TBL 19 Flashcards
What arteries supply the foregut, midgut and hindgut?
celiac artery: foregut
SMA: midgut
IMA: hindgut
What forms the intestinal loop? What occupies the long axis of the loop?
Rapid elongation during midgut development
SMA
How is the intestinal loop attached to yolk sac?
its apex by the vitelline duct to the yolk sac
What causes reduction of the capacity of the abdominal cavity? What happens as a response?
Elongation of the loop and expansion of the liver cords temporarily reduces the capacity of the abdominal cavity so the loop enters the stalk and later returns to the cavity.
How does an omphalocele form and what are the consequences?
Omphalocele involves herniation of abdominal viscera through an enlarged umbilical ring. The viscera (may include liver, small and large intestines, stomach, spleen, gallbladder) are covered by amnion. Results because failure of bowel to return to the body cavity from its physiological herniation during the 6th-10th weeks.
High rate of mortality –> severe malformations (cardiac anomalies, neural tube defects)
What forms an ileal (Meckel) diverticulum?
when the vitelline duct persists forming an outpocket of the ileum
What does the counterclockwise (180) rotation of the intestinal loop cause?
The intestinal loop makes a counterclockwise rotation around the SMA during herniation. The transverse colon passes anterior to the duodenum.
The completion of the counterclockwise rotation determines final deposition of the midgut and hindgut derivatives in the abdominal cavity.
What are derivatives of the midgut? hindgut?
Midgut: distal duodenum, jejunum, ileum, cecum, appendix, ascending colon and proximal 2/3 of transverse colon
hindgut: distal 1/3 of transverse colon, descending colon, sigmoid colon, rectum, and upper anal canal
Why are most gut atresias and stenoses caused by vascular accidents? Why is proximal duodenal atresia an exception?
From the distal portion of the duodenum cadually, gut atresias and stenoses are thought to be caused by vascular accidents that resulted in compromised blood flow and tissue necrosis in a section of the gut resulting in defects.
Atresias in the upper duodenum are due to a lack of recanalization.
How does Hirschsprung disease cause congential megacolon and where does it most commonly occur?
Congenital megacolon is due to an absence of parasympathetic ganglia in the bowel wall (Hirschsprung disease = aganglionic megacolon).
In most cases, the rectum is involved and in 80% the defect extends to the midpoint of the sigmoid.
What is allantosis?
Allantosis is a slender endodermal diverticulum of the distal hindgut that extends into the connecting stalk. The proximal part of the allantosis forms the cloaca
What divides the endoderm-lined cloaca into urogenital and anorectal portions?
MESODERM-derived urorectal septum
What contributes to the periarterial plexuses on the branches of the celiac trunk to the foregut-derived viscera?
greater splanchnic nerves (t5-t9) which synnapse in the celiac ganglion
postsynaptic sympathetic fibers
Where do the greater splanchnic nerves synapse? (T10-T11)
superior mestenteric ganglion
What do branches of the SMA convey to the midgut derivatives?
Plexuses of postsynaptic sympathetic and visceral sensory fibers
Where is visceral pain from the midgut derivatives referred to? What is it perceived as?
umbilical region
dull, diffuse pain
What do vagus nerves do?
Vagus nerves contribute to the celiac trunk
vagal fibers also join the SMA plexus to the midgut derivatives
What do the parasympathetic and sympathetic fibers do ENS-regulated GI tract?
peristalsis and glandular secretion are:
accelerated– parasympathetic
decelerated – sympathetic
What nerves synapse in the inferior mesenteric ganglion?
least splanchnic nerves (T12) and lumbar splanchnic nerves (L1-L2)
What do periarterial plexuses on branches of the IMA do?
convey postsynaptic sympathetic fibers to the hindgut derivatives
How do hindgut derivatives refer pain?
Proximal hindgut derivatives (distal 1/3 of transverse colon, descending colon and superior half of sigmoid colon) refer visceral pain to the hypogastric region via visceral sensory fibers from DRG at T12-L2, which accompany the postsynaptic sympathetic fibers from the inferior mesenteric ganglion
What are pelvic splanchnic nerves? What accompanies these nerves?
Pelvic splanchnic nerves arise from spinal cord segments S2 to S4, which consist of presynaptic parasympathetic fibers that synapse with enteric ganglia in the hindgut-derived viscera.
Visceral afferent fibers from DRG at S2-S4 accompany the pelvic splanchnic nerves