salivary and gastric secretion Flashcards

1
Q

what do secretions do?

where do they come from? 2

A
  • lubricate, protect and aid digestion
  • exocrine glands (with duct)
  • endocrine glands (without duct)
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2
Q

what is the role of salivary secretions? 3

A
  • lubrication
  • protection (oral hygiene)
  • initiate chemical digestion
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3
Q

what are the major salivary glands? 3

A
  • parotid (under ear, back of jaw)= serous, watery solution containing amylase for starch digestion
  • submandibular (under tongue, closer to oesophagus)= mixed serous and mucus
  • sublingual (under tongue, closer to lips)= mucus, thicker mucus dominant secretions for lubrication
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4
Q

what are dispersed salivary glands? 5

A
  • mucosa of the mouth and tongue
  • labial
  • buccal
  • palatal
  • lingual
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5
Q

what is the composition of saliva and role? 6

A
  • water (99.5%)= solvent dissolves food components to aid taste, swallowing, ignition of digestion and oral hygiene
  • electrolytes (K+, HCO3-, Na+, Cl-)= buffer for acidic food contents
  • enzymes (different functions)
  • secretory IgA= prevents microbial attachment to the epithelium
  • mucin= lubrication
  • organics urea and uric acid= waste product removal for excretion
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6
Q

what are the different enzymes in salvia and their role? 5

A
  • alpha amylase (ptyalin)= hydrolysis of alpha-1,4 glycosidic bonds in starch to disaccharide maltose, trisaccharide maltose and alpha-dextrin
  • lysozyme= hydrolysis of peptidoglycan in wall of gram-negative bacteria
  • lingual lipase (serous salivary glands of the tongue)= hydrolysis of lipid triglycerides to fatty acid and diglycerides (optional in acidic pH)
  • lactoferrin= chelates iron to prevent microbial manipulation
  • kallikrein= converts plasma protein alpha-2-globulin into bradykinin
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7
Q

describe the acinar structure of salivary glands? 3

A
  • Acinar cells: serous or mucin secreting
  • Myoepithelial cells: around the acinar cells and are contractile in nature to help move the secretions through the duct
  • Ductal cells: columnar, line the salivary gland duct and modify the primary saliva
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8
Q

what are the unique properties of a salivary gland? 3

A
  • Large volume of saliva produced compared to the mass of the gland
  • Low osmolarity
  • High K+ concentration
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9
Q

describe the 2 stage formation of hypotonic saliva? 2

A
  • Stage 1= acinar cells secrete isotonic saliva similar to blood plasma in electrolyte composition
  • Stage 2= ductal cells secrete HCO3- and K+ ions with reabsorption of NaCl and limited movement of water by osmosis. This produces HCO3- and K+ rich hypotonic saliva
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10
Q

describe how the composition of saliva can change? 4

A
  • with flow rate
  • Electrolyte composition= Na+ and Cl-plasma
  • Low rate of secretion= maximum reabsorption of electrolytes produced hypertonic saliva (lower concentration of osmotically active electrolytes)
  • High rate of secretion= reduced absorption of electrolytes produces alkaline HCO3- rich saliva with increases osmolality closer to that of the primary isotonic saliva
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11
Q

what normally regulates the secretions of saliva? 7

A
  • parasympathetic ANS regulation is dominant
  • Simulation= sight, thought, smell tase, tactile stimuli, nausea
  • Signal superior and inferior salivatory nuclei in the medulla
  • Via cranial nerve VII (facial nerve) for the sublingual and submandibular gland
  • Via cranial nerve IX (glossopharyngeal nerve) for the parotid gland
  • Increase salivary secretion, vasodilation, myoepithelial cell contraction
  • Inhibitors= fatigue, sleep, fear, dehydration
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12
Q

describe the sympathetic neural stimulation for the secretion of saliva? 5

A
  • Overall slight increase in secretion
  • Produces a mucin and enzyme rich saliva
  • Activity is via superior cervical ganglion
  • Initial vasoconstriction (neurotransmitter noradrenaline stimulates beta-adrenergic receptors)
  • Later vasodilation (salivary enzyme kallikrein action on blood plasma protein alpha-2-globulin to form vasodilator bradykinin)
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13
Q

name 2 salivary gland dysfunctions and 3 things about each?

A
  • Sjogren’s syndrome:
  • An autoimmune disease that destroys the exocrine glands
  • Commonly affects tear and saliva production
  • Dry eyes and dry mouth, known as sicca syndromes
  • .
  • Xerostomia (dry mouth)
  • Patients lack adequate saliva
  • Dental caries and halitosis common due to bacteria overgrowth
  • Difficulty speaking or swallowing solid food due to inadequate lubrication
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14
Q

describe gastric glands? 9

A

-gastric pits in the mucosa branch into gastric pits

  • Exocrine gland cells (secrete gastric juice):
  • Mucous neck cells= thin mucus
  • Parietal cells= HCl and intrinsic factor
  • Chief cells= pepsinogen (also rennin in neonates), gastric lipase
  • .
  • Endocrine cells:
  • G cells= hormone gastrin (antrum)
  • D cell= hormone somatostatin
  • Enterochromaffin-like (ECL) cells secrete histamine
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15
Q

what are the two major types of gastric gland and 3 subcategories of each?

A
  • Body and fundus (80%):
  • Gastric/oxyntic glands
  • Exocrine secretion of HCl, pepsinogen, intrinsic factor and mucus
  • Paracrine ECL secretion of histamine, paracrine D cell secretion of somatostatin
  • .
  • Antrum (20%)
  • Pyloric glands
  • Mucus and endocrine hormone gastrin
  • Paracrine/endocrine somatostatin
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16
Q

what are the components of gastric juice and what they do? 7

A
  • Water and electrolytes= medium for action of acids and enzymes, digestion or organic substances
  • Mucus (glycoprotein mucin) (mucus neck) = protects surface epithelium from acid/pepsin
  • Pepsinogen pro-enzyme (chief) = active pepsin form is an endopeptidase that cleaves peptide bonds (protein to make smaller peptides)
  • Rennin in neonates only (chief) = coagulation of milk through casein proteolysis
  • Gastric lipase (chief)= triglycerides to fatty acid and diglycerides
  • HCl (pH1-3) = converts pro-enzyme pepsinogen to pepsin, denatures proteins, kills microorganisms
  • Intrinsic factor (parietal) = vitamin B12 absorption in the ileum, erythropoiesis in bone marrow, absence= pernicious anaemia
17
Q

describe HCl secretion by parietal cells? 4

A
  • Parietal cells have in intracellular branches canalicular structure and are packed with tubulovesicles in resting state
  • These contain enzymes carbonic anhydrase and H+/K+ ATPase for acid secretion
  • On stimulation of acid production, tubulovesicles fuse with the canalicular membrane to form microvilli
  • HCl is formed at these microvilli and secreted
18
Q

how does HCl secretion occur? 4

A
  • H+/K+ ATPase proton pump drives active secretion of H+
  • Carbonic anhydrase catalyses formation of HCO3- producing H+ ions
  • HCO3- exchanged for Cl- (alkaline tide – gastric venous blood becomes more alkaline postprandially)
  • Cl- diffuses into the lumen
19
Q

what activates gastric acid secretion? 3

A
  • Ach=acetylcholine release from vagus
  • Gastrin from G cells
  • Histamine from ECL cells
20
Q

what inhibits gastric acid secretion? 2

A
  • Somatostatin from D cells (paracrine and endocrine): inhibits adenylate cyclase (AC)
  • Musical prostaglandin antagonists for H receptor (NSAIDS inhibit prostaglandin formation and increase gastric acid secretion)
21
Q

what stimulates the parietal cell to secrete acid? 3

A
  • PLC phospholipase C
  • IP3 inositol triphosphate
  • AC adenylate cyclase
22
Q

describe pharmalogical inhibition of gastric acid? 3

A
  • Omeprazole= proton pump inhibitor inactivates H+/K+ ATPase
  • Cimetidine= H2 receptor antagonist inhibits stimulus for acid secretion
  • Atropine= inhibits muscarinic receptors and vagal stimulation of acid secretion
23
Q

what hormone promotes gastric secretion, how does it do this? 6

A
  • gastrin (promoted by the vagus, distention of the stomach and peptide)
  • Promotes:
  • Parietal cell secretion of HCl
  • Chief cell secretion of pepsinogen
  • Lower oesophageal sphincter contraction
  • Increased motility of the stomach
  • Relaxation of pyloric sphincter
24
Q

what are the 3 phases of gastric secretion?

A
  • Cephalic= vagus stimulates parietal, chief cell production of gastric juice and hormone gastrin secretion
  • Gastric= stimulates parietal, chief, mucus secretion, antral G cells (gastrin stimulates parietal cells directly and indirectly via ECL histamine release)
  • Intestinal=
  • excitatory: chyme with pH>3, peptides stimulate gastric secretions via vagus and gastrin
  • inhibitory: chyme with pH<2, distention, protein breakdown produces, hypo/hyper-osmotic products inhibit gastric secretions via cholecystokinin, secretin, gastric inhibitory polypeptide
25
Q

why is the gastric mucosa not damaged? 4

A
  • Surface mucous glands secrete viscous mucus layer of mucopolysaccharides/proteins
  • Mucous viscosity generates a mucosal barrier= Mucin has basic side chains and HCO3- secreted from surface epithelial cells both neutralise H+ ions
  • Tight junctions stop acid damaging underlying tissue
  • Net result= unstirred layer of pH7, pepsinogen not activated, prevents enzymatic and chemical damage
26
Q

describe a dysfunction of the gastric mucosa? 5

more specific type of this? 3

A
  • Gastritis (inflammation of gastric mucosa)
  • Most commonly causes by an infection by the bacteria Helicobacter pylori (primary cause of peptic ulcer disease)
  • Gram negative bacteria produced urease which forms ammonia from urea, ammonia neutralizes bactericidal acid and is toxic to the mucosal barrier
  • Also caused by smoking, alcohol, nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDS) (inhibit cyclooxygenase to reduce protective prostaglandin synthesis), chronic stress
  • Following acute damage, rapid regeneration is via a process called restitution= rapid division of stem cells located in the neck of gastric glands
  • Autoimmune atrophic gastritis
  • An antibody mediated destruction of gastric parietal cells which causes hypochlorhydria (insufficient acid secretion), and a deficiency of intrinsic factor IF
  • The loss of IF results in vitamin B12 mal-absorption and pernicious anaemia