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

1
Q

what is the most important role of the small intestine

A

absorption of water, salts and nutrients

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2
Q

where does the small intestine originate

A

stomach, before coiling around abdomen

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3
Q

what holds the small intestine in place and what is its function

A

mesentery, which is a connective tissue and throws small intestine into folds; supports blood supply

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4
Q

what does the small intestine meet in the lower right quadrant

A

large intestine

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5
Q

sphincter at proximal end

A

pyloric sphincter

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6
Q

sphincter at distal end

A

ileocaecal valve (prevents back flow of bacteria into ileum)

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7
Q

3 portions of small intestine, length and key roles

A

duodenum (0.25m; digestion, gut regulation), jejenum (2.5m; absoprtion), ileum (3.75m; absorption)

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8
Q

what does the epithelial layer have and why

A

finger-like villi projections to increase SA for absorption

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9
Q

what are villi rich in and what are they innovated by

A

bloody supply, lymph drainage, motility; innovated by submucosal plexus

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10
Q

what is the mucosa arranged in

A

circular folds

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11
Q

name of mucosal invaginations in between villi

A

crypts of Lieberkuhn

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12
Q

distinguishing feature of duodenum

A

coiled mucous-secreting Brunner’s submucosal gland; secretes bicarbonate-rich alkaline solution which open up into the base of the Crypts

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13
Q

function of solution from duodenum

A

helps to neutralise acid chyme, protects lining of proximal small intestine, provides optimum pH for enzymes

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14
Q

distinguishing feature of jejenum

A

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)

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15
Q

distinguishing features of ileum

A

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

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16
Q

what are Peyer’s patches in ileum able to do

A

initiate leukocyte and immunoglobulin responses to pathogens

17
Q

what do Payer’s patches in ileum contain

A

M-cells

18
Q

what do M-cells do

A

key for immunity

19
Q

what don’t M-cells possess

A

microvilli

20
Q

3 main functions of intestinal motility

A

mix ingested food with digestive secretions and enzymes, facilitate contact between contents and mucosal surface, propel contents along small intestine

21
Q

3 mechanisms to achieve motility functions

A

segmentation, peristalsis, migrating motor complex

22
Q

describe segmentation

A

less coordinated; alternative contraction and relaxation of non-adjacent segments of circular muscle in gut wall, so food is pushed backwards then forwards to mix it and break it down mechanically, with a minor effect of propulsion; more frequent in duodenum than ileum

23
Q

descibe peristalsis

A

more coodinated; sequential contraction of adjacent segments of circular muscle in gut wall, combined with contractions of longitudinal muscle, so that food is propelled distally in a 10cm long wave, with a minor effect of mixing

24
Q

describe migrating motor complex

A

periodic contractions from stomach to distal ileum during fasted state (restart when complete) - also present in fed state but less ordered; prevent colonic flora travelling backwards and help cleansing of residual food

25
Q

where are secretions that facilitate digestion in small intestine principally derived from

A

liver, gall bladder, pancreas, small intestine wall

26
Q

where do enzymes that cleave big nutrients into smaller nutrients operate and where are they released from

A

gut lumen, released from glandular organs

27
Q

where do enzymes that cleave dimeric nutrients into monomers for absorption operate and where are they released from

A

brush border of enterocytes, released from gut epithelium