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What are the 2 types of movement of the GI tract?
propulsive movement and mixing movements (peristalsis)
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What is propulsive movement?
moving food forward at an appropriate rate for digestion and absorption
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What is peristalsis?
mixing movements by local intermittent contractions
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What kind of organ is the gall bladder and what system is it apart of?
solid organ and biliary system
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What is the difference b/t a solid and hollow organ?
- solid- does NOT come in contact with food and does secretions
- hollow- comes in contact with food
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What is excitation of GI smooth muscle?
converting an electrical stimulus to a mechanical response. This process is fundimental to muscle physiology, whereby electrical stimulation is usually an action potential and mechanical response is contraction
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What are the steps of of the longitudinal and circular muscles to push food throught the GI tract?
- step 1: circular muscles contract behind the food mass
- step 2: longitudinal muscles contract in front of the food mass
- step 3: contraction of circular muscles propels food mass forward
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*What stimulates peristalsis?
stretching of gut wall is 1st stimulus, that occurs with large amount of food, stimulates contraction 2-3 cm behind stretched wall. This initiates peristalsis that propels food forward. Other stimuli are : parasympathetic signals (positive action) and physical or chemical stimulation of epithelial lining
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*What is important about the electrical wiring of the GI?
uniform and coordinated. enteric nervous system: myenteric plexus and submucosal plexus (Auerbach and Meissner's plexus)
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*Stimulation of myenteric plexus causes what?
- 1. increase in tonic contractions
- 2. increase in intensity of contractions
- 3. slight increase in rhythm of contractions
- 4. increase in velocity of excitatory waves along the gut wall
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*Blocking myenteric plexus does what?
greatly decreases peristalsis
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*The myenteric plexus arises from what?
cells in parasympathetic nucleus from the 10th CN (vagus), located in medulla
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*What are characteristics of smooth muscle?
- 1. Thick and thin filaments
- 2. Not arranged in sarcomeres
- 3. Appears homogenous and not striated
- *4. Unitary smooth muscle (single unit)
- 5. Spontaneously active (slow waves)
- 6. Exhibit pacemaker activity
- 7. Modulated by neural and hormonal mechanisms
- *8. High degree of coupling b/t cells- leads to coordinated contraction
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What is the force behind peristalsis?
smooth muscle contractions
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Electrical activity of smooth muscles in gut does what?
coordinates the cells so that they act in unison fashion
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Smooth muscle behave as what?
syncytium
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What is syncytium?
behave as a mass of cytoplasm having many nuclei, but no internal cell boundaries (cytoplasm that does not seperate into individual cells)
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Electrical activity can be recorded after blockage of central impulses because of _________.
autonomous of electrical activity
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***What are the steps in excitation (contraction coupling in GI smooth muscle)?
- 1. Different from skeletal muscle
- 2. There is no troponin in SM
- 3. Calcium regulates myosin on thick filaments
- 4. Depolarizaiton opens voltage gated Ca2+ channels
- 5. So Ca2+ flows into the cells
- 6. There may be additional release of Ca2+ from SR
- 7. Intracellular Ca2+ increases
- 8. Ca2+ binds to calmodulin
- 9. Ca2+ + calmodulin binds and activates MLCK (myosin light chain kinase)
- 10. MLCK phosphorylates myosin which binds to actin --> contraction
- 11. Dephosphorylation --> relaxation
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*In GI SM a slow wave originates where? as what?
cells of cajal, Basic Electrical Rhythm
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*Loss of slow wave cells (cells of Cajal) stops what?
stops propagation of slow wave potential and thus gut motility
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**Slow wave threshold must be reached before what can happen?
before spike potential can propagate
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***What do intrinsic (Auerbach and Messner's plexus), extrinsic, and hormones do?
modulate amplitude and frequency of wave
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*What is extrinsic?
symp. and parasymp
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*What is intrinsic?
Auerbach and Meissner's plexus
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*What do excitatory compounds include?
ACh, Substance P
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*What do inhibitory compounds include?
vasoactive interstinal peptide (VIP) and nitric oxide (NO)
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*****What are slow waves?
osscilating resting membrane potentials
NOT ACTION POTENTIALS
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*What are some characteristics of slow waves?
- 1. key for generating contractions from stomach downwards
- 2. Generated by specialized cells (interstitial cells of Cajal, ICC)
- 3. Begin in stomach and travel downward thru GI tract
- 4. Frequency is characteristic of different parts of GI
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*Contractions = what?
when spike potentials occur during slow waves (not every slow wave = contraction)
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*Slow waves are caused by what?
entry of Na+
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*What do slow waves do?
drive membrane to threshold, which causes spikes to occur.
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*Spikes cause what?
Spikes cause contraction
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*What are spikes caused by?
influx of primarily Ca2+ and some Na+. The Ca2+ enters the muscle during the spike causes the contraction
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*When do spikes occur?
occur once resting membrane potential depolarizes to 40 mV. The more depolarized the resting membrane potential becomes during slow waves, the greater the frequency of spikes
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*Where can Interstitial cells of Cajal (ICC) be found?
throughout GI tract: from esophagus to inner sphincter region of anus
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*What do ICC do?
act as pacemaker cell and as an impulse conduction system in the gut musculature in a way analogous to the pacemaker cells in the heart.
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*When are slow waves present?
at all times in the stomach and SI even when muscle not contracting
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*When muscle begins to contract what happens
fast activity appears on top of slow wave
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*Types of electrical activity have several alternateve names. Match the following with their other name: Slow wave, pacesetter potential, control activity, basic electrical rhythm
fast activity, spike potentials, action potentials, response activity spike burst
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What does a intracellular electrode do?
put into cell and records changes in electrical potental b/t cytoplasm and fluid surrounding cell
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What does extracellular electrodes do?
record from fluid b/t muscle cells
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What is the importance of electrical activity of GI SM?
- 1. slow wave coordinates the adjacent muscle cells so that they are ready to fire fast activity together to give a mechanically effective contraction (preps the muscle for contraction)
- 2. movement and mixing of gut contents are main functions of muscluar coat
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*Generation and transmission of electrical activity inclusds what?
- 1. contacts b/t SMCs (physical contact with each together)
- 2. function of membranes of SMCs
- 3. activity of ganglion cells and neural endings
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*What are factors that influence electrical activity?
hormones, nervous system, feeding, and temp
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What do gastrin or pentagastrin do?
giving an increase in frequency in slow waves
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What does secretin do?
decreases frequency of slow waves
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Where are slow waves not significantly affected by hormones?
duodenum
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*Electrical activity of GI SMCs can be influneced by what?
CNS (symp and parasymp)
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*Gastric vagal denervations do what?
long-term alteration in wave form
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*Nervous system can give either stimulation or inhibition of fast activity depending on what?
parameters of electrical stimulation
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Ingesting of food within a few minutes does what?
followed by bursts of coordinated fast activity on gastric and duodenal slow waves
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How long does fast activity happen?
3 hrs
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How long do fasting patterns take?
8 or more hours
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Increase in body temp does what?
increases frequency of slow waves
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cooling of body does what?
decreases frequency of slow waves
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What are some motility disorders of the esophagus?
- 1. Gastroesophageal Reflux Disease (GERD)
- 2. Dysphagia --> difficulty in swallowing
- 3. Achalasia --> esophageal dysphagia
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What are some motility disorders of the stomach?
- 1. Delayed Gastric Emptying (Gastroparesis) --> food in stomach longer than normal (more than 3-4 hrs)
- 2. Rapid Gastric Emptying (Dumping Syndrome)
- 3. Functional Dyspepsia --> indigestion, bloating
- 4. Cyclic Vomiting Syndrome (CVS) --> usually in kids or elderly
- 5. Idiocyclic Vomiting Syndrome --> don't know cause
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What are some motility disorders of the SI?
- 1. Intestinal Dysmotility
- 2. Intestinal Pseudo-Obstruction
- 3. Small Bowel Bacteral Overgrowth
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What are some motility disorders of the Colon?
- 1. Constipation
- 2. Diarrhea
- 3. Hirschsprung's Disease
- 4. Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS)
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What are some motility disorders of the Anorectal region and pelvic floor?
- 1. Fecal Incontinence
- 2. Hirschsprung's Disease
- 3. Outlet Obstructive Type Constipation (Pelvic Floor Dyssynergia)
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