Term
what are the functions of the GI tract, which are the main functions. explain a little about each |
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Definition
motility: propell, reduce size, mix, proper rate
secretion: electrolytes, galnds
**digestion: to make molecules absorbable
**absorption: nutrients, electrolytes, water |
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Term
what type of tissue is the mouth what is the muscle of the lips what is the vermillion border |
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Definition
stratified squamous border between skin of mucosa and face obricularis oris |
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Term
what is the tounge covered with, anchored by, and its function |
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Definition
covered with mucosa and papillae, anchored to hyoid
chewing, swallowing, speech |
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Term
where are taste buds, what can they taste |
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Definition
they are nerve cells on pepillae
taste sweet, sour, bitter, salty, and umami |
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Term
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Definition
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Term
what is the difference between intrinsic and extrinsic salivary glands
what are the extrinsic ones |
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Definition
intrinsic are in oral mucosa and secrete all the time
extrinsic only secrete around eating. parotid, submandibular, sublingual |
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Term
what is saliva composed of |
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Definition
water, ions, mucous, enzymes |
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Term
what are the functions of saliva |
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Definition
moisten, dissolve food, start digestion, antibacterial, antiviral |
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Term
how does the pharynx contribute to digestion, what type of tissue is it |
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Definition
stratified squamous three constrictor muscles oropharynx and laryngopharynx are used |
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Term
how does the esophagus contribute to digestion |
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Definition
skeletal muscle controlled by vagus pushes food down, collapses when empty |
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Term
what are the functions of the stomach |
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Definition
temporary storage, mixing, break down protein with pepsin, HCl antimicrobial, absorb water electrolytes asprin alcohol |
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Term
what are some characteristics of the epithelium / lining of the stomach |
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Definition
simple columnar glands open into pits secrete bicarbonate rugae: longitudinal folds distentable muscularis: circular and longitudinal |
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Term
what are the cell types of the stomach, give a general function |
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Definition
parietal: secrete HCl and intrinsic factor Chief: secrete pepsinogen mucous neck cells |
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Term
where does the small intestine get blood from, where does it drain |
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Definition
superior mesenteric arteries hepatic portal vein |
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Term
by what structure does the duodenum recieve enzymes from the pancreas |
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Definition
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Term
what is the biggest part of the small intestines |
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Definition
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Term
what structures help with absorption in intestines |
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Definition
circular folds (plicae circularis), villi on simple columnar cells, microvilli, and lacteals (fat absorption) |
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Term
what are some structural characteristics of the large intestines. beriefly describe them / purpose (cell tyoes, structural markers, tissue characteristics) |
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Definition
teniae coli: 3 longitudinal muscle strips haustra: sacs epiploic ependages: omental folds or eritoneum or fat pouches cecum: holds symbiotic microbes ileocecal valve columnar cells: absorb water and electrolytes goblet cells: secrete mucous to lubricate lymphoid tissue: control bacteria NO villi! |
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Term
what are the layers of the GI tract and their sublayers from lumen out (10 layers, 6 sub) |
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Definition
1. lumen 2. mucosal layer :epithelial cells, lamina propria, muscularis mucosae 3. submucosa 4. submucosal / meissner's plexus 5. muscularis externa: circular muscle, myenteric plexus, longutidunal muscle 6. serosa 7. peritoneal cavity |
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Term
what are the parts of the mucosal layer of the GI tract, what are their functions |
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Definition
epithelial cells: absorb nutrients, secrete mucous (goblet cells), form barrier
lamina propria: CT, blood, lymph. first line of immune defense (MALT)
muscularis mucosae: contracts locally |
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Term
what is the submucosa of the GI tract made of, what is its function |
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Definition
collagen, elastin, glands, vessels
helps regain shape after processing |
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Term
what is the function of the muscularis externa and the different parts |
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Definition
peristalsis and segmentation circular: squeezes longitudinal: shortens |
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Term
describe the muscle cells of the GI tract (shape, configuration, function) |
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Definition
spindle shaped, one nuclri, no striations, in sheets, no sarcomere
slow contraction, fatuge resistant
does not always need nervous signal
stimulated by stretch too |
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Term
what is another name for the serosa, what type of tissue is it |
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Definition
simple squamous epithelium with areolar CT beneath it |
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Term
what organs are retroperitoneal |
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Definition
kidney, ureter, suprarenal gland, great vessels, paired branches |
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Term
what does the peritoneal cavity contain |
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Definition
intestines, stomach, liver |
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Term
what are the steps in the digestive process, briefly explain each (6) |
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Definition
1. ingestion 2. propulsion: swallowing, peristalsis 3. mechanical digestion: chew, chrun, mix 4. chemical digestion: enzymes 5. absorption: transport into blood or lymph 6. defecation: elimination via feces |
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Term
explain the process of defecation |
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Definition
wall stretching triggers parasympathetic reflex, contraction of smooth muscle, relaxation of internal anal sphinctor, voluntary relaxation of external anal sphincter (aided by diahragm and abdnominal wall muscles) |
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Term
what is the extrinsic innervation of the GI tract, general purpose of each part |
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Definition
autonomic nervous system parasympathetic: stimulate digestion sympathetic: stop digestion |
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Term
what does the parasympathetic part of the vagus nerve innervate in GI tract, what type of innervatin |
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Definition
upper GI, striated muscle of esophagus many afferent (mechanoreceptors, chemoreceptors, vasovagal reflexes) some efferent |
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Term
what does the phrenic nerve innervate in GI tract |
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Definition
lower GI tract (striated muscle of external anal canal too) |
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Term
where do sympathetic preganglionic cell bodies of extrinsic nervous system synapse |
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Definition
celiac, superior mesenteric, inferior mesenteric, and hypogastric ganglia |
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Term
what neurotransmitters to postganglionic fibers of the extrinsic sympathetic nervous system are there |
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Definition
adrenergic release NE and N |
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Term
where do postganglionic fibers of the extrinsic sympathetic nervous system synapse |
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Definition
some go to submucosal or myenteric plexuses some go to smooth myscle, endocrine, or secretory cells |
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Term
where do the postganglionic parasympathetic fibers of the extrinsic nervous system go, why |
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Definition
myenteric and submucosal plexuses to coordinate information |
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Term
what types of parasympathetic neurons are there for the GI tract, what neurotransmitters do they use |
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Definition
cholinergic: ACh peptidergic: substance P, neuropeptide, vasoactive inhibitor peptide (VIP) |
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Term
where are the cell bodies of the enteric nervous system, what do they control |
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Definition
submucosal and myenteric plexuses
contractile, secretory, and endocrine functions |
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Term
what is different about the neurotransmitters of the enteric nervous system |
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Definition
the release neurocrines/neurochemicals and neuromodulators
nerves may secrete more than one |
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Term
what and how does the enteric nervous system communicate with |
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Definition
comminicates with autonomic nervous system
recieves info via chemo and mechanoreceptors and sends info back to GI tract
info is relayed between ganglia by interneurons |
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Term
what qualifies something to be a hormone |
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Definition
must be secreted in response to physiologic stimulus, carried in blood to distant site of action, independent function from neural activity must have been isolated, purified, identified, and synthesized |
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Term
physically describe the endocrine cells of the mucosa |
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Definition
single or in small groups dispersed over GI tract NO glands |
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Term
what are the types of hormones and almost hormones in the GI tract |
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Definition
gastrin, CCK, secretin, GIP
almost hormones: motilin, pancreatic polypeptide, enteroglucagon |
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Term
what are the types of gastrin, explain when each is used. where are they secreted from |
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Definition
little (G17): in response to meal big (G34): between meals, more common C-terminal tetrapeptide: fragment that causes lesser effects
secreted from G (gastrin) cells in the antrum of the stomach |
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Term
what can signal gastrin release what can turn them off |
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Definition
peptides, AA (phenyalalnine, tryptophan), distension of stomach, vagal reflexes (GRP/bombesin)
low pH or somatostatin turns them off |
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Term
what are the actions of gastrin |
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Definition
cause parietal cells to release H increase trophic growth of mucosa |
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Term
what are the types of CCK and its receptors, explain why each are used. where is CCK secreted from |
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Definition
CCK A receptor: CCK only CCK B receptor: CCK and gastrin C-terminal hepatapeptide (CCK-7): smallest part of CCK needed for function
I cells of duodenum and jejum mucosa |
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Term
what stimulates CCK release |
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Definition
peptides, AA, FA (not TG) |
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Term
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Definition
contraction of gallbladder and relaxation of sphinctor of Oddi to release bile
secreation of pancreatic enzymes and bicarbonate
growth of pancreas and gallbladder
inhibit gastric emptying to help absorb fat |
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Term
what stimulates secretin release, from where |
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Definition
pH < 4.5 (H+), Fa
S cells in duodenum |
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Term
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Definition
secretion of pancreatic and biliary bicarbonate
inhibit gastrin |
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Term
what stimulates GIP release from where |
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Definition
FA, AA, oral glucose (only one with all three)
K cells in duodenum and jejunum |
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Term
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Definition
stmulates B cells in pancreas to release insulin
decrease H secretion |
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Term
where is moltilin do, where is it secreted from and why |
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Definition
upper duodenum during fasting
increase motility, initiates inter-digestive myoelecric complexes (90 min intervals) |
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Term
where is pancreatic polypeptide secreted from and why, what does it do |
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Definition
pancrease in response to carbs, proteins, and lipids
inhibits pancreas secretion of bicarbonate and enzymes |
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Term
where is enteroglucagon secreted from and why, what does it do |
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Definition
intestinal cells in response to decreased blood glucose
tells liver to increase glycogenolysis and gluconeogenesis |
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Term
what are paracrines, what are the ones in the GI tract, how do they work |
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Definition
secreted by endocrine cells and act locally unlike hormones
somatostatin and histamine |
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Term
what is somatostatin secreted by and why, what does it to |
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Definition
secreted by D cells (endocrine and paracrine) in mucosa in response to low pH secreted by hypothalamus by delta cells of endocrine pancreas inhibits H secretion |
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Term
what makes histamine a paracrine peptide, what does it do for the GI tract |
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Definition
it is not a peptide. stimulates H secretion by parietal cells |
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Term
what are neurocrines, what ones are in the GI tract |
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Definition
peptides made in neurons ACh, NE, VIP, GRP, enkephalins, neuropeptide Y, substance P |
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Term
what does ACh do in the GI tract |
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Definition
increase contraction in wall, salivation, gastric and pancreas secretion decrease contraction in sphinctors |
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Term
what does NE do in the GI tract |
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Definition
increase sphinctor contraction and salivation decrease contraction of wall |
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Term
what does vasoactive intestine peptide do in the GI tract |
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Definition
increase intestinal and pancreatic secretion decrease contraction of wall |
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Term
what does gastrin releasing peptide or bombesin do in the GI tract |
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Definition
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Term
what do enkephalins or opiates do in the GI tract |
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Definition
increase wall contraction decrease secretion |
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Term
what does neuropeptide Y do in the Gi tract |
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Definition
decrease contraction of wall and secretions |
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Term
what does substance P do inthe GI tract, how is it released |
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Definition
co-secreted with ACh increases contraction of wall and secretions |
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Term
what is the cause of zollnger-ellison syndrome |
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Definition
gastrinoma: gasrin secreting tumor in B cells of pancreas |
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Term
what are the signs of zollnger-ellison syndrome |
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Definition
high H secretion, hypertrophy of gastric mucosa, duodenal ulcers, acidification of lumen deactivates pancreatic lipase, decreased fat digestion, steatorrhea |
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Term
what is the treatment for zollnger-ellison syndrome |
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Definition
H2 receptor blockers (cimetidine) H+ pump inhibitors (omeparazole) tumor removal gastric resection |
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Term
what complication can occur in a gastric resection |
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Definition
in antrum is removes, H secretion may over decrease causing gastric mucosa atrophy |
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Term
what are the other names for heartburn |
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Definition
acid reflux, GERD, gastroesophageal reflux disease |
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Term
what are the causes and effects of heartburn |
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Definition
abnormal lower esophagel concentration and slow stomach emptying, incomplete closure of LES allowing regurgitation of gastric contents into esophagus, hiatial hernia
effects: wall becomes hyperemic (blood flow increases, iflammation) and white patches are seen (leukoplakia), simple squamous epithelium of low esophagus is replaced by columnar which is at risk for adenocarcinoma, heartburn, regurgitation, nausea, dysphasia (difficult swallowing) |
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Term
what are the types of hemmhorids, what distinguishes them |
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Definition
internal: superior to pectinal line external: inferior to pectinal line |
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