Lecture 33: GIT 2 Flashcards
Mastication
- Initiates mechanical breakdown of food and allows mixing with saliva
- Under voluntary control
- Cutting and grinding of food with teeth
- Tongue and buccal muscles position food within mouth
- Trigeminal nerve (CN V) – sensory to teeth and motor to jaw muscles
- Facial nerve (CN VII) – motor and sensory to tongue and pharynx
- Glossopharyngeal nerve (CN IX) – sensory to caudal 1/3 of tongue
- Hypoglossal nerve (CN XII) – motor to tongue
What is prehension?
How does it happen?
- Bringing food into mouth
- Involves lips, teeth and tongue + head and jaw movements
- Voluntary
- Facial (CN VII), hypoglossal (CN XII) and trigeminal (CN V) nerves provide motor innervation to lips, tongue, and muscles of jaw, respectively
- Sensory input important, involving olfactory nerve (CN I) (smell), optic nerve (CN II) (vision) and trigeminal nerve (sensation to rostral oral mucosa, lips and teeth)
- To drink, draw fluid into oral cavity by suction
Salivary glands
- Some secretion from multiple small glands in wall of oral cavity
- Most secretion from paired parotid, mandibular and sublingual salivary glands
- Parotids produce serous secretion
- Secretion from mandibular and sublingual glands is mixed
Formation of saliver. 2 step process
Also what is the effect of flow rate on saliva composition
1.Acini secrete fluid containing amylase, lysozyme, mucin, and electrolytes in similar concentrations to plasma
2.During passage through ducts, ionic composition of saliva modified
ØNa+ and Cl- reabsorbed
ØK+ and HCO3- secreted
Effects of flow rate on saliva composition
•High flow – less time for modification in ducts (isotonic)
•Low flow – less Na+ and Cl- and more K+ (hypotonic)
•Saliva HCO3- > plasma HCO3-, except at very low flow rates
What is the composition of saliva and what is each of its functions?
- 98% water
- Mucin – forms mucus when mixed with water – acts as lubricant
- Amylase – initiates starch breakdown
- Bicarbonate – neutralises acids produced by oral bacteria – prevents acid damage to dental enamel
- Lysozyme and antibodies – protection against oral bacteria
How do you regulate salivary secretion?
- Regulated exclusively by autonomic nervous system
- Volume and composition = balance between parasympathetic and sympathetic activity
- Parasympathetic stimulation – high volume; watery consistency
- Sympathetic stimulation causes constriction of blood vessels supplying glands – low volume; viscous consistency + increased amylase
- During meals, parasympathetic predominates
- Reflex activity – tactile stimuli from mouth, and sight or smell of food
Deglutition: swallowing
What are the different phases?
- Initial phase voluntary – food bolus moved against pharynx
- Remaining phases involuntary – reflex activity
VOLUNTARY •Oral INVOLUNTARY (REFLEX) •Pharyngeal •Oesophageal •Gastro-oesophageal