Physiology of Large Intestine Flashcards

1
Q

what comprises the large intestine

A
caecum
appendix
colon
rectum
anal canal and anus
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2
Q

name the different parts of the colon

A

ascending
transverse
descending
sigmoid

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3
Q

structure of caecum and colon

A

longitudinal smooth muscle layer

divided into 3 strands - taeniae coli, but encircles the rectum and anal canal

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4
Q

structure of internal sphincter and external sphincter

A

thickened smooth muscle surrounded by skeletal muscle of the external sphincter

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5
Q

functions of caecum and appendix

A

no specialised functions

caecum receives material from terminal ileum

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6
Q

how is material from terminal ileum permitted to the caecum

A

via the gastroileal reflex in response to gastrin and CCK through one-way ileocaecal valve

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7
Q

what material does the caecum receive from the terminal ileum

A

indigestible residues
unabsorbed biliary components
unabsorbed fluid

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8
Q

action of the ileocaecal valve - pressure

A

maintains positive resting pressure

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9
Q

action of the ileocaecal valve - relaxation

A

relaxes in response to distension of duodenum

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10
Q

action of the ileocaecal valve - contraction

A

contracts in response to distension of the ascending colon

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11
Q

nervous control of ileocaecal valve

A

vagus nerve
sympathetic nerves
enteric neurones
hormonal signals

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12
Q

structure of appendix

A

blind-ended tube with extensive lymphoid tissue connected to distal caecum via appendiceal orifice

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13
Q

what causes appendicitis

A

appendiceal orifice may become obstructed by faecalith

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14
Q

primary functions of the colon

A

absorption
secretion
reservoir
periodic elimination of faeces

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15
Q

primary functions of the colon - absorption

A

absorbs;
sodium, chloride and water
short chain fatty acids

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16
Q

why does the colon absorb sodium, chloride and water

A

to condense ileocaecal material to solid, or semi-solid, stool

17
Q

why does colon absorb short chain fatty acids

A

carbohydrate that is not absorbed by small intestine is fermented by colonic flora to short chain fatty acids

18
Q

primary functions of the colon - secretion

A

secretes potassium, bicarbonate and mucus

19
Q

primary functions of the colon - reservoir

A

stores colonic contents

20
Q

primary functions of ascending and transverse colon

A

fluid reabsorption

bacterial fermentation

21
Q

primary function of descending colon

A

final ‘drying’ (desiccation) and storage

22
Q

structure of mucosa of the colon

A

lacks villi

possesses colonic folds, crypts and microvilli - increasing surface area

23
Q

function of surface epithelial cells (colonocytes) on mucosa of colon

A

mediate electrolyte absorption which, by osmosis, drives absorption of water

24
Q

function of crypt cells on mucosa of colon

A

mediate ion secretion

25
Q

function of goblet cells on mucosa of colon

A

secrete;
copious mucus containing glycosaminoglycans – hydrated to form a slippery surface gel
trefoil proteins involved in host defence

26
Q

describe transepithelial movement of electrolytes

A

complex - involves numerous transporters and ion channels

27
Q

how is sodium absorption and potassium secretion enhacned

A

by aldosterone

28
Q

describe haustration

A

pattern of motility - non-propulsive segmentation

29
Q

action of haustration

A

haustra are saccules caused by alternating contraction of the circular muscle (similar to segmentation - lower in frequency)
contributes to long transit time

30
Q

how does haustra contribute to long transit time

A

disappear before and reappear after a mass movement
generated by slow wave activity
mixes content – allows time for fluid and electrolyte reabsorption

31
Q

describe peristaltic propulsive movements

A

patterns of motility - mass movement

32
Q

action of peristaltic propulsive movements

A

simultaneous contraction of large sections of circular muscle of the asending and transverse colon - driving faeces into distal regions

33
Q

how is peristaltic propulsive movements triggered

A

by a meal via the gastrocolic response involving;
gastrin
extrinsic nerve plexuses

34
Q

how is defaecation reflex triggered

A

mass movement in the distal colon propels faeces into rectum - triggering reflex in response to rectal stretch

35
Q

action of commensal bacteria in the large intestine

A

increase intestinal immunity by competition with pathogenic microbes
promote motility and help maintain mucosal integrity
synthesise vitamin K2 and free fatty acids (from carbohydrate) that are absorbed
activate some drugs (e.g. IBD)

36
Q

how do intestinal gases arise

A

swallowed air - (may be burped - eructation) enters small intestine and absorbed, or passed to the colon
bacteria in the colon which attack forms of carbohydrate that are indigestible to humans

37
Q

how is gas not absorbed by the large intestine expelled

A

expelled through the anus - selective expulsion requires abdominal contractions; internal and external sphincters are contracted to form an ‘exit’ too narrow for solid matter to escape