Small Intestine Function Flashcards

1
Q

Function of small intestine (5)

A

1) Mix digestive secretions with food
2) Propel chyme along intestine
3) Digest + absorb (nutrients + constituents of digestive secretions)
4) Regulate gastric function (synthesising and secreting hormones)
5) Defend body against micro-organisms

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2
Q

Which part does the most digestion? Most absorption?

A

Duodenum (digestion)

Jejunum (absorption)

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3
Q

Secretions received from other organs (3)

A

Bile (Lipid Digestion)
Pancreatic Enzymes
Alkaline Juices (HCO3-)

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4
Q

Bile?

A

Bile secreted from gallbladder → common bile duct (response to CCK)

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5
Q

Pancreatic enzymes + alkaline juice?

A

secreted from pancreas into pancreatic duct (response to CCK + secretin)

Opens out into duodenum (major duodenal papilla)

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6
Q

SPHINCTER OF ODDI?

A

Secretions into S.I regulated by sphincter of Oddi

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7
Q

Activation of pancreatic enzymes

A
Active enzymes (pancreatic lipase + pancreatic amylase)
Inactive enzymes (trypsinogen + chymotrypsinogen)

Brush border enzyme enterokinase coverts: trypsinogen→ trypsin (active form)

Trypsin activates chymotrypsinogen

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8
Q

Carb products formed from digestion (3)

A

Glucose
Galactose
Fructose

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9
Q

function of brush border enzymes

A

hydrolyse compounds into glucose / galactose / fructose

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10
Q

brush border enzymes (3)

A

(lactose, sucrase, trehalase)

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11
Q

Bile acid digestion (lipids)

A

Emulsification of fat goblets into small chunks (micelles)

Larger surface area

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12
Q

3 major lipid digestion enzymes

A

Pancreatic Lipase, Phospholipase A2, Cholesterol Ester Hydrolase

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13
Q

What are micelles hydrolysed into (4)

A

Fatty acids
Monoglycerides
Cholesterol
Lysolecithin

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14
Q

Lipid absorption

A

Products from digestion released at apical membrane
Diffuse into enterocyte

Products re-esterified to form original lipids, triglycerides, cholesterol, phospholipids

Packaged tightly inside apoproteins (form chylomicrons)

Too large to enter circulation so enter lymphatic system (via lacteals)

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15
Q

What controls secretions? (3)

A

Enteric Nervous System
Hormones
Enterotoxins

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16
Q

Enteric Nervous system (seretonin + prostoglandins)

A

Mechanical stimulation of enterochromaffin cells = release of serotonin

Serotonin stimulates sensory neurons = activates secretomotor neurones - terminates at enterocytes

Mechanical stimulation of mucosa = releases prostaglandins (group of lipids) = stimulates secretomotor neurones

17
Q

Hormones involved in controlling secretion (2)

A

Guanylin + Histamine

18
Q

Guanylin action (+ consequences)

A

Stimulates guaylin receptor on apical border of enterocyte
= increased activity on guanylate cyclase
= elevated intracellular concentration of cyclic guanosine monophosphate
= increased opening of K+ channels (basolateral layer) + Cl- channels (luminal membrane) = increased fluid secretion

19
Q

Histamine action

A

Antigen-antibody reactions at mast cells + stimulation of cells by substance P (during axon reflexes) = histamine release
Histamine stimulates secretion by histamine receptors in enterocytes

20
Q

Enterotoxins

A

Bacterial toxins

Stimulate enterocytes directly by enteric reflexes

21
Q

MMC’s (definition + function)

A

Propulsive waves

MMC’s prevent reflux of bacteria from large intestine back to the terminal ileum

22
Q

Segmentation? (WHAT + WHY)

A

Mixes chyme with secretions + brings mixture into contact with mucosa

Contractions of circular muscle layer in short intervals along the intestine

Intestine between contracted regions = relaxed

23
Q

Segmentation pros + cons

A

Chyme only propelled short distance from contraction = not effective for propelling chyme

Effective for breaking up unstirred layer of fluid next to epithelial cells = easier nutrient absorption

24
Q

Peristalsis (what + why)

A

Propels chyme along small intestine

REPEATED contraction of circular muscle layer on oral side of chyme bolus
Relaxation on aboral side

Contraction pushes bolus into the adjacent area of intestine ready to receive it

25
Q

Intestino - intestinal inhibitory reflex

A

If a region of intestine becomes distended (swollen) or obstructed - contraction in adjacent regions are inhibited
Depends on activation of sympathetic nerves via coeliac ganglion + spinal chord

26
Q

Gatro-ileal reflex

A

Caused by increase in gastric activity (food digesting in stomach)
Propulsive activity of terminal ileum is increased
Contents emptied into caecum via relaxed ilea-caecal sphinchter
Gastrin + CCK (duodenal hormone) increase contractive activity in ileum
Ileo-caecal sphincter relaxes