S8) The Digestive System Flashcards

1
Q

Label the following components of the alimentary canal:

A
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2
Q

What are the four layers of the gut wall?

A
  • Mucosa (innermost)
  • Submucosa
  • Muscularis externae
  • Serosa (outermost)
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3
Q

Identify the 8 functions of the gut

A
  • Provides a port of entry for food
  • Mechanically disrupts food
  • Temporarily stores food
  • Chemically digests food
  • Kills pathogens in food
  • Moves food along the tract
  • Absorb nutrients from the resultant solution
  • Eliminate residual waste material
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4
Q

What is digestion?

A

Digestion is the conversion of what we eat by physical and chemical disruption into a solution that is relatively sterile, neutral in pH and isotonic; from which we can absorb our nutrients

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5
Q

Identify 4 roles of saliva in the GI tract

A
  • Starts digestion (amylase & lipase)
  • Assists swallowing
  • Protects mouth & teeth (high calcium)
  • Bacteriostatic (IgA antibody)
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6
Q

Compare physical and chemical disruption in the mouth and stomach respectively

A

- Begins in the mouth:

I. Physical - by teeth, tongue, muscles of mastication

II. Chemical - by salivary amylase and lipase

  • Continues in the stomach:

I. Physical - by churning

II. Chemical - by HCl and enzymes

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7
Q

Describe the transport of food in the GI tract

A
  • Mouth forms a bolus which enters the oesophagus
  • Rapid peristaltic transport (even when upside down) moves bolus to stomach (8-9 seconds)
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8
Q

Describe the neural control of the oesophagus

A
  • Upper end oesophagus – voluntary control (striated skeletal muscle)
  • Lower end oesophagus – involuntary control (solely smooth muscle)
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9
Q

Identify and describe the different components of oesophageal mucosa

A

- Epithelium – stratified squamous non-keratinized

- Lamina propria – loose connective tissue bearing blood & lymph vessels, smooth muscle and immune cells

- Muscularis mucosae – thin layer of smooth muscle cells

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10
Q

Identify and describe the structure of the layer of the oesophageal wall, apart from the mucosa

A

- Submucosa – connective tissue containing mucus-secreting glands

- Muscularis externa – smooth muscle layers which move food by peristalsis

- Adventitia – thin outermost layer of connective tissue

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11
Q

Identify the different smooth muscle layers in the muscularis externa of the oesophageal wall

A
  • Inner layer is circular muscle
  • Outer layer is longitudinal muscle
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12
Q

State 4 roles of the stomach

A
  • Temporarily stores food
  • Receptive relaxation to maintain pressure
  • Proteolytic enzyme and acid secretion
  • Produces hypertonic incompletely digested chyme
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13
Q

What are the three layers of smooth muscle in the stomach?

A
  • Oblique
  • Circular
  • Longitudinal
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14
Q

How does the stomach protect its epithelium

A

The stomach protects its epithelium by secreting bicarbonate-rich mucus

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15
Q

What is rugae?

A

Rugae are folds of gastric mucosa, forming longitudinal ridges in the empty stomach

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16
Q

What is the gastric pit of the gastric gland ?

A

The gastric pit is the region of the gastric gland lined by mucus secreting cells, similar to goblet cells

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17
Q

What is the isthmus (of the gastric gland)?

A

The isthmus is the region in which stem cells divide to populate the gland by upward or downward migration

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18
Q

What do parietal cells do?

A

Parietal cells secrete H+ ions into the lumen and HCO3+ ions into nearby capillaries, which move it to the surface mucous cells

19
Q

What do chief cells do?

A

Chief cells secrete pepsinogens which are converted into pepsins which partly hydrolyse proteins

20
Q

What are enteroendrocrine cells?

A

Gastric enteroendrocrine cells (G cells) are cells found at the base of the gastric gland which secrete gastrin

21
Q

What are surface mucous cells and what do they do?

A

Surface mucous cells are cells which are abundant in gastric pits and release mucus in response to distension, stomach contents and acid secretion from gastric glands

22
Q

Discuss the resistance/vulnerability of surface mucous cells

A
  • Their secreted mucus is resistant to pepsin degradation
  • They can be damaged by aspirin/alcohol
23
Q

Describe the structure, location and function of the duodenum

A
  • Structure: proximal portion of the small intestine
  • Location: curves around the head of the pancreas
  • Function: walls contain Brunner’s glands which secrete bicarbonate-rich mucus to neutralise acidic chyme
24
Q

Describe the dilution and neutralisation of chyme

A
  • Water drawn in from ECF to dilute hypertonic chyme
  • Pancreas & liver secrete alkali and bile to neutralise acidic chyme
25
Digestion is completed by enzymes from the pancreas and intestine. What does this entail?
- Cleaves **peptides** to amino acids - Cleaves **polysaccharides** to monosaccharides - Breaks down and re-form **lipids** - Breaks down **nucleic acids**
26
What are the 3 main requirements of absorption?
- Large amounts of energy (active process) - High surface area (slow process) - Good blood supply/drainage
27
Identify the components of the small intestine and their individual roles
- **Duodenum** absorbs iron - **Jejunum** absorbs most sugars, amino acids and fatty acids - **Ileum** absorbs Vitamin B12, bile acids and remaining nutrients
28
Plicae circulares are found in the jejunum. What are they?
**Plicae circulares** are circular folds of mucosa and submucosa that project into the gut lumen
29
What is a lacteal?
A **lacteal** is a dilated lymphatic capillary vessel
30
What are the components of the large intestine?
31
What are the roles of the bacteria of the large intestine?
- Synthesis of **vitamins** K, B12, thiamine and riboflavin - Breakdown of **bile acids** - Conversion of **bilirubin** to non-pigmented metabolites
32
Identify 2 consequences of disrupted fluid balance in the gut
- Life threatening **dehydration** (depletion of body fluids) - Life threatening **electrolyte imbalance**
33
Describe the neural control of the gut
- **Somatic**: I. Ingestion - mouth & upper oesophagus II. Excretion - last spinchter of anus - **Autonomic**: I. Range of neurotransmitters II. Post ganglionic neurones form plexuses
34
In the paracrine control of the gut, substances act locally. Describe this
- **Histamine** controls production of acid in stomach - **Vasoactive substances** affect blood flow in gut
35
Which 3 actions are controlled by endocrine hormones of the gut?
- Stomach **acid** secretion - **Alkali** secretion from liver and pancreas - **Enzyme** secretion
36
What does gastrin do?
**Gastrin** promotes production of HCl by stomach parietal cells
37
Which three structures produce gastrin?
- G cells of pyloric antrum of stomach - Pancreas - Duodenum
38
Where does CCK come from?
**CCK** is synthesised and secreted by enteroendocrine cells of the duodenum
39
Which 3 things does CCK do?
- Promotes **release of digestive enzymes** from the pancreas - Promotes **release of bile** from gall bladder - Suppresses **hunger**
40
Which 3 things does secretin do?
- Promotes **HCO3 secretion** from duct cells of pancreas - Promotes **bile production** by the liver - Inhibits **acid secretion** by parietal cells of stomach
41
Why don't we inhale what we are trying to swallow?
The **epiglottis** is a flap of elastic cartilage that projects behind the tongue and closes during swallowing, preventing aspiration forcing liquids/food down the oesophagus
42
What is bile?
**Bile** is a digestive juice that is secreted by the liver and stored in the gallbladder
43
Identify 3 roles of bile
- **Emulsify fat** to increase surface area for enzymes - Assists in **absorption of fat soluble** substances *e.g. Vitamin A D E K* - **Neutralise acidic pH** of the stomach contents as they enter the duodenum