Gi Part 3 Flashcards

(31 cards)

1
Q

What is not absorbed and digested in the duodenum

A
  • No fat digestion
  • Fibre not absorbed
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2
Q

What is the most common motion in the SI?
What is it initiated by?
What valve does it move the contents towards?

A
  • Most common is segmentation
  • initiated by intrinsic pacemaker cells (cajal cells)
  • moves contents toward the ileocecal valve
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3
Q

How does control of motility work?

Where is the most frequency?

A

Segmentation
- Frequency does NOT change
- we only control INTENSITY

  • most frequency in the duodenum
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4
Q

What enhances long reflex of segmentation?

A

PNS activity

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5
Q

When does peristalsis occur?
What hormone is release?
What happens to each successive wave?

A
  • after most nutrients absorbed
  • hormone motilin is released
  • each successive wave is initiated a bit more distally called the migrating motility complex (MMC)
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6
Q

What occurs when ACh impulses (cholinergic) are sent PROXIMALLY?

A

contraction and shortening of the circular muscle

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7
Q

What occurs when ACh impulses are sent DISTALLY?

A

cause shortening of the longitudinal muscle layer and distension of the intestine

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8
Q

Explain the regulation of pancreatic secretion (HCO3)

A
  1. Acidic chyme enters duodenum to release SECRETIN
    - fatty protein rich chyme induces release of Cholecystokinin (CCK)
  2. CCK and secretin enter bloodstream
    • CCK induces the secretion of enzyme-rich pancreatic juices
      - secretin causes copious secretion of bicarbonate-rich pancreatic juice

Both act as buffer for acid

  • also stimulates secretion of bile from liver
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9
Q

What valve controls the flow of digestive juices and is relaxed by the hormone CCK.
- also allows the release of bile in the duodenum

A

Sphincter of Oddi
(hepatopancreatic sphincter)

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10
Q

What enzymes are released in inactive form (zymogen) and activated?

A

Trypsin
Chymotrypsin
Elastase
Carboxypeptidase
Phospholipase

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11
Q

What activates trypsinogen?

A

Enterokinase

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12
Q

What does vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP) release cause?

A

lead to dilation of capillaries to help with absorption

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13
Q

What does GIP release help with?

A

releases insulin to help with nutrient absorption

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14
Q

What does the following enzymes do for absorption of carbs:

Salivary amylase

Pancreatic amylase

brush border enzymes

A

Salivary amylase
- begins starch digestion

Pancreatic amylase
- digest starch to oligosaccharides

brush border enzymes
- hydrolyze oligosaccharides

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15
Q

What enzymes help break disaccharides down to monosaccharides?
What is the exception?

A

Brush border enzymes

Exception: is B-1,4 bonds in cellulose

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16
Q

What is the breakdown of each?

Sucrose
Maltose
Lactose

A

Sucrose
- Glucose + Fructose

Maltose
- Glucose + glucose

Lactose
- Glucose + galactose

17
Q

What enzymes are used to breakdown proteins?
what enzymes act in the SI

A

Pepsin

-pancreatic enzymes that need to be activated (trypsin, chymotrypsin, carboxypeptidases)
- brush border enzymes

18
Q

How are single AA transported?

How are dipeptides and tripeptides transported?

A
  1. Active transport or secondary active transport with NA+
  2. secondary active transport using H+ gradient
19
Q

How are glucose and galactose transported?

How is fructose transported?

A
  1. Secondary active transport with Na+
  2. Facilitated diffusion
20
Q

How are nucleic acids transported?

A

active transport

21
Q

How are water-soluble & fat-soluble vitamins transported?

How is vitB12 transported?

A
  1. diffusion
  2. Active transport
    - must be bound to intrinsic factor prior to absorption
22
Q

How are short-chain fatty acids transported?

How are micelles transported (LONG chain fatty acids)

A

Simple diffusion

Processed in the epithelial cells of villus first to make triglyceride then it is transported

23
Q

When does Net osmosis occur for water absorption?

A

when a concentration gradient is established by active transport of solutes into the mucosal cells

24
Q

How are haustra made in the large intestine?

A

caused by slight contractions of teniae coli

25
What type of cell is the colon mucosa?
Simple columnar - except anus is strat squamous
26
Where are the main contractions of the large intestine? How does motility of large intestine work?
In the transverse and descending colon Haustral contractions - as a haustram fiills with food the distension stimulates muscle to contract to move food to the next haustrum
27
What does presence of food in the stomach activate for SI & LI
SI: Gastroileal reflex LI: Gastrocolic reflex helps clear residues from intestine
28
What type of epithelium is the large intestine? What type of epithelium is the anal canal?
LI - simple columnar Anal - stratified squamous
29
What is the function of the large intestine?
propulsion of fecal material toward the anus - no further digestion other than enteric bacteria
30
What is the role of the bacteria in the colon?
- Metabolize some host-derived proteins (mucin, heparin, and hyaluronic acid) - ferment some of the indigestible carbohydrates (cellulose, xylan) (breakdown & use as energy)
31
What type of sensory fibers are in the superior & inferior pectinate line in anus? contrast between them
Superior - insensitive to pain - innervated by visceral sensory fibers Inferior - very sensitive to pain - somatic sensory fibers