Chapter 66 - Guyton Flashcards
Damage to which cranial nerves can result in paralysis of significant portions of the swallowing mechanism.
5th, 9th, 10th
Achalasia
condition in which the lower esophageal sphincter fails to relax during swallowing
These two substances are unique in that they can actually be absorbed by the stomach lining. They consequently are the most common cause of acute or chronic gastritis.
alcohol and aspirin
What is the gastric barrier?
gastric mucosa is lined with highly resistant mucous cells that secrete a viscid and adherent mucus and it has tight junctions between the adjacent epithelial cells
Achlorhydria
means simply that the stomach fails to secrete hydrochloric acid
Hypochlorhydria
diminished acid secretion
Common accompaniment of gastric atrophy and achlorhydria (no intrinsic factor secreted by parietal cells).
pernicious anemia
Causes of peptic ulcers:
- High acid and peptic content
- Irritation
- Poor blood supply
- Poor secretion of mucus
- Infection, H. pylori
Most common treatments for gastric ulcers:
antibiotics and acid suppressant drug
Lack of pancreatic secretion frequently occurs:
pancreatitis, pancreatic duct is blocked by a gallstone at the papilla of Vater, head of the pancreas has been removed because of malignancy
Most common causes of pancreatitis:
excess alcohol intake, blockage of the papilla of Vater by a gallstone
Sprue
decreased absorption by the mucosa even though the food is well digested
Megacolon or Hirschsprung’s disease
tremendous quantities of fecal matter to accumulate in the colon, causing the colon sometimes to distend to a diameter of 3 to 4 inches (caused by lack of or deficiency of ganglion cells in the myenteric plexus in a segment of the sigmoid colon)
Enteritis
inflammation usually caused either by a virus or by bacteria in the intestinal tract
Ulcerative colitis
disease in which extensive areas of the walls of the large intestine become inflamed and ulcerated