Large Intestine Structure and Function Flashcards

1
Q

Which muscle layer is incomplete?

A

Longitudinal muscle layer - found in strips

•circular muscle layer extends out inbetween these strips

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2
Q

How many bands of teniae coli span the entire length of the colon?

A

3

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3
Q

What is formed as a result of contractions of teniae coli?

A

Pouches / haustra are formed - making the puckered appearance

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4
Q

What is the mucosa of the large intestine composed of?

A

Simple columnar epithelium - flat

Large straight crypts are lined with a number of goblet cells

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5
Q

Describe the location of the rectum

A

•Straight, muscular tube (between end of sigmoid colon and anal canal)

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6
Q

What is the epithelium of the rectum?

A

Simple columnar

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7
Q

How would you describe the muscularis externa of the alimentary canal?

A

•thick compared to other regions of alimentary canal

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8
Q

Where does the anal canal lie?

A

In between the distal rectum and the anus

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9
Q

How does the muscularis externa compare between the anal canal and the rectum?

A

Muscularis is thicker than the rectum - internal anal sphincter

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10
Q

What kind of muscle composes the external anal spincter?

A

Skeletal muscle

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11
Q

What is the epithelium of the anal canal?

A

Simple columnar - stratified squamous

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12
Q

What does the large intestine absorb and what does it absorb?

A

No absorptive role of nutrients in humans

Actively transports sodium from lumen into the blood allowing for the osmotic absorption of water - dehydration of chyme - solid faecal pellets

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13
Q

What happens to undigested carbohydrate (cellulose) in the large intestine?

A

Bacterial fermentation of undigested carbohydrate

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14
Q

What is formed as a result of bacterial fermentation?

A

Makes:

Short chain fatty acids

Vitamin K

Gas (flatus) - nitrogen, CO2, Hydrogen, methane, hydrogen sulphide

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15
Q

What happens as a result of mass movement contraction from colon to rectum?

A

Rectal wall becomes distended - mechanoreceptors initiate defaecation reflex - urge to defaecate

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16
Q

What is the nervous control of the defaecation reflex?

A

Parasympathetic control by the pelvic splanchnic nerves

17
Q

What do these pelvic splanchnic nerves influence?

A

Contraction of rectum

Relaxation of internal and contraction of external anal sphincters

Increased peristaltic activity in colon

These act to increase pressure on the external anal sphincter

18
Q

What is controls the voluntary delay of defaecation?

A

Descending pathways, appear after about 2 years of life

19
Q

Will toxins eventually be absorbed following long periods of retention (constipation)?

A

NO

20
Q

What are symptoms associated with constipation?

A

Headaches

Nausea

Loss of appetite

Abdominal distension

21
Q

What is diarrhoea defined as?

A

•Too frequent passage of faeces which are too liquid

22
Q

What are the causes of diarrhoea?

A

pathogenic bacteria

protozoans

viruses

toxins

food

Stress

23
Q

Give examples of enterotoxigenic bacteria

A

Vibrio cholerae, Escherichia coli

24
Q

How do enterotoxigenic bacteria cause diarrhoea?

A

Protein enterotoxins maximally turn on intestinal chloride secretion from crypt cells.

Increases H2O secretion

Swamps absorptive capacity of villus.

Flat surface of the colon means that it can’t absorb this vast quantity of water

25
Q

What secondary messengers do protein enterotoxins utilise?

A

cAMP

cGMP

calcium

26
Q

How does sodium glucose solution used to treat diarrhoea?

A

Sodium is the driving factor for water absorption – rehydrates patient