12 - Function Of The DS Flashcards

1
Q

What are the GI functions?

A

Ingest
Digest
Absorb
Defecate

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2
Q

What does digestion include?

A

Mechanical breakdown

Chemical digestion

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3
Q

What do extrinsic salivary glands secrete?

A

Serous, enzyme rich saliva in response to:

Ingested food which stimulates chemoreceptors and mechanoreceptors and to the thought of food

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4
Q

In the stomach how much gastric fluid do the gastric glands secrete

A

400 - 800 cm3

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5
Q

What is chime

A

Bolus + gastric fluid

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6
Q

What do chief cells secrete?

A

Pepsinogen

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7
Q

What do parietal cells secrete

A

HC1 and Lipases

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8
Q

What does HC1 do

A

Hydrolyses pepsinogen to pepsin

Kills bacteria
Denatures proteins and softens fibrous tissues in food
Activates pepsin and renin
Renders calcium and iron salts suitable for absorption
Begins the hydrolysis of sucrose

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9
Q

What does the pancreatic juice do

A

Neutralises almost all of the acid immediately as the chime enters the duodenum

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10
Q

What does bile help do

A

Neutralise the stomach acid

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11
Q

What are the two basic routes by which molecules will enter the blood?

A

Hepatic portal vein

Fats are transported up to the left subclavian vein

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12
Q

Where are chylomicrons made?

A

In the ER of absorptive cells of mucosal villi cells

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13
Q

What do chylomicrons do?

A

Transport dietary lipids from intestines, via lymphatic system and then bloodstream to aidipose, cardiac and muscle tissue

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14
Q

What are triglycerides hydrolysed by

A

Lipoprotein lipase to free fatty acids and glycerol

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15
Q

What is a lacteal

A

A lymphatic capillary that absorbs dietary fats in the villi of the small intestine

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16
Q

What starts the hydrolysis of proteins in the stomach?

A

Pepsin

17
Q

Where is trypsin produced

A

In the pancreas

18
Q

What happens in the duodenum

A

It catalyses the hydrolysis of peptide bonds:

Proteins to peptides

19
Q

What is chymotrypsin

A

A pancreatic enzyme acting in the duodenum where it performs proeteolysis

20
Q

Amino acid molecules are absorbed into the bloodstream via … dependant amino acid transporters

A

Na+

21
Q

Amino acids and small peptides are absorbed where

A

Into the small intestine §

22
Q

What hydrolyses proteins to peptides

A

Trypsin and chymotrypsin

23
Q

What hydrolyse peptides to individual amino acids

A

Brush borders

24
Q

What is glucose absorbed by?

A

Epithelial cells using a protein carrier

25
Q

Where are electrolytes absorbed?

A

In the small intestine

26
Q

Where are vitamins K and B absorbed

A

Large Intestine

27
Q

Where are most dietary vitamins absorbed>

A

Small intestine

28
Q

What are the two types of nervous control of the GI tract?

A

Intrinsic control - activity of the nerve plexuses near the GI tract initiating short reflexes
Extrinsic controls - long reflexes arising within or outside the GI tract