*NURSING > STUDY GUIDE > Exam 4 Study Guide GASTROINTESTINAL PHYSIOLOGY (All)

Exam 4 Study Guide GASTROINTESTINAL PHYSIOLOGY

Document Content and Description Below

Exam 4 Study Guide GASTROINTESTINAL PHYSIOLOGY Anatomy of the GI system – NOT ON STUDY GUIDE • Digestive system – enteric nervous system (extrinsic and intrinsic) o Autonomic (involuntar... y) and hormonal control [except chewing, swallowing, defecation] ▪ Vagus nerve o Ingested substances trigger hormones that stimulate or inhibit ▪ Muscular contractions – GI motility; timely secretion of substances that aid in digestion o Located near the areas that they innervate and control • Mouth o Reservoir for chewing and mixing of food with saliva o Taste buds (chemoreceptors) and olfactory nerves are stimulated – initiates salivation and secretion of gastric juices in the stomach • Salivary glands o Submandibular, sublingual, parotid (largest; secretes saliva) o Saliva is composed of water with mucus, sodium, chloride, bicarbonate, potassium and salivary a-amylase (carb digestion) and is controlled by ANS ▪ Cholinergic parasympathetic fibers stimulate salivary glands • Ex: anticholinergic meds inhibit salivation ▪ Sympathetic beta-adrenergic stimulation decreases salivary secretion – none, little, or little with rich protein content ▪ A pH of 7.4 which neutralizes bacterial acids aiding to prevent injection ▪ Contains IgA – prevents orally ingested microorganisms • Esophagus o Conducts substances from oropharynx to stomach o Upper esophageal sphincter prevents entry of air into the esophagus during respiration o Lower esophageal sphincter (cardiac sphincter) prevents regurgitation from the stomach Increase tone by cholinergic vagal stimulation and the digestive hormone gastrin Decrease tone/relax by non-adrenergic, non-cholinergic vagal impulse and the hormones progesterone, secretin, and glucagon o Vagus nerve allows relaxation of esophagus during swallowing o Swallowing: complex event mediated by the swallowing center in reticular formation of brainstem Phases: oropharyngeal (voluntary) and esophageal (involuntary) Must coordinate with respiratory center • Respiration is inhibited – epiglottis slides downward to prevent food from entering larynx and trachea o Peristalsis: Primary: immediately follows oropharyngeal phase of swallowing Secondary: bolus of food becomes stuck – wave of contraction and relaxation occurs that is independent of voluntary swallowing • Stomach o Hollow muscular organ – stores food, secretes digestive juices, mixes food with juices – propels chyme into duodenum o Muscle layers – outer (longitudinal), middle (circular), inner (oblique) o Sphincters – lower esophageal (chyme enters from esophagus into stomach), pyloric (chyme exits stomach into duodenum of small intestine o Functional portions – upper (fundus), middle (body), lower (antrum) o Blood supply via branch of celiac artery; drainage via splenic vein and tributaries o Few substances absorbed in stomach – can absorb alcohol, aspirin, NSAIDS o Innervated by sympathetic and parasympathetic o Gastric motility .................................................................continued............................................................................................... [Show More]

Last updated: 1 year ago

Preview 1 out of 59 pages

Reviews( 0 )

$13.00

Add to cart

Instant download

Can't find what you want? Try our AI powered Search

OR

GET ASSIGNMENT HELP
33
0

Document information


Connected school, study & course


About the document


Uploaded On

Jul 07, 2021

Number of pages

59

Written in

Seller


seller-icon
Anthony79

Member since 3 years

4 Documents Sold


Additional information

This document has been written for:

Uploaded

Jul 07, 2021

Downloads

 0

Views

 33

Document Keyword Tags

Recommended For You


$13.00
What is Browsegrades

In Browsegrades, a student can earn by offering help to other student. Students can help other students with materials by upploading their notes and earn money.

We are here to help

We're available through e-mail, Twitter, Facebook, and live chat.
 FAQ
 Questions? Leave a message!

Follow us on
 Twitter

Copyright © Browsegrades · High quality services·