4- Swallowing Flashcards

1
Q

Describe the composition of saliva

A
Water - saliva is hypotonic 
Potassium and HCO3 (saliva is alkaline)
Mucins (help with lubrication)
Amylase (from salivary glands)
Lingual lipase (from lingual glands)
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2
Q

What is xerostomia?

A

Dry mouth, reduced flow of saliva in oral cavity

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3
Q

What are the salivary glands?

A

Parotid
Submandibular
Sublingual

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4
Q

Describe the control of saliva content

A

Autonomic main regulator
Reduced parasympathetic input leads to dry mouth
Sympathetic stimulates a little saliva production, but also vasoconstriction

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5
Q

What are the phases of swallowing and are they voluntary?

A

Oral preparatory: Voluntary
Pharyngeal: Involuntary
Oesopharyngeal: Involuntary

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6
Q

What protects the nasal cavity during swallowing?

A

Elevation of the soft palate

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7
Q

What protects the respiratory tract during swallowing?

A

Elevation of the larynx, which closes the epiglottis

Adduction of the vocal cords

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8
Q

Which nerve is responsible for the sensory part of swallowing?

A

Glossopharyngeal (IX)

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9
Q

Which nerve is responsible for innervating the muscles involved in swallowing?

A

Vagus X

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10
Q

Describe the neural control of the gag reflex

A
Mechanoreceptors in wall of pharynx detect a bolus 
Glossopharygneal (IX)
Medulla 
Vagus (X) 
Pharyngeal constrictors
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11
Q

What muscles are involved in the pharyngeal phase?

A

Pharyngeal constrictor muscles, move bolus from posterior aspect of oral cavity to oesophagus

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12
Q

What prevents gastro-oesophageal reflux?

A

Sphincter forms from smooth muscle of distal oesophagus
Intra-abdominal oesophagus gets compressed when intra-abdominal pressure rises
Muscular rosette at cardia
Acute angle of entry of oesophagus

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13
Q

What causes dysphagia?

A

Loss of neural control - eg stroke

Obstruction - eg oesophageal tumour

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14
Q

Describe the pharyngeal phase of swallowing

A

Involuntary
Tongue against hard palate so food cant re-enter mouth
Soft palate elevated to close the nasopharynx
Longitudinal muscles shorten to widen the pharynx for the bolus
Epiglottis closes
Constrictor muscles move bolus
UOS relaxes

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15
Q

Describe the oral phase of swallowing

A

Voluntary
Food moistened by saliva
Muscles of mastication act on temporomandibular joint, buccinator compresses cheeks against teeth
Tongue pushes against hard palate, forcing bolus to posterior oral cavity

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16
Q

Describe the oesophageal phase of swallowing

A

Involuntary
Bolus enters oesophagus and is propelled downwards by striated muscle, then smooth muscle by peristalsis
LOS relaxes to allow bolus into stomach

17
Q

Since acinar cells produce isotonic fluid, how does saliva become hypotonic?

A

More ions reabsorbed than secreted from saliva
Ductal cells impermeable to water so it cant follow ions out of cell
So more ions out than water, so saliva becomes hypotonic

18
Q

What is the main neural control of saliva?

A

Parasympathetic