Digestive System: Accessory Organs Flashcards
1
Q
Oral cavity
A
- cheeks form lateral walls of oral cavity and contain buccinator muscle. Helps us tense and move around food bolus
- lips form anterior wall. Red from superficial blood vessels, reduced keratin. Special kind of epithelium
- palate forms superior boundary — separates from nasal cavity
> anterior 2/3 hard and bony
> posterior 1/3 soft and muscular
2
Q
Tongue
A
- formed from skeletal muscle and covered with stratified squamous epithelium
- papillae with taste buds cover surface
- stratified squamous epithelium: found in regions where you need protection
3
Q
Functions of saliva
A
- moistens ingested food for easier swallowing
- moistens, cleanses, and lubricates oral cavity structures -> keep taste buds clean so we can taste other foods
- contain amylase = enzyme that helps break down food
- contains lysosome to help inhibit bacterial growth
- dissolves tastants and food molecules so that taste receptors can be stimulated
4
Q
Salivary glands - cells
A
- mucous cells: secrete mucin
- serous cells secrete watery fluid with ions, lysozyme, and salivary amylase
- secretion of both is stimulated by parasympathetic division of ANS
5
Q
Sublingual gland
A
- inferior to tongue
- secrete all of its saliva through these holes
6
Q
Parotid gland
A
- largest, located anterior and superior to ear
- sends little duct all the way through your whole face and into this opening right at the back wall of your oral cavity, right next to your 2nd molar up on the top
7
Q
Submandibular gland
A
- inferior to the mandible
- secrete it’s saliva through this one little submandinular duct into a particular little hole underneath your tongue
8
Q
Pharynx
A
- divided into 3 regions: nasopharynx, oropharynx, and laryngopharynx
- back wall of pharynx = continuation of your esophagus
9
Q
Pharyngeal constrictor muscles
A
- contract sequentially pushing material down toward esophagus
- contract from top to bottom
- think constrictor = squeezing
10
Q
Liver
A
- located in upper right quadrant of abdominal cavity
- main fxn are to filter blood and produce bile
- has a right and left lobe
11
Q
Porta hepatis
A
- area where blood vessels and bile ducts enter and leave liver
12
Q
Liver — histological organization
A
- hepatocytes: are liver cells. doing fxn of the liver
- they are arranged into hepatic lobules
- at the periphery of each hepatic lobule is portal triad with an artery, vein, and bile duct
13
Q
Hepatocytes
A
- produce bile and secrete into bile duct
- receiving blood from intestines
> duodenum, jejunum, and ileum = absorbing blood into our SMV and our IMV and our splenic veins = send it off to the liver and then we’re going to send branches of it next to these hepatocytes
> blood will filter through these hepatocytes - after that it can now detoxify drugs, metabolites, and poisons
- store excess nutrients and vitamins and release when needed (ex: glucose)
- synthesize blood plasma proteins such as albumins, globulins, and proteins required for clotting
14
Q
Branches of hepatic portal vein
A
- carries blood from GI tract to liver to these hepatocytes
- rich in nutrients and other absorbed substances
- relatively poor in oxygen
- carry deoxygenated blood thru the porta hepatis and then send this blood past all of these hepatocytes
- going to help us to filter the blood through these cap beds
- blue
15
Q
Branches of hepatic artery
A
- Branch of celiac artery
- carries oxygen rich blood to capillary beds and liver, which then leave as a venous blood
- red