Lecture 60 Flashcards

1
Q

What is enterosystemic fluid cycle

A

The net movement of fluid into & out of the intestinal lumen

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2
Q

Why is it very important to reabsorb secretions delivered to the proximal part of the SI

A

B/c secretory fluids from the accessory organs, stomach, & intestines make up a substantial fraction of ECF volume

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3
Q

T/F: Herbivores have a larger vole of secretion than carnivores

A

T

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4
Q

Where are the major reabsorptive sites for enterosystemic fluid

A

The distal SI & LI

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5
Q

_____ lines the intestinal crypts & secretes fluid and electorlytes

A

Epithelial cells

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6
Q

Why do apical membranes have Cl- channels

A

B/c Na follow Cl into the lumen which will cause water to follow Na into the membrane

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7
Q

What transporters for intestinal secretions is found on the basolateral membrane

A

Na/KATPase
Na/K/2Cl cotransporters

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8
Q

What causes Cl channels to open

A

Hormones & neurotransmitters binding to the basolateral membrane

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9
Q

What does cholera do to the Cl channels & what does this cause

A

Cl channels stay open
The body loses a lot of Na, Cl, & H2O & it is very hard to reabsorb what has been lost

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10
Q

What are the routes fluid & electrolytes can take for absorption

A

Transcellular routes
Paracellular routes

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11
Q

What determines the routh fluids & electrolytes will take during absorption

A

The permeability of the tight junctions between the enterocytes

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12
Q

What happens if the junctions are tight & where are tight junctions found

A

Makes it hard to travel paracellular so fluid & ions move transcellulary
Found in the stomach & colon

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13
Q

What happens if the junctions are leaky & where are leaky junctions found

A

Ions & water move via paracellular routes
Found in the duodenum & jejunum

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14
Q

T/F: The fluid that is absorbed is NEVER isosmotic

A

F

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15
Q

What part does the jejunum play in absorption

A

Is the major site for Na absorption
Absorption occurs via Na dependent cotransporters in the enterocytes of apical membranes
Monosaccharides, amino acids, & H+ exchange use the Na gradient
After entering the enterocyte Na enters the blood via the Na/K pump

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16
Q

What part does the Ileum play in abosrption

A

Absorbs Na
Cl/HCO3 exchange occurs in the enterocytes of the apical membrane
There are Cl transporters in the enterocytes of the basolateral membrane
Overal there is a net absorption of NaCl

17
Q

What part does the colon play in absorption

A

There is Na & K channels in the apical membrane
Synthesis of Na channels can occur b/c of aldosteron here

18
Q

What happens if aldosterone synthesizes Na channels

A

There is an increase in Na absorption & an increase in K secretion

19
Q

Why is aldosterone important in herbivores

A

Causes an increase in K secretion
K is high in plants so excess K needs to be moved out

20
Q

What happens to K during diarrhea & why

A

Increase in the loss of K
b/c of increased flow rates of the intestinal fluid

21
Q

What happens if there is a loss of large volumes of ECF type fluid from the GIT

A

Decreased ECF volume
Decrease intravascular volume
Decreased arterial pressure (which causes baroreceptor activation to restore BP)

22
Q

What are some issues or losses associated with severe diarrhea

A

Circulatory collapse
High HCO3 losses are relative to Cl loses which can leads to hyperchloremic metabolic acidosis w/ a normal anion gap
High K losses that lead to hypokalemia b/c K is lost from the ECF

23
Q

What happens when there is hyperchloremic metabolic acidosis w/ a normal anion gap

A

Loss of bicarb for the GIT signals the kidneys to reabsorb NaCl (b/c NaCl is lost when bicarb is lost)
This is activated by the RAAS system (stimulates Na/H exchangers)
Causes the kidneys to excrete more acid

24
Q

What is a main cause of diarrhea

A

Decreased surface are for absorption due to infections or inflammation of the SI

25
Q

What causes osmotic diarrhea

A

Non absorbable solutes cause water retention in the SI lumen which lead to a decrease in SA

26
Q

What causes secretory diarrhea

A

Excessive amounts os fluid being secreted by the crypt cells
Adenylyl cyclase has been permanently activated & cAMP levels are high