What are 6 steps in the peristaltic contractions of the stomach (gastric emptying and mixing)?

What is the function of the duodenum section of the small intestine?
Juices important for absorption are released
Since the stomach only produces peptin (which absorbs protein) this part is important to absorb other nutrients

What are 2 parts of the pancreas?

What are the 2 cells in the exocrine part of the pancreas?
What do the duct cells secrete?
aqueous NaHCO3 – solution
What do acinar cells secrete?
digestive enzymes
What is the control of pancreatic aqueous NaHCO3- secretion?

What is the control of pancreatic digestive enzyme secretion?

What are 2 hormones that are produced when food will activate receptors of the wall of the duodenum?

What is the importance of regulation within the GIT?
2 different inputs activate certain cell types and will produce different outcomes (that are both very important for the contra-balance of acidity and the production of enzymes needed for digestion of food)
What are pancreatic enzymes?
Zymogen granules of secretory cells contain digestive enzymes:

What are 4 digestive pancreatic enzymes?
What are proteolytic enzymes?
break certain proteins apart
What is alpha-amylase enzymes?
What is lipase?
breaks down complex lipids (triglycerides)
What are nucleases?
break down nucleic acids
What are 3 external features of the liver and gallbladder?

What is the functional organisation of the liver?
Bile is released connected to the pancreas

What is one function of the liver in terms of the GIT?
produce & secrete bile (600-1200ml/day)
What is bile?
An alkaline solution containing bile salts, bile pigments, cholesterol, neutral fats, phospholipids, and electrolytes
Where is bile stored?
Gallbladder
Where is bile discharged?
Duodenum
What are the 2 functions of bile?

What are bile salts?
emulsify large fat particles into tiny particles that can be attacked by lipases
