Week 2.2 - Gastric Acid Secretion Flashcards
What are the 2 mechanisms stimulating gastric acid secretion?
cephalic phase and gastric phase
What occurs in the stimulatory cephalic phase?
think about/smell/taste food causes saliva and gastric acid secretion - vagus nerve releases ACh, causing release if ECL cells which release histamine
What is the order of the parasympathetic response of food to hydrogen release?
ACH - ECL cells - Histamine - adenyl cyclase ATP to cAMP - PKA
What occurs in the stimulatory gastric phase? (3)
- food in stomach causes distension. vagal and enteric nerves activated, releasing ACh.
- peptides in lumen activate g cells in antrum to release gastrin
- ACh and gastrin activate ECL cells releasing histamines
What are the mechanisms inhibiting gastric acid secretion?
cephalic phase, gastric phase and intestinal phase
What occurs in the inhibitory cephalic phase?
stop thinking about/smelling food, vagal activity decreases
What occurs in the inhibitory gastric phase?
high HCl causes low pH - negative feedback - inhibits gastrin secretion
What occurs in the inhibitory intestinal phase?
- food moves into small intestine, acid gets into duodenum.
- duodenum should be neutral, acid triggers enterogastric effect.
- duodenum mucosa secretes secretin - enters blood and triggers release of bicarbonate, as well as decreasing gastrin activity.
What influence on gastric release do fats and carbs in the duodenum have?
fats and carbs in duodenum induces release of GIP - gastric inhibitory peptide, inhibiting gastrin release
Why is the cephalic phase important?
sterilising food before it enters stomach
What are enterogastrones?
hormones released from glands in duodenal mucosa which inhibit gastric acid secretion and reduce gastric emptying rate
What are some examples of enterogastrones?
secretin, GIP, CCK (cholecystokinin)
How do enterogastrones reduce gastric emptying rate?
contract the pyloric sphyncter
What do chief cells secrete?
pepsinogen
What is pepsinogen and why is it present?
inactive form of pepsin. pepsin denatures proteins so cant be exposed to cells directly