Peptic Ulcer
A peptic ulcer is a break in the protective mucosal lining of the lower esophagus, stomach, or duodenum
*These breaks expose the Submucosa to gastric secretions and cause autodigestion of deeper layers of the GI tract wall
Where are peptic ulcers found? (3 with explanation)
Erosion Ulcer (4)
Acute Ulcer (2)
Perforating Ulcer
When an ulcer perforates (penetrates through all the layers of the GI tract) can be very dangerous because it exposes the body cavity to the contents of the tract
Risks for Peptic Ulcer Disease (6)
*Risk factors increase chance of developing peptic ulcer either by increasing gastric acid production or by increasing inflammation, or both
H.Pylori (5)
What occurs with presence of H.Pylori? (3)
Duodenal Ulcers
Duodenum is particularly vulnerable to the acid coming from the stomach and doesn’t have alkaline mucous covering; often heal spontaneously but reoccur within months
*It is the most frequently seen type of ulcer
Factors that contribute to Duodenal Ulcers (5)
Characteristic Manifestation of Duodenal Ulcers
Chronic intermittent pain in the epigastric region
-The pain occurs and causes discomfort for a while then spontaneously heals then comes back
(Very different from gastric ulcers, which tend to be very acute and don’t spontaneously heal)
Food-pain relief pattern: Duodenal Ulcers
You consume a meal and then about an hour after the meal, when the food has moved out of the duodenum, you start to feel pain from the acid hitting the duodenum
*If you consume more food, then 20-30 min after you consume it the pain is relieved as food enters duodenum, but then as the food moves out you feel pain again 1 hour after eating
RELIEF = 20-30 min after eating PAIN = 1 hour after eating
Food-pain relief pattern: Gastric Ulcers
You eat a meal and the food immediately enters the stomach so you don’t immediately feel pain because the food is between the acid and the ulcer, but 20-30 min after the meal when the food moves out of the stomach, the acid hits the ulcer and gives you pain
*If you consume more food, the food immediately relieves the pain, but then the cycle starts over 20-30 min later
RELIEF= immediately after eating PAIN= 20-30 minutes after eating
Duodenal and Gastric Ulcer Treatments (4)
PPIs
The pumps move hydrogen ions out of the parietal cells and into the stomach, and in the stomach it binds with chloride to make hydrochloric acid, so this is getting blocked by PPIs
CCK and Secretion (4 steps)
1st: The food that moves from the stomach into the duodenum triggers the duodenal mucosal cells to release CCK and secretin
2nd: CCK and secretin act on liver and pancrease to stimulate release of bile and digestive juices into duodenum
3rd: Secretin acts on the exocrine portion of the pancreas and binds to duct cells to stimulate release of sodium bicarbonate (alkaline) solution
4th: The alkaline solution is released from pancreas and enters duodenum to neutralize the acid coming from the stomach
* Protective measure
Stress Ulcers (4)
Steps leading to stress ulcer (6 steps)
1st: SNS stimulation
2nd: Decreased mucosal blood flow
3rd: Mucosal metabolism declines
4th: Decreases mucous production
5th: Exposes mucosa to gastric acid
6th: Autodigestion and ulcer formation
Cushing’s Ulcer (3)
A type of stress ulcer that is particularly severe…
Maldigiestion
an abnormality interfering with digestion of food
Malabsorption
an abnormality interfering with absorption
Maldigestion and Malabsorption Disorders
Interference with nutrient digestion or absorption in the small intestine
Malabsorptive and Maldigestive disorders often occur together
Pancreatic Insufficiency
What occurs if you don’t have pancreatic enzymes? (4)