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Esophagus

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Esophagus Muscular tube that extends from _____to the _____ and is located dorsal to the trachea. Function is to transport swallowed material to the stomach. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Esophagus


1
Esophagus
  • Muscular tube that extends from _________to the
    __________ and is located dorsal to the trachea.
  • Function is to transport swallowed material to
    the stomach.
  • No significant digestion takes place
  • Enters stomach at an angle in __________
  • Controlled by cardiac sphincter
  • As stomach fills, fold of stomach against
    esophagus closes lower end of esophagus
  • Reduces risk for reflux
  • In some species, closure is strong enough to
    prevent reflux
  • or vomiting (horse, rabbit)

2
Megaesophagus
  • Loss of muscle tone causing _________ of the
    esophagus
  • Causes esophagus to relax
  • Food accumulates in the esophagus instead of
    being transported to stomach.
  • Animal ___________ undigested food.
  • How do we treat?
  • Feed liquid based diet
  • Feed on an elevated surface
  • Holding animal up and allowing gravity to pull
    food down to stomach.
  • Can lead to aspiration pneumonia.

3
Monogastric (Simple) Stomach
  • _________- area immediately surrounding the
    opening from the esophagus into the stomach
    sphincter and angle of esophageal entry helps to
    prevent reflux
  • _________- distensible blind pouch expands as
    more food is swallowed rich with glands
  • _________ distensible middle section rich
    with glands

4
Monogastric (Simple) Stomach
  • 4. _________ ________- distal portion that grinds
    up swallowed food and regulates the HCl produced
    in the body and fundus
  • 5. _________- sphincter that regulates movement
    of digested stomach contents (chyme) from
    stomach to duodenum (first part of intestine).
  • -Prevents backflow of duodenal contents into
    the stomach.

_________ curvature- outer portion of C-shaped
stomach _________ curvature- inner portion of
C-shaped stomach
5
Gastric Glands
  • FUNDUS BODY Both areas are rich with glands
    containing the following cells
  • __________ cells
  • Produce hydrochloric acid (HCl)
  • __________ cells
  • Produce pepsinogen, an enzyme precursor to pepsin
  • __________ cells
  • Produce a protective mucus
  • PYLORIC ANTRUM
  • ____ cells
  • Endocrine cells that secrete the hormone gastrin
    into the blood when food is present
  • Gastrin stimulates the parietal cells to release
    HCl
  • __________ cells

6
Gastric Motility
  • Peristalsis continues in stomach and small
    intestines.
  • Longitudinal muscles send peristaltic waves from
    the cardia to the antrum.
  • Circular muscles encircle the antrum, allowing it
    to grind food.
  • Fundus and Body relax with swallowing, allowing
    stomach to distend and fill with food.
  • Body of stomach also contracts to help mix food
    within the stomach.
  • Pyloric Antrum increases contractions in response
    to swallowing of food.
  • Stimulates mixing, grinding, and propulsive
    contractions that move food toward pylorus

Empty Full
7
Gastric Motility
  • Pylorus
  • Concentration of circular muscle fibers
  • Maintains constant tone of sphincter
  • Chyme is forced by contractions into antrum of
    stomach.
  • Remains partially open so contents can move from
    stomach to duodenum.
  • Anything that causes distension of the small
    intestines or increased acidity of duodenum will
    inhibit stomach contractions and delay gastric
    emptying.
  • ______________ reflex- prevents stomach from
    sending its contents into the duodenum before
    the intestines are ready.

Empty Full
8
Gastric Motility
  • Stomach contains mucosal layer, submucosa,
    muscular layer (longitudinal and circular muscle
    fibers), and outer serosal layer
  • Smooth muscle in stomach wall responds to actions
    of the Autonomic Nervous System.
  • _________________ stimulation causes fundus to
    relax and increases contractions in antrum
  • _________________ stimulation (fight or flight)
    can decrease motility ? gastric atony

9
Gastric Secretions
  • ______________
  • Hormone produced by G cells in the pyloric
    antrum.
  • Helps to increase HCl production.
  • Inhibits muscle activity of fundus.
  • Causes relaxation and greater filling of the
    stomach.
  • _____________ acid
  • Produced by parietal cells in body and fundus.
  • Produce hydrogen and chloride separately which
    combine in stomach.
  • Accounts for stomachs low pH
  • When enough acid is produced, then gastrin
    release is inhibited.
  • _____________- precursor to pepsin which breaks
    down proteins to chains of amino acids.
  • Peptides (chains of amino acids) stimulate
    release of gastrin, which increases hydrochloric
    acid production and pepsinogen release.
  • Pepsin is inactivated from pH change from stomach
    to intestine.

10
Gastric Secretions
  • ____________
  • Hormone released by intestines
  • Can inhibit peristalsis which slows gastric
    emptying.
  • _______________ (CCK)
  • Nutrients high in fat or protein stimulate
    release of this hormone.
  • Decreases contraction of antrum, body and fundus.
  • _____________ factor- protein that combines with
    vitamin B12 that aids in absorption of this
    vitamin.

11
Gastric Secretions
  • ____________
  • Produced by gastric glands
  • Complex of substances
  • _______- produced by goblet cells
  • Main constituent of mucus
  • ____________- makes mucous coat more alkaline in
    nature
  • This helps to neutralize hydrochloric acid
  • Help to coat the stomach
  • pH of stomach is generally about 2-3
  • Must be secreted continuously

12
Prostaglandins
  • Small molecular structures released by the body
    that have a wide variety of effects.
  • Involved in ______________.
  • Some are beneficial to body.
  • PGE PGI
  • Reduce hydrochloric acid production by inhibiting
    gastrin release from G cells.
  • Directly inhibit Parietal cells
  • Stimulate bicarbonate ion production
  • Enhance blood flow to stomach
  • Help stomach to repair quickly.

13
Gastric Ulcers
Deep erosions of the stomachs epithelium
Rugae- long folds in the stomach.
14
Ruminants and Complex Stomachs
  • Only have one true stomach (abomasum), and 3
    forestomachs (reticulum, rumen, and omasum).
  • RUMINATION
  • ____________ food
  • ____________ it
  • _______ it some more
  • ____________it again

15
Reticulum
  • Smallest and most cranial compartment.
  • _____________ arrangement to increase absorption.
  • Separated from rumen by _______________fold
    muscle wall is continuous with the rumen
  • Rumen and Reticulum work together and produce
    Reticulorumen contractions.
  • ___________ disease is associated with the
    reticulum.

16
Rumen
  • Contains billions of ____________
  • _____________ takes place here
  • Muscular sacs separated by pillars (long,
    muscular folds of rumen wall).
  • Sacs can close off to allow more mixing to take
    place
  • Reticuloruminal contractions allow
  • Regurgitation of partially-digested plant food
    (cud) to take place
  • Eructation-Expulsion of built up carbon dioxide
    or methane gas
  • If build up continues, may cause _________.

17
Rumen Continued
  • Rumen motility is controlled by
  • _____ (ideal is 5.8-6.4)
  • Presence of _________ _______ _______ (VFAs)
  • Cellulose ? Glucose ? absorbed by microbes ? VFA
    (absorbed) ? Glucose (liver)
  • Excess VFAs decrease rumen motility
  • ______________ nervous system
  • ___________ of foodstuffs
  • ___________ receptors

18
Fermentative Digestion
  • Dependent on billions of microbes
    (bacteria/protozoa) in rumen
  • Rumen microbes contain enzymes
  • (monogastric animals produce necessary enzymes)
  • Cellulase enzymes turn cellulose into simple
    carbohydrates/sugars
  • (Simple stomach animals cannot digest cellulose)
  • Glucose not immediately available to ruminant
  • Absorbed by microbes and released as VFAs
  • VFAs absorbed into blood and converted to
    glucose, fat, milk fat
  • Proteases (from microbes) break down protein into
    aas/peptides
  • Incorporated into microbes eventually ?
    bloodstream
  • Converted to ammonia (NH3) and VFAs ?
    bloodstream
  • Ammonia released is utilized by other microbes to
    create their own amino acids and proteins

19
Omasum
  • When reticulorumen contractions occur, they move
    ingesta to omasum.
  • Muscular with interior full of parallel,
    longitudinal muscular folds.
  • Breaks down food particles and carry them to the
    abomasum.
  • ________ VFAs (that werent already absorbed in
    rumen) and water from ingesta
  • Removes _______________ (to preserve the pH of
    the abomasum).

Abomasum
  • _______ __________ functions very similar to
    that of mongastric stomach.
  • Only ______________ part of the stomach.
  • Contains enzymes called __________ that break
    down microbes flushed out from the rumen to be
    used as protein source

20
Young Ruminant Digestive Tract
  • Newborns stomach functions mainly as a
    monogastric digestive system.
  • ______________ is the largest chamber in a
    newborn
  • Rumen and reticulum are small and non-functional
    at birth (minimal _________).
  • Development of rumen and reticulum is dependent
    on rate of diet change to grain.
  • Milk in rumen can disrupt fermentation process so
    is carried directly to omasum.
  • ____________ groove (_______________ groove)-
    allows liquids to be carried from esophagus
    directly to omasum, bypassing rumen and
    reticulum.
  • As animal ages, groove disappears.

21
Small Intestines
  • Where majority of nutrients are __________ into
    the bloodstream.
  • Same anatomy for monogastrics and ruminants
  • Divided into
  • ______________
  • Short, first segment that leaves stomach.
  • ______________
  • Longest portion, makes up majority of small
    intestines.
  • ______________
  • Short section that enters the colon (large
    intestine).
  • Separated from colon by ileocecal sphincter-
    muscle that regulates movement of materials from
    small intestine into colon or the cecum (blind
    pouch of the large intestine).
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