2 digestion and absorption Flashcards

1
Q

what is pancreatic juice like

A

enzyme rich secretion, aqeuous alkaline secretion

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2
Q

what are the ancillary organs required for digestion and absorption

A

liver, pacreas and gall bladder

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3
Q

why does bicarbonate ions need to neutralise chyme

A
  1. digestive enzyme activity (optimal at neural or slightly alkaline pH)
  2. micelle formation (fat absorption)
  3. protecting duodenal mucosa
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4
Q

which ion does bicarbonate ions exchange with in the pancreas?

A

chloride ions

Cl- channels are absent in CF, so mucus plugs pancreas preventing natural release of enzymes

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5
Q

Discuss carbohydrate digestion and absorption

A
  1. Ingested as complex carbohydrate
  2. digestion begins in mouth- salivary amylase (works at neutral or alkaline) activity stops in acidic stomach
  3. digeston/ absorption cotinues in small intestine with pancreatic amylase splitting alpha 1,4 glycosidic linkages on chains larger than disaccharides

some salivary amylase is protected and embedded in food

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6
Q

Carbohydrate enzymes located in brush border

A

Lactase- lactose to glucose and galactose

maltase- maltose to glucose and glucose

sucrase- sucrose to glucose and fructose

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7
Q

Describe the digestion of carbohydrates by enzymes on brush border

A
  • BB enzymes closely related to sodium pumps
  • when sodium pump drag sodium into epithelial cells, this brings disaccharides in contact with enzymes
  • glucose, fructose and galactose are then transported via glucose carriers into epithelial cells from apical membrane, then into basolateral membrane which then can diffuse into blood and transported to liver via portal vein
  • sodium gradient is maintained by Na+/K+ ATPase
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8
Q

What is the role of pepsin

A

Start of protein digestion and absorption in the stomach (15%)

pepsin activity stops when chyme interacts with alkaline pancreatic secretions

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9
Q

Two major classes of pancreatic proteolytic enzymes? What is the fate of these enzymes?

A
  1. Endopeptidases- cleaves interior peptide bonds
  2. Exopeptidases- cleaves external peptide bonds

These enzymes are secreted into duodenum as inactive precursors trypsinogen (prevent autodigestion) converted to trypsin by enterokinase (brush border)

trypsin then activates other inactive precursors to digest peptides

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10
Q

How are amino acids and di- and tripeptides absorbed?

A

Passive or faciliated diffusion

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11
Q

which enzyme is most important in digesting fats?

what are its properties? what does this mean is digesting fats?

A

pancreatic lipase

water soluble, requires access to lipid site as fats are insoluble to water except some short chain FA

need to emulsify lipid droplets to increase surface area of lipid water interface – requires conjugated bile acids released from the gall bladder. products are mostly insoluble – absorbed by forming a micelle (bile salts). This process also important for absorption of fat soluble vitamins (A, D, E, K).

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12
Q

what happens to fats once they are absorbed?

A

monoglyceride and free fatty acids are resynthesized into triglycerides, where they combine with protein, phospholipids and cholesterol to form a chylomicron. Chylomicrons are too large to enter capillaries and so are transported to the systemic circulation via the lymphatic system

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13
Q

what are the controls of pancreatic secretions?

A
  1. Vagus nerve. conditioned stimuli (cephalic phase)

presence of food in the stomach (gastric phase)

ACh also acts to potentiate the actions of secretin and cholecystokinin (CCK).

  1. secretin (released in response to acid in duodenum) stimulates HCO3- production
  2. cholycystokinin (CCK) stimulates enzyme rich secretion (released in response to presence of fat and protein in duodenum)

Pancreatic secretions can be reduced by sympathetic activation and by somatostatin.

Pancreas also has an important endocrine role by releasing insulin and glucagon.

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14
Q

Xerostomia

A

dry mouth resulting from reduced saliva flow- symptom of various medical conditions

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15
Q

Achlorhydria:

A

absence of HCl in gastric secretions

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16
Q

pancreatic exocrine insufficiency

A

the inability of the pancreas to produce and/or transport enough digestive enzymes to break down food in the intestine and allow its absorption. It may be due to problems arising in the pancreas itself or problems outside the pancreas

17
Q

Lactase insufficiency

A

Intolerance to lactose (dairy products) produces osmotic diarrhoea and flatulence.

18
Q

Gluten enteropathy (coeliac disease)

A

gluten in diet (wheat, rye, barley) causes mucosal damage – decrease villi surface area for absorption. Increased delivery of nutrients to large intestine produces diarrhoea (osmotic) and flatulence.

Treatment – gluten-free diet.

19
Q

Pancreatitis

A

Acute – autodigestion of pancreas by secreted enzymes (can be due to blockage of pancreatic duct caused by bile duct stones). Alcohol binges.

Chronic – normally associated with alcohol abuse

Symptoms include steatorrhoea (fatty stools) due to fat malabsorption (lack of pancreatic lipase), and diabetes (lack if insulin).

No major effect on carbohydrate and protein digestion due to presence of additional digestive enzymes in small intestine.