small bowel and large intestine Flashcards
small intestine anatomy: describe the structure and functions of the small intestine (secretions, absorption, and motility) and distinguish between functionally different regions
what is the most important role of the small intestine
absorption of water, salts and nutrients
where does the small intestine originate
stomach, before coiling around abdomen
what holds the small intestine in place and what is its function
mesentery, which is a connective tissue and throws small intestine into folds; supports blood supply
what does the small intestine meet in the lower right quadrant
large intestine
sphincter at proximal end
pyloric sphincter
sphincter at distal end
ileocaecal valve (prevents back flow of bacteria into ileum)
3 portions of small intestine, length and key roles
duodenum (0.25m; digestion, gut regulation), jejenum (2.5m; absoprtion), ileum (3.75m; absorption)
what does the epithelial layer have and why
finger-like villi projections to increase SA for absorption
what are villi rich in and what are they innovated by
bloody supply, lymph drainage, motility; innovated by submucosal plexus
what is the mucosa arranged in
circular folds
name of mucosal invaginations in between villi
crypts of Lieberkuhn
distinguishing feature of duodenum
coiled mucous-secreting Brunner’s submucosal gland; secretes bicarbonate-rich alkaline solution which open up into the base of the Crypts
function of solution from duodenum
helps to neutralise acid chyme, protects lining of proximal small intestine, provides optimum pH for enzymes
distinguishing feature of jejenum
large submucosal folds (plicae circularis); similar to folds in rest of the small intestine, but are considerably larger, closer together and more frequent (look more like frills than folds)
distinguishing features of ileum
has up to 100 Peyer’s patches (aggregates of specialised lymphoid tissue key to immune response to gut-borne pathogens); more bacteria in colon so could migrate back up into small intestine