nd part of duodenum

+ Deliver enzymes for macronutrient digestion in duodenum

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5
Q

What are the acinar cells of the pancreas?

A

+ Main secretory cells
+ Clusters are connected by intercalated ducts
+ Converge on collecting ducts
+ Lining cells add ions and secretions

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6
Q

What are the phases of digestion that exocrine pancreas regulation is dependent on?

A

+ Cephalic
+ Gastric
+ Intestinal

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7
Q

What is involved in the cephalic phase of digestion?

A

Vagus nerve stimulates pancreatic secretions by releasing ACh and VIP

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8
Q

What is involved in the gastric phase of digestion?

A

Medicated by vagovagal reflexes

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9
Q

What is involved in the intestinal phase of digestion?

A

Controlled hormonally by secretin (in response to H+) and CCK (in response to aas, fatty acids, monoacylglycerols)

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10
Q

What are the secretory cells involved with the exocrine pancreas?

A

+ Acinar cells

+ Ductal cells

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11
Q

What is the role of zymogen granules, and where are they found?

A

+ They house inactive (and active) digestive enzymes

+ Secreted in respins to CCK (& VIP, gastric-releasing peptide)

+ Found in acinar cells

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12
Q

What happens to zymogen granules upon activation?

A

They are exocytosed from acinar cells into luminal space

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13
Q

What are features of acinar cells?

A

+ Basolateral CCK & ACh binding stimulates Cl- transport across apical mambrane.

+ Facilitates paracellular Na+ & water movement

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14
Q

What are features of ductal cells?

A

+ Secretin & ACh bind in ductal cells

+ Activates cystic fibrosis transmembrance conductance
regulators, Cl- channels, Cl-HCO3- co-transporters.

+ Transporters recycle Cl- and HCO3-

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15
Q

What is the effect of pancreatic secretion flow rate?

A

+ Alters ionic conentration: increased flow rate = HCO3- conc. increased, Cl- conc. decreased

+ Na+ and K+ conc. are not affected by flow rate

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16
Q

What are the non-biliary liver functions?

A

+ Metabolism: pf CHO, protein, fat
- stores/releases CHO i.e glycogen (glycogenolysis, gluconeogenesis)

+ Detoxification:

  • removal of ammonia and ethanol + drug biotransformations
  • produces large amount of lymph

+ Immune system functions:
- removal of intestinal bacteria from portal blood so there is none in systematic circulation

17
Q

What are features of the liver?

A

+ Lies across the upper abdomen, under the diaphragm

+ Surrounded by peritoneum except for the bare area (related to diaphragm posteriorly)

+ May be palpable below the costal margin

+ Deep to its peritoneal covering, liver is completely surrounded by Glisson’s capsule

18
Q

What is Glisson’s capsule?

A

+ A thin connective tissue layer that sends extensions into the organ, inbetween the lobules

+ Not strong enough to hold sutures that may be required following trauma to the liver

19
Q

By which structures is the liver supplied?

A

+ Hepatic portal vein brings absorbed nutrients from stomach and gut
+ Hepatic portal artery supplies hepatocytes (liver cells) with oxygen

20
Q

How is bile drained from the liver?

A

+ Hepatocytes secrete bile into canaliculi, across series of bile ducts until they form the common hepatic duct

+ Bile flow from hepatocytes is in OPPOSITE direction of blood from hepatic artery and portal vein

21
Q

Via what structure is venous drainage?

A

Via hepatic veins that enter the inferior vena cava

22
Q

Describe the structure of the liver?

A

+ Left and right lobes (separated by falciform ligament)
+ Quadrate lobe next to gall bladder
+ Posterior surface shows caudate lobe next to IVC
+ Bare area is diaghragmatic surface of liver (no peritoneal covering)

23
Q

What are all of the functions of the liver?

A

+ Synthesis and secretion of bile

+ Storage (of glucose, glycogen, proteins, vitamins and fats)

+ Detoxification (of metabolic waste)

+ Synthesis of blood clotting (and anticoagulant factors (fibrinogen & prothrombin))

24
Q

What are some features of bile?

A

+ Bile pigments are derived as the breakdown products of haemoglobin; Kupffer cells (fixed phagocytes) play a role in their formamtion

+ Bile salts responsible for detergent and emulsifying effect of bile on fats

+ Increase absorption of fats by small intestine

25
Q

What are the constituents of bile?

A
\+ Bile pigments (chiefly bilirubin)
\+ Cholesterol
\+ Phospholipids 
\+ Fatty acids
\+ Water
\+ Electrolytes
26
Q

What are relations of liver between neighbouring structures?

A
\+ Right kidney and suprarenal gland
\+ Diaghpragm with lungs and pleura above (superior)
\+ Stomach, duodenum (posterior)
\+ Abdominal wall and ribcage (anterior)
\+ Hepatic fixture and transverse colon
\+ Gallbladder and portal triad
27
Q

How does the hepatobiliary system function?

A

+ Bile goes from common bile duct into duodenum or gallbladder

+ Sphincter of Oddi controls path into small intestine:

  • contracted: gallbladder contraction forces bile down common bile duct
  • relaxed: bile flows down common bile duct to duodenum

+ Sphincter relaxation regulated primarily by CCK

28
Q

What is the function of the gallbladder?

A

+ Stores and distributes bile - in concentrated form

+ Contracts to ecpel bile in response to CCK (same as Sphincter of Oddi to relax)

+ Vagal stimulation causes weak gallbladder contraction

+ Somatostatin & noradrenaline inhibit bile acid secretion

29
Q

What does exocrine pancreas regulation occur via?

A

+ Via stimulatory effects of secretin and CCK

+ Via inhibitory effetcs of somatostatin

30
Q

What is storage/secretion of substrates by the liver dependent upon?

A

The fed/fasted state

31
Q

What is the relationship between the pancreas and the stomach?

A

The pancreas is in direct contact with the stomach and connects to the duodenum via a collection of ducts - main & accessory pancreatic ducts - to openings (major & minor duodenal papilla)