Histology of the Esophagus and Stomach Flashcards
what are the 4 layers of the GI tract?
- mucosa
- submucosa
- muscularis externa
- serosa
3 components mucosa
- stratified squamous—oral cavity, oropharynx, esophagus, anal canal
- simple columnar—stomach, small intestine, large intestine, rectum
- functions:
a. selective permeable barrier
b. transport, digestion, absorption
c. produce hormones
submucosa
i. connective tissue—contains glands, blood vessels, nerves
muscularis externa
i. Circular layer—inner layer is arranged around the tube’s lumen
ii. Longitudinal layer—fibers of the outer layer are disposed along the tube
1. These can contract and the circular layer reduces the diameter of the lumen
2. Contraction of the fibers of the longitudinal layer shortens the tube
lamina propria of mucosa
i. consisting of a vascularized connective tissue
1. vascularized loose connective tissue
2. lymphatic nodules and scattered immunocompetent cells—lymphocytes, plasma cells, and macrophages
3. in the small intestine and large intestine, lamina propria is a relevant site of immune responses—Peyer’s patches and GALT
muscularis mucosa of the mucosa
- a thin double layer of smooth muscle is often present for local movement of the mucosa
- increases contact area with food
- propel and mix food in GI tract
adventitia
a. Outside the peritoneal cavity
b. Binds to the body wall
c. Loose CT
d. Blood vessels, nerves
serosa
a. Within the peritoneal cavity
b. Loose CT
c. Simple squamous epithelium
d. Blood vessels, nerves, adipose tissue
extrinsic innervation of the GI tract
a. voluntary
i. Sympathetic—decreases motility/secretions
ii. Parasympathetic (Vagus N)—increases motility/secretions
intrinsic/enteric innervation of the GI tract
i. Distinct, interconnected neuronal circuits
ii. Submucosal plexus—Meissner
iii. Myenteric (Auerbach plexus)
1. b/w the inner and outer layers of muscularis externa
2. peristaltic contractions move food bolus
3. secretory activity of mucosal and submucosal glands
esophagus
a. hollow muscular tube that is about 25 cm long
b. lies posterior to the trachea in the thoracic cavity, except for its distal end, which passes thru the diaphragm into the abdominal cavity
c. carries food from the oropharynx to the stomach by a strong peristaltic reflex
d. lower esophageal sphincter (LES) is just anterior to the gastroesophageal junction
i. helps prevent regurgitation of stomach contents thru contraction and must relax to allow food passage with swallowing
e. upper esophageal sphincter (UES) is near the cricopharyngeus muscle
GERD
- UES—anatomically defined, cricothyroid
a. Participates in initiation of swallowign - LES—funcitonally defined, gastroesophageal sphincter
a. Prevents gastric reflux
b. GERD: change in epithelium to columnar (like stomach), chronic esophagitis/ulceration, dysphagia, fibrosis
Barrett’s Esophagus:
i. Condition in which an abnormal columnar epithelium replaces the stratified squamous that normally lines the distal esophagus
ii. Most severe histologic consequence of chronic gastroesophageal reflux and predisposes to the development of adenocarcinoma and ulcers
mucous cells of the stomach
a. the mucosa in the fundus has 2 types of mucus producing cells:
i. surface mucous cells lining the pit
ii. mucous neck cells located at the opening of the gastric gland into the pit
b. both cell types here produce mucins which are glycoproteins with high molecular mass
c. a mucous layer with a lot of water forms an insoluble gel that attaches to the surface of the gastric mucosa to form a protective barrier
i. traps bicarbonate and neutralizes environment adjacent to the apical region of the surface mucous cells to an alkaline pH
chief cells
a. predominate in lower 1/3 of gastric gland
b. not present in cardiac glands and seldom in antrum
c. zymogen granules are observed in the apical region of the cell
i. pepsinogen—proenzyme stored in the zymogen granules—released into the lumen of the gland and converted in the acid environment of the stomach to pepsin which digests most proteins
ii. exocytosis of pepsinogen is stimulated by feeding