Grand Tour of the Alimentary Canal Flashcards

1
Q

List the salivary glands and their function@

A

Parotid - Sublingual - Submandibular

They coat the mouth in saliva which acts as a lubricant and begin digesting starch through salivary amylase

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2
Q

What are the functions of the stomach?

A
  • Digests Proteins
  • Reduces food to a liquid
  • Stores food during digestion
  • Sterilizes food
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3
Q

What is the digestive function of the pancreas?

A

Produces digestive enzymes (to break down fats, carbs and proteins) and passes them to the duodenum via the pancreatic duct

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4
Q

What is the digestive function of the liver?

A
  • Produces bile salts for digesting and absorbing fats in small intestine
  • Also stores fat and sugar delivered from the small intestine via the portal vein
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5
Q

Whats the function of the gall bladder?

A

Stores & concentrates up to 50ml of bile

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6
Q

Whats the function of the small intestine?

A

Performs the last bit of chemical digestion and the vast bulk of nutrient absorption

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7
Q

Whats the function of the large intestine?

A
  • Absorbs water
  • Forms faeces
  • Bacterial fermentation
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8
Q

What are the layers of the GI tract?

A
  • Mucosa (Epithelium - Lamina Propria - Muscularis Mucosae)
  • Submucosa
  • Muscularis Externa
  • Serosa/Adventitia
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9
Q

Do glands exist in the submucosa?

A

Only in two places:

  • The esophagus where they make mucous to aid motility
  • The duodenum where they make bicarbonate to neutralize stomach acid
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10
Q

What are the layers of the muscularis externa?

A

Inner circular layer which contracts the tube
Outer longitudinal layer which shortens the tube
Together they produce GI motility by peristalsis & segmentation

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11
Q

What are the serosa and adventitia?

A

The connective tissue sheath surrounding the GI tract.
Inside the peritoneal cavity its called serosa
Outside its called Adventitia (Oesophagus & Rectum)

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12
Q

What makes up the enteric nervous system?

A

The neural plexus that makes up the bulk of the enteric nervous system.
Its split in two:
- Submucosal plexus on the submucosa
- Myenteric plexus between layers of the muscularis externa

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13
Q

What type of epithelium is found in the mucosa?

A

Two different types based on location.

  • Stratified squamous at the ends (mouth, esophagus & anal canal) to protect against solids
  • Simple columnar in the middle (stomach & intestines) to reduce absorption/secretion time
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14
Q

Whats the function of the epithelium in the mucosa?

A
  • Absorbing digestive products

- Synthesising & secreting digestive enzymes, hormones and mucous

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15
Q

What makes up the lamina propria?

A

Loose connective tissue

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16
Q

What else is found in the lamina propria?

A

Glands
Lymph vessels/Nodes
Bloods vessels

17
Q

What is the muscularis mucosae?

A

A thin layer of smooth muscle on the mucosa which does very little.

18
Q

What makes up the submucosa?

A
  • A thick band of irregular connective tissue
  • It also supplies blood, lymph and neurones.
  • Topped with the submucosal plexus
19
Q

What kind of nervous control is the gut under?

A

autonomic

20
Q

What nerves supply the gut with parasympathetic stimulation and what effect do they have?

A
  • Parasympathetic control comes via the Vagus nerve.(10)
  • The exception is the salivary glands which are supplied by the facial (7) & amp; glossopharyngeal (9) nerves
  • When stimulated they increase gut secretion and motility
21
Q

What nerves supply the gut with sympathetic stimulation and what effect do they have?

A
  • The thoracic Splanchnic nerves. Split into the Greater (T7-T9), Lesser (T10-T11) and least (T12)
  • Mainly inhibitory, decreasing secretion & motility. Except in the salivary glands which are stimulated by sympathetic innervation.
22
Q

How is sympathetic stimulation of the salivary glands different to parasympathetic?

A

They produce different types of saliva

23
Q

Explain the arterial supply of the gi tract?

A

Descending abdominal aorta feeds into the:

  • Celiac Trunk which supplies the foregut
  • Sup. Mesenteric artery which supplies the midgut
  • Inf. Mesenteric artery which supplies the hindgut
24
Q

Whats fucking annoying about the arterial supply of the duodenum?

A

Its divided.

Half by the celiac trunk and half by the superior mesenteric

25
Q

Explain the venous drainage of the Gi tract:

A

Hindgut -> Inf. mesenteric
Midgut -> Sup. mesenteric
stomach -> gastric veins
Pancreas & spleen -> Splenic vein

All of the above feed into the hepatic portal vein
Then the hepatic vein via the liver
Finally into the IVC

26
Q

What is the purpose of filtering all blood from the GI tract through the liver first>

A
  • It screens the blood for nasty stuff you dont want to absorb from the gut
  • Also stores any excess nutrient and sugar.
27
Q

Whats the difference between symp and parasymp salivation?

A

Symp salivation - thick (for facilitating resp) “ So Thick”

Parasymp Salivation - watery (for facilitating digestion)