Describe the oesophagus?
A muscular tube about 25cm long, extending pharynx to stomach, travels posterior to the trachea, tube is normally empty with its lumen collapsed, and expands to accomodate food/water
Functions of the oesophagus?
Transport (travel time 5 seconds for food, 1 second for fluid, due to peristalsis)
Protection
No absorption, little secretion, no digestion
Differences in the oesophagus to the four layers of the gut tube?
What is the epithelium of the mucous membrane like?
What is the external muscle in the oesophagus like?
Contains, in addition to the usual smooth muscle, some skeletal muscle in the upper third of the oesophagus to allow rapid contraction and voluntary control of swallowing
Does the oesophagus have a serosa?
No. Over most of its length the oesophagus does not lie in a body cavity, so lacks a serosa- instead, it is covered with a fibrous adventitia which attaches it to neighbouring organs eg trachea
What does the stomach look like?
A j-shaped bag on the left side, an enlargement of the gut tube. About 1.5 litre capacity
Function of the stomach?
Storage, since food can be eaten more quickly than it can be digested and absorbed
Regions of the stomach?
Four; cardia, fundus, body, pylorus
What’s at the outlet of the stomach?
A well developed muscular pyloric sphincter
What’s the stomach like when empty?
Lines with longitudinal folds
Differences in the stomach to the typical four layers of the gut tube?
Functions of the stomach?
Purpose of surface mucous cells?
To secrete insoluble alkaline mucus which protects the mucosa from acid and pepsin
Purpose of undifferentiated cells?
Stem cells dividing to generate new epithelium
Purpose of parietal cells?
To secrete HCl which kills microbes and living cells. Also secretes intrinsic factors, important for absorption of B12
Purpose of mucous neck cells?
Secrete soluble acid mucus at meal times
Purpose of chief cells?
Secrete pepsinogen (inactive form of pepsin) and gastric lipases. Pepsinogen is converted into the protein splitting enzyme pepsin by acid in the lumen of the gland
Purpose of gastric cells?
(Enteroendocrine)
Gastrin enters the bloodstream as a hormone, stimulates secretion of acid and pepsinogen, increases muscular contractions of stomach releases pyloric sphincter
What precedes chief cells?
Mucous neck cells then stem cells
Two parts of mucosa of stomach?
Gastric pit (upper) Gastric gland (lower)
What is the liver made of?
Epithelial cells (hepatocytes) derived from embryonic endoderm
What carries out liver function?
Hepatocytes
What are hepatocytes and what do they do?
Multitalented cells which perform more than 500 different metabolic functions, including: glycogen/glucose storage and release, recycling of red blood cells, bile synthesis and secretion, synthesis of plasma proteins and removal of toxins from blood