10. Secretions of the pancreas and small intestine Flashcards
Pancreas:
Innervation?
Enzyme storage?
Innervation:
PS= From vagus stimulates secretion
Symp= Inhibits secretion
Pancreatic enzymes are stored in condensed zymogen granules until release
What is the process of formation and release of pancreatic secretions?
Composition of pancreatic fluid?
Modification of ductal cells?
Enzymes released from acinar cells, passes centroacinar cells then follow out via ductal cells as an isotonic pancreatic secretion.
Pancreatic fluid is an isotonic fluid containing Na+, K+Cl- and HCO-3
Ductal cells concentrate HCO-3 in fluid
Enzymatic component of pancreatic secretions?
Pancreatic amylase and lipase are secreted as active enzymes
Pancreatic proteases are secreted in an inactive form and activated in duodenum (enterokinase)
Regulation of pancreatic secretion, 3 phases?
Cephalic phase initiated by taste, smell and conditioning mediated by the vagus nerve ( mainly enzymatic secretion)
Gastric phase initiated by distension of the stomach and mediated by the vagus nerve ( mainly enzymatic secretion)
Intestinal phase accounts for 80% of pancreatic secretion and both enzymatic and aqueous secretions are stimulated
How are acinar cells regulated?
Duodenal I cells secrete CCK in response to the presence of amino acids, small peptides and fatty acids in the intestinal lumen.
Vagal release of ACh potentiates CCK action
How is ductal cell secretion regulated?
Ductal cells secrete Na+, K+Cl- and HCO-3
- Arrival of acidic chyme in the duodenum triggers secretin release
- S cells of duodenum secrete SECRETIN, stimulating HCO-3 release from ductal cells
ACh and CCK potentiate secretin action.
Bile secretion:
Function?
Produced/stored?
Composition?
Bile is essential for the digestion and absorption of lipids (water insoluble)
Produced and secreted by the liver and stored in the gall bladder
Mixture of bile salts, bile pigments and cholesterol
Function of bile salts?
Bile salts emulsify lipids to prepare them for digestion and solubilise the products of digestion into ‘packets’ called micelles
3 functions of the gallbladder
- Reservoir for bile
Stores the bile which is continuously produced by the hepatocytes and flows to the gallbladder through the bile ducts - Concentration of bile
Epithelial cells lining the gallbladder absorb ions and water isosmotically - Ejection of bile
Begin 30 minutes after a meal. The major stimulus for ejection is the release of cholecystokinin from the I cells in the duodenum and jejunum.
The IMA ends as the ____ ___ artery supplying the rectum and anal canal
The IMA ends as the superior rectal artery supplying the rectum and anal canal
What are the different layers of the GIT? (Inner to outer)
Lumen Epithelium Muscularis mucosae Submucosa Inner circular muscle Auerbach's myenteric plexus of ganglia and nerves Outer longitudinal muscle
What is hirchsprung disease?
Lack of normal development of the colonic innervation leads to a constricted, aganglonic segment proximally
Rectum is ___peritoneal
Rectum is retroperitoneal
What is cholecystokinin?
When/why/where is it secreted
A 33 amino acids peptide hormone related to gastrin
Secreted from the I cells of the duodenal and jejunal mucosa in response to the presence of monoglycerides, fatty acids, small peptides and amino acids
5 hormonal action of cholecystokinin
- Contraction of the gall bladder and relaxation of the
sphincter of Oddi to eject bile (emulsification and solubilisation of dietary fat) - Secretion of pancreatic enzymes (both lipases and proteases)
- Secretion of pancreatic HCO3
- Growth of exocrine pancreas and gall bladder
- Inhibition of gastric emptying