GIS19 Motility Of The GI Tract Flashcards

1
Q

Importance of GI motility

A
  1. Retain food at different compartments of GI tract in an appropriate time
  2. Mixing food with digestive secretions —> better digestion
  3. Controlled by autonomic reflexes
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2
Q

Swallowing

A

3 phases:

  1. Oral phase:
    - voluntary
    - transfer of food to pharynx by **tongue (only Cerebral cortex involved)
    - food bolus activates cells in the opening of pharynx
    - -> stimulate **
    swallowing centre in the medulla oblongata
    - -> initiate involuntary swallowing reflex
  2. Pharyngeal and 3. Esophageal phase:
    - involuntary
    - efferent signals trigger motor responses from pharynx, larynx, esophagus and respiratory muscles
    - prevent entrance of food into trachea
    - also need to ***inhibit respiration

ALL controlled by Swallowing centre in medulla

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3
Q

The 3 phases of swallowing

A
  1. Oral phase / buccal phase
    - Transfer of food to pharynx by tongue
  2. Pharyngeal phase
    - **Elevation of soft palate to block nasopharynx to prevent food from entering nasal cavity
    - **
    Tongue blocks oral cavity
    - **Vocal folds close the glottis; **Larynx raised; **Epiglottis swings backward —> prevents food from entering trachea
    - **
    Respiratory centre in the brainstem is inhibited by swallowing
  3. Esophageal phase
    - Esophageal peristalsis
    - ***Relaxation of upper esophageal sphincter
    - Closure of sphincter after passage of food
    - Glottis opens
    - Breathing resumes
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4
Q

Esophagus

A
  • Upper esophageal sphincter (below pharynx) protects airway from swallowed material and gastric reflux
  • Lower esophageal sphincter (entrance of stomach) prevents reflux of gastric content into esophagus
  • Primary peristaltic contractions of the esophagus triggered by:
    —> Food bolus in the esophagus after swallowing
  • Secondary peristaltic contractions triggered by
    —> Distension of esophagus by retained food (to clear any leftover material and reflux from stomach)
  • Swallowing + Esophageal distension also stimulate:
    —> Relaxation (opening) of lower esophageal sphincter
    —> Receptive relaxation of stomach
  • Esophageal peristalsis + Sphincters are regulated ***entirely by Neural control (Vagus + Myenteric NS of esophagus)
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5
Q

Dysphagia

A
  • Difficulties in swallowing
  • causes:
    1. Painful disease of mouth and pharynx e.g. stomatitis, ulcers
  1. Disorders in mechanisms of swallowing
    - Neural (damage of swallowing centre in encephalitis, damage in nerves involved in swallowing)
    - Muscular (muscle dystrophy)
    - Neuromuscular transmission (myasthenia gravis)
    - Motility disorder (Achalasia: LES fail to open)
  2. External compression on esophagus (goitre, enlarged lymph nodes)
  3. Intrinsic disease of esophagus (stricture, esophageal cancer)
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6
Q

Vomiting

A
  • Forceful expulsion of contents from the stomach and upper intestinal GI tract
  • Protective value: removal of toxic ingested substance before they are absorbed
  • excessive vomiting can lead to
    —> **Large losses of water + salt (K and Cl)
    —> **
    Alkalosis
- Vomiting reflex:
Stimuli
—> Afferent pathway
—> Vomiting centre (***Medulla oblongata)
—> Efferent pathway
—> Vomit
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7
Q

Stimuli that cause vomiting

A
  1. ***Irritation of the GI mucosa:
    - distension
    - acute infections (gastroenteritis)
    - chemotherapy / radiation
  2. Tactile stimuli at the back of the throat
  3. Toxins in blood
    —> activation of ***chemoreceptor trigger zone (area postrema) on the wall of the 4th ventricle (outside BBB)
  4. Rotating movement of the head (motion sickness) detected by Vestibular system
    —> sends information to the brain via CN8
  5. Emotional stimuli (afferents from the limbic system)
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8
Q

Vomiting reflex

A

Receptors sensing the emetic stimuli can be found in the brain / GI tract

  • Afferent:
    —> **Vagal + **Sympathetic
    —> excites vomiting centre in medulla
  • Efferent:
    —> **Cranial nerves to upper GI tract
    —> **
    Spinal nerves to diaphragm and abdominal muscles
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9
Q

Vomiting act

A
  1. Early events in the vomiting reflex: ***Reverse peristalsis (as far down as ileum)
  2. Preceding:
    - feeling of nausea, rapid heart beat, increased salivation, sweating
  3. Starting:
    - deep breath, closure of glottis, lifting soft palate
  4. **Lowering of diaphragm and **forceful contraction of abdominal muscle —> strongly compressing stomach —> ***building up stomach pressure
  5. ***Lower esophageal sphincter relaxes
  6. Gastric content forced out of stomach into the esophagus

—> can occur repeatedly without expulsion of content through the mouth (Retching)

Following a sequence of retches, content is expelled from esophagus into the mouth upon

  • Relaxation of upper esophageal sphincter
  • Closure of glottis + Inhibition of respiration prevents vomitus to enter trachea
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10
Q

Motor functions of the stomach

A

Different parts of stomach show different contractions

  • Proximal (Reservoir): **storage: **Tonic contractions
  • Distal (Antral pump): **mixing: **Phasic contractions
  1. Storage: receptive relaxation
  2. Mixing and grinding
    - contractions mix ingested food with gastric juice
    —> solubilise some constituents + reduce particle size
    —> facilitate digestion
  3. Controlled emptying
    - controlled emptying of food to the duodenum
    —> providing optimal time for intestinal digestion and absorption

Presence of food in stomach and duodenum provide both **Mechanical + **Chemical stimuli to regulate motor function

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11
Q

Storage function of the stomach

A

Esophagus distension
—> **Vagovagal reflex
—> esophageal peristalsis begins and LES relaxes
—> **
Reduces tonic contraction of the stomach wall —> increase volume
—> Receptive relaxation of proximal stomach (fundus and body)
—> accommodate ingested material with negligible increase in pressure

  • Food forms concentric circles in Body of stomach: newest food nearest esophageal opening and oldest food nearest the wall
  • Volume of empty stomach about 50ml, ↑ to 1.5L when a meal is swallowed
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12
Q

Mixing and grinding of food in the stomach

A

When food enters stomach:

  • Induce peristaltic contraction of Body of stomach
  • **Weak contractions in **Body (3x per min)
  • -> determined by ***“slow wave” of stomach smooth muscle
  • -> cause mixing of gastric content with gastric secretions
  • -> weak mixing effect
  • Major mixing in ***Antrum
  • -> strong antral peristaltic contractions **against closed pylorus (*Retropulsion)
  • -> propel mixture back towards Body
  • -> mixing + breaking down food particles (***Grinding)
  • -> during onset of terminal antral contraction: pylorus closING
  • -> complete terminal antral contraction: pylorus closED
  • Resulting mixture: ***Chyme
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13
Q

Contraction of stomach during hunger

A

Fasted state:
- Antral contraction occurs in a different pattern when stomach emptied for several hours

  • **Strong contraction of antrum (5-10 mins, then 75-90 mins quiescence) with a **relaxed pylorus
  • -> Migrating myoelectric complex (MMC)
  • -> sweep from stomach to ileum
  • Function: ***remove remaining materials in stomach
  • usually associated with ***hunger feeling –> intensifies drive to acquire food
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14
Q

***Regulation of gastric emptying

A
  • ensure gastric contents not emptied into duodenum at a rate > small intestine can neutralize gastric acid + process the chyme
  • regulated through ***1. Antral contraction + 2. Tone of pyloric sphincter

***- Neural + Hormonal mechanisms

  • **Weak gastric factors promote emptying:
    1. Distension of stomach wall
    2. Gastrin
  • **Strong duodenal factors inhibit emptying:
    1. Distension of duodenum
    2. Presence of hypertonic solution, low pH, fatty acids, monoglycerides in duodenum
  • -> Neural (extrinsic + intrinsic)
  • -> Hormonal (Secretin, CCK, GIP)
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15
Q

Regulation of GI smooth muscle contraction

A

Smooth muscle of GI tract: Muscularis externa

  • **Frequency of muscle remains **CONSTANT
  • -> determined by ***“slow wave” depolarisation
  • -> intrinsic pattern/frequency
  • **Force of muscle contraction can be CHANGED by **Neural + Hormonal mechanisms
  • Neural / Hormonal stimuli:
  • -> change baseline of depolarisation
  • -> regulates ***number of action potential
  • -> hence ***contraction force
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16
Q

2 types of contractions in small intestine

A
  1. Segmentation contractions (mixing)
    - concentric contractions spaced at intervals along small intestine
    —> divide intestine into segments
    - one set of contractions relax —> new set begins at new points **between previous contractions
    - determined by intrinsic **
    “slow wave” of smooth muscle of wall: ~12-20 per min —> **CONSTANT
    - Chyme is divided, pushed **
    back and forth
    —> ***mixes the luminal content
  2. Peristaltic contractions (propulsive)
    - progressive contractions of successive sections of **Circular smooth muscle (contraction moves foward)
    - propels chyme slowly along
    - peristalsis ↑ **
    after a meal (distension of stomach + duodenum)
    - Long transit time (3-5 hrs from pylorus to ileocecal valve)
    —> allow time for efficient digestion + absorption
17
Q

Empty into large intestine

A

Pressure/distension + chemical irritation in ileum
—> Ileocecal sphincter relaxes + excites peristalsis

Pressure/distension + chemical irritation in colon/caecum
—> Ileocecal sphincter contracts + inhibit peristalsis

—> allow material to enter colon + prevent reflex of fecal content into small intestine

18
Q

Motility of large intestine

A
  1. Combined ***Segmentation contraction of circular + longitudinal muscle strips (i.e. Taeniae coli)
    - -> unstimulated portions of large intestine to bulge outward into haustrations
  • movement of haustrations along colon: ***Sluggish
  • -> allow storage of contents + absorb most of remaining water
  1. Peristaltic wave (mass movement; 1-3 times per day,) propels significant amount of material into distal colon / rectum
    - -> Distension of rectum
    - -> Rectosphincter reflex (desire for defecation)
19
Q

Anal sphincter

A

Anus normally closed by:

  1. Internal anal sphincter (smooth muscle)
    - innervated by **Pelvic nerves (Parasympathetic) + **Myenteric plexus (Enteric NS)
  2. External anal sphincter (skeletal muscle)
    - striated muscle under voluntary control by ***Pudendal nerve (skeletal motor nerve)
20
Q

Defecation reflex

A
  • initiated by mass movement of faeces into rectum
  1. ***Intrinsic reflex (local enteric NS):
    distension of rectal wall
    —> Reflex ↑ in peristalsis in descending, sigmoid colon + Relaxation of internal anal sphincter
  2. ***Parasympathetic reflex:
    - enhances defecation reflex
    - involves Sacral spinal cord + Pelvic nerves
  3. if external sphincter also voluntarily relaxed
    —> defecation
    —> toilet training —> CNS can voluntarily override reflex relaxation of external anal sphincter —> delaying defecation
21
Q

Summary

A

Control of esophagus: Neural ONLY
Control of stomach: Neural + Hormonal
Control of small + large intestine: Neural + Hormonal
Control of anal sphincter: Neural ONLY