Gastric Motility & Pancreatic Function Flashcards

1
Q

How do gastric contents move through the stomach?

A

By peristaltic waves

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2
Q

In what section of the stomach does most mixing occur and why?

A

The antrum as it has a thick powerful muscle

The muscle around the body of the stomach is much weaker and so does little more than move the contents along

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3
Q

How does the pyloric sphincter control movement of gastric contents?

A

Once a small amount of gastric contents hits the duodenum the pyloric sphincter closes forces most of the contents back up towards the body to be mixed again

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4
Q

How fast is the gastric peristaltic rhythm?

A

~3 waves/min

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5
Q

What regulates the peristaltic rhythm?

A

Spontaneous depolarisation in pacemaker cells in the longitudinal muscle layer

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6
Q

What do we call the basic electrical rhythm of the gastric muscle?

A

Slow Wave Rhythm

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7
Q

What parts of the GI tract are slow waves conducted to and how?

A

The stomach, and intestines.

The longitudinal muscle is connected by gap junctions all the way down

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8
Q

The slow wave depolarisation happens constantly, why isnt your stomach contracting even when empty?

A

The slow wave depolarisation is sub threshold and requires further depolarisation from another source to trigger an action potential

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9
Q

What other sources of depolarisation add to the slow wave depolarisation?

A

Gastrin -> Increases Contraction

Distension of stomach wall -> Vagal and ENS reflexes (long & Short) -> Increased Contraction

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10
Q

What factors reduce gastric motility?

A

Acid in duodenum -> More Secretin from S cells -> Reduce gastric motility

Fat/amino acids/hypertonicity in duodenum -> Cholecystokinin -> reduce gastric motility

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11
Q

What chemical neutralises stomach acid upon reaching the duodenum? and where is it produced?

A

Bicarbonate (HCO3-)

Made in ductal cells (pancreatic duct) and brunners glands (duodenal submucosa)

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12
Q

How is HCO3- secretion regulateD?

A

Acid is detected in the duodenum:

1) Long vagal & short ENS reflexes
2) Secretin released from S cells
- triggers HCO3- secretion in ductal cells
- acid neutralisation then inhibits secretin release

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13
Q

Describe the endocrine portions of the pancreas?

A

Islets of langerhans
They secrete:
- insulin & glucagon.
- Somatostatin (controls insulin/glucagon release)

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14
Q

Describe the exocrine portion of the pancreas and the passage to the duodenum

A

Acinar cells forms lobules

  • > Lobules connected by intercalated ducts
  • > Join into intralobular ducts
  • > Join into interlobular ducts
  • > Combine into pancreatic duct
  • > Joins common bile duct at hepatopancreatic ampulla
  • > Passes through sphincter of Oddi
  • > Exits into duodenum at the major duodenal papilla
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15
Q

How do we compensate for a blocked pancreatic duct?

A

WE have a smaller accessory pancreatic duct that can open if needed

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16
Q

What type of epithelium lines the pancreatic duct and what do they produce?

A

Cuboidal epithelium makes up the ductal cells.

They produce bicarbonate

17
Q

What does the exocrine portion of the pancreas secrete?

A

Acinar cells -> Digestive enzymes

Ductal cells -> Bicarbonate

18
Q

Why do acinar cels store their secretions as zymogens?

A

So they dont self digest

19
Q

How are the zymogens of digestive enzymes activated upon hitting the duodenum?

A

Enterokinase is bound to the brush border of duodenal enterocytes

  • > It activates trypsinogen to trypsin
  • > Trypsin then converts the rest of the zymogens to active forms
20
Q

Name the 6 types of pancreatic enzymes and what they do:

A

Proteases - cleave peptide bonds
Nucleases - Hydrolyse DNA/RNA
Elastases - Digest collagen
Phospholipidases - break down phospholipids to fatty acids
Lipases - break TAG to fatty acids + glycerol
Alpha-amylase - Breaks starch to maltose & glucose

21
Q

Summarize the control of pancreatic secretions

A

Bicarbonate:

  • Secretin controlled
  • Released in response to acid in the duodenum

Zymogens:

  • Controlled by Cholecystokinin (CCK)
  • Released in response to fats & amino acids in the duodenum

Neural control through long vagal and short ENS reflexes also trigger bicarbonate and zymogen release in response to organic nutrients in the duodenum.