The Digestive System Flashcards

1
Q

Name the nerves of the gut wall

A

myenteric plexus and submucosal plexus

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2
Q

What are the layers of the gut wall?

A

mucosa, submucosa, muscularis, externae serosa

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3
Q

What are the layers of the mucosa?

A

muscularis mucosae, lamina propria, epithelium

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4
Q

What are the digestive accessory organs?

A

liver, gallbladder, pancreas

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5
Q

List the salivary glands

A

parotid, sublingual, submandibular

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6
Q

What role does saliva play in digestion?

A

starts digestion, amylase, lipase, bacteriostatic (IgA), high Ca, alkaline, assists swallowing, protects mouth, mouth forms bolus

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7
Q

What stops aspiration?

A

Epiglottis

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8
Q

How can swallowing be visualised?

A

barium swallow = swallow liquid barium imaged by X-Ray

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9
Q

How does a bolus move from the mouth to the stomach?

A

Oesophagus (visualised by endoscopy) –> bolus enters, upper end: voluntary, lower end: involuntary, rapid peristaltic transport

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10
Q

How does the stomach protect itself from its acid environment?

A

Secreted mucus resistant to pepsin (enzymatic). Mucous sticks to walls of stomach, provide physical barrier so acid doesn’t touch stomach itself. Cells come into contact with acid, secrete bicarbonate = highly alkaline = neutralising acid

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11
Q

What is the role of the stomach?

A

food store, wall relaxes so pressure doesn’t rise (repetitive relaxation), contracts rhythmically, secretes acid + proteolytic enzymes, secretes mucus, produce hypertonic chyme from bolus (greater conc of minerals, salt proteins = draw water from vascular system)

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12
Q

What is hypertonic chyme?

A

Becomes hypertonic in stomach, hypertonic chyme from bolus (greater conc of minerals, salt proteins = draw water from vascular system)

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13
Q

What do parietal cells do?

A

Parietal cells: secrete H+ to lumen, HCO3 into capillaries – will move to surface of mucus cells

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14
Q

What is the role of chief cells?

A

Chief cells: secrete pepsinogens –> pepsins – hydrolyse proteins

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15
Q

What is the role of gastrin?

A

Enteroendocrine cells: secret gastrin = mucosa secrete HCL.

Hormone which stimulates secretion of gastric juice and is secreted into bloodstream by stomach wall in response to presence of food.

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16
Q

How long is the small intestine?

A

7 meters

17
Q

What enables the small intestine to have such a large surface area?

A

Microvilli, villi and folding

18
Q

In order list the parts of the small intestine?

A

Duodenum, jejunum, ileum

19
Q

What happens in the duodenum?

A

secrete bicarbonate, water from ECF to make hypertonic chyme isotonic, bile enters small intestine here, liver & pancreas secret alkali = neutralise acidic chyme, liver pancreas and intestine secrete enzymes to complete digestion of chyme. Bile = water, alkali, bile salts (emulsify fat). Absorbs iron

20
Q

Describe the role of the jejunum

A

absorbs sugars, AA, and fatty acids

21
Q

Outline what happens in the ileum

A

absorbs vit b12, bile acids, remaining nutrients

22
Q

Describe the location of the duodenum

A

proximal part of SI, C-shaped, 20-22cm long, curves around head of pancreas

23
Q

List the part of the large intestine in order

A

caecum, ascending colon, transverse, descending, sigmoid

24
Q

How long is the large intestine?

A

1.2 meters

25
Q

Outline the role of the colon

A

Numerous crypts of lieberkuhn: cells produce mucus. Peyer patch (lymphoid tissue) present. Surface epithelial cells absorb water/electrolytes. Water recovery: decreased = dehydration, electrolyte imbalance. Await expulsion. Contain most of GI bacteria: involved in synthesis of vik K B12, breakdown of primary bile acid to secondary

26
Q

What is the role of the rectum?

A

critical mass gives urge to defecate

27
Q

What is the final structure of the digestive system?

A

anus

28
Q

What are the paracrine methods of controlling the digestive system?

A

histamine: controls production of acid in stomach. vasoactive subs: affect blood flow in gut

29
Q

List the endocrine controls of the digestive system

A

SECRETIN: promotes bicarbonate secretion, bile prod, inhibits acid secretion.

CHOLECYSTKININ: promotes release of pancreatic digestive enzymes, bile.

GASTRIN: promotes HCL prod

30
Q

Which parts of the digestive system are under somatic control?

A

somatic: ingestion, excretion

31
Q

List the order of the digestive system.

A

Mouth, saliva, epiglottis, oesophagus, stomach, duodenum, jejunum, ileum, caecum, ascending colon, transverse colon, descending colon, sigmoid, rectum, anus.

32
Q

What is ghrelin and leptin?

A

GHRELIN = hormone prod by stomach = feeling hungry. LEPTIN = hormone prod by fat = feeling full.

33
Q

What are enteroendocrine cells?

A

Enteroendocrine cells include G cells which secrete gastrin, gastric mucosa responds to this hormone by secreting acid.

34
Q

What are crypts of lieberkuhn?

A

Glands that secrete intestinal juice, contain: lipase, lactase, amylase. Found in the small and large intestine

35
Q

What is cholecystokinin?

A

Hormone synthesized/secreted by enteroendocrine cells in the duodenum. Causes release of digestive enzymes and bile from pancreas and gallbladder, respectively, also acts as a hunger suppressant

36
Q

What is secretin?

A

Hormone released into bloodstream by duodenum promotes bicarbonate secretion, bile prod, inhibits acid secretion.