Lecture 33: GIT 2 Flashcards

0
Q

Mastication

A
  • 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
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1
Q

What is prehension?

How does it happen?

A
  • 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
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2
Q

Salivary glands

A
  • 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
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3
Q

Formation of saliver. 2 step process

Also what is the effect of flow rate on saliva composition

A

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

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4
Q

What is the composition of saliva and what is each of its functions?

A
  • 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
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5
Q

How do you regulate salivary secretion?

A
  • 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
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6
Q

Deglutition: swallowing

What are the different phases?

A
  • Initial phase voluntary – food bolus moved against pharynx
  • Remaining phases involuntary – reflex activity
VOLUNTARY
•Oral
INVOLUNTARY (REFLEX)
•Pharyngeal
•Oesophageal
•Gastro-oesophageal
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