Pyloric antrum
| Pyloric antrum | |
|---|---|
| Outline of stomach, showing its anatomical landmarks. (Pyloric antrum visible at left.) | |
| Interior of the stomach. (Pyloric antrum visible at left.) | |
| Latin | antrum pyloricum |
| Gray's | subject #247 1162 |
| MeSH | Pyloric+Antrum |
Pyloric antrum (antrum, lesser cul-de-sac) is the initial portion of the pyloric part of the stomach. It is near the bottom of the stomach, proximal to the pyloric sphincter, which separates the stomach and the duodenum.
It may temporarily become partially or completely shut off from the remainder of the stomach during digestion by peristaltic contraction of the prepyloric sphincter; it is demarcated, sometimes, from the second part of the pyloric part of the stomach (pyloric canal) by a slight groove.
Function
The pyloric antrum is the location of several important endocrine cells including Gastrin-producing G Cells (stimulate acid production) and the luminal-pH-sensitive population of somatostatin producing of D cells (responsible for shutting off acid secretion. There is a second hormone-sensitive population near the fundus.)
Etymology
pylorus — gatekeeper, antrum — cave; cavern; hollow place with overarching foliage; cavity, hollow; tomb
Additional images
stomach ph 2.567
Sources
- William F Ganong. "Review of Medical Physiology, 22nd Edition."
- Physiology Lecture Notes.
External links
- Controversy over definition at plig.org
- SUNY Labs 37:06-0104 - "Abdominal Cavity: The stomach"
- SUNY Anatomy Image 7765
- Pyloric+antrum at eMedicine Dictionary
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