Topic 60 - Digestion in the colon, feces formation, defaecatio Flashcards

1
Q

Words to include in carbohydrate digestion in the colon

A
  • Volatile fatty acids
  • Microbial digestion
    • Cellulose
    • Retention time
    • Fermentation product
  • Osmotic pressure
  • Buffer system
    • Bicarbonate buffer
    • Phosphate buffer
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2
Q

Words to include in protein digestion in the colon

A
  • Bacteria
  • Urea
  • Blood
  • Nitrogen-metabolism
  • Pseudo-caecotropia (rabbits)
    • Cecum
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3
Q

Words to include in motions of the colon

A
  • Retrograde flow (ru)
    • Retention
  • Peristalsis
  • Antiperistalsis
  • Microbial synthesis
  • Aboral-mass peristalsis (Car)
  • Slow waves
  • ANS
  • Pacemaker areas
  • Retrograde motions
  • Endocrine effects
    • Gastrin
    • CCK
    • Secretin
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4
Q

Words to include in feces formation

A
  • Lieberkühn glands
    • Mucin
    • HCO3-
      • ​Buffer
      • Volatile fatty acids
  • Stercobilin
  • Protein
    • Detached epithelium
  • Rectum
    • Storage
    • Evacuation
      • Stretch receptors
      • Afferent nerve fibers
      • S1-S4 segments of the spinal cord (feces evacuation center)
      • Feces evacuation reflex
        • Efferent stimulus (via pelvic nerve)
        • Somatic pudendal nerve
        • Aboral direction
    • Defecation
      • Hypothalamic control
      • Cortical control
    • Internal sphincter
    • External sphincter
      • Motor fibers from the brain cortex
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5
Q

Topics to include in the essay

A
  1. Role of colon
  2. Carbohydrate digestion
    • Herbivore
    • Carnivore
    • Requirements of microbial digestion in large intestines
    • Buffer system
  3. Protein digestion
  4. Motions of the colon
  5. Feces formation
    • In colon
    • In rectum
    • Defecation
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6
Q

What is the role of the colon?

A
  1. Microbial digestion
    • Significant in herbivores
  2. Water and electrolyte reabsorption
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7
Q

Carbohydrate digestion

In herbivores and carnivores

A
  • Herbivore:
    • In the horse, about 75% of the energy is provided by volatile fatty acids
  • Carnivores:
    • Microbial digestion of cellulose is important because: some carbohydrates are not absorbed in the small intestines
    • Carbohydrates not absorbed represents osmotic pressure in the colon, and would cause water loss if not digested down to volatile fatty acids
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8
Q

Carbohydrate digestion

Requirements of microbial digestion in large intestines

A
  • Neutralization of acidic products
  • Ensuring retention time
  • Dilution of fermentation products
  • Continuous absorption of acidic end-products
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9
Q

Carbohydrate digestion

Buffer system

A
  • Buffer systems responsible for the proper pH of the large intestines:
    • Bicarbonate buffer
    • Phosphate buffer
  • Eq, sus
    • High HCO3- content from pancreas/intestinal juice
  • Ca
    • Phosphate buffer mainly
    • HCO3- concentration is low
  • Ru
    • Phosphate buffer originates from saliva
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10
Q

Protein digestion

A
  • Common features with ruminant forestomach
  • Bacteria in colon receive urea from blood to balance nitrogen-metabolism
  • Rabbit: pseudo-caecotropia
    • Microbial digestion occurs in cecum
    • In order to not loose microbial vitamins and proteins, rabbit digest their food two times
    • They do not eat feces, they eat half digested food
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11
Q

Motions of the colon

A
  • Intestinal content moves slower in colon than in the previous section of the intestines
  • Ru:
    • Retrograde flow (ileum – colon – caecum – colon)
    • This is to slow down the flow of the intestinal content (retention)
  • Car:
    • Small microbial synthesis
    • Fast movement caused by an aboral-mass peristalsis
      • Causes evacuation of the majority of the colic content
  • The motions of the colon:
    • The slow waves of the colon arise from the circular muscle layer and extend from there to the longitudinal fibers
    • The stimuli from the pacemaker areas (initial and terminal part of colon) spread both directions, which makes the retrograde motions and mixing of the intestinal content possible (antiperistalsis)
    • Peristalsis + antiperistalsis = mixing
  • Endocrine effects:
    • Gastrin
    • CCK (facilitate)
    • Secretin (inhibit)
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12
Q

Feces formation

Feces formation in colon

A
  • Lieberkühn glands in the colon produces:
    • Mucin
      • For mechanical protection and feces formation
    • HCO3-
      • For buffering of volatile fatty acids
  • Color: stercobilin
  • Feces contain organic indigestible substances only to a small degree
  • Proteins in feces originate from the detached epithelium of large intestines and from microbial origin
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13
Q

Feces formation

Interspecies amount

  1. Highest
  2. Lowest
A
  1. Highest: Cattle
  2. Lowest: Carnivores
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14
Q

Feces formation

Rectum

A
  • Role: storage and evacuation of feces
  • Most domestic mammals are unable to voluntarily regulate defecation
    • E.g. in the dog a conditioned response can be developed
  • Internal sphincter
  • External sphincter
    • Innervation: motor fibers from the brain cortex
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15
Q

Feces formation

Defecation

A
  • Empty rectum
    • A feces evacuation can be used if 15-20 mmHg pressure is exerted on the wall of the rectum
    • Spontaneous evacuation of feces is prevented by the closing of the inner and the outer sphincter
  • Feces gets into the rectum
    • During the feces evacuation reflex, from the stretch receptors that are sensitive to the stretching of the wall of rectum
    • Afferent nerve fibers reach the S1-S4 segments of the spinal cord (feces evacuation center)
  • Feces evacuation reflex
    • From the medullary center concerned with feces evacuation, the efferent stimulus (via the pelvic nerve) increases the contraction of the rectum and peristalsis, and relaxes the tone of the sphincter
    • Stimulus of the somatic n. pudenda causes the relaxation of the external sphincter
    • The consequence of this is the shortening of the rectum, and the processing of its content in the aboral direction
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