User:Yanping Nora Soong/M1/exam 3

General tissue organization (review) edit

Exocrine glands edit

Histology edit

Organization edit

Glandular organization edit

Ductal organization edit

Branced/compound v. simple

Method of secretion edit

Note: taken ad verbatim from exocrine gland. Will resumnmarize later

Product secreted edit

Note: taken ad verbatim from exocrine gland. Will resumnmarize later

Gastrointestinal edit

Anatomy overview edit

Enteric ganglia edit

As an ensemble, rivals the CNS in mass ("the second brain").

Histology (general pattern) edit

 
General histological organization diagram

Generalized cell types edit

Oral cavity and mucosa and esophagus edit

The muscularis propria (muscularis externa) of the top 1/3 of the esophagus is skeletal muscle, not smooth muscle. The bottom 1/3 (preceding the gastroesophageal junction) is smooth muscle only. The middle 1/3 is mixed.

Stomach edit

General organization edit

The stomach has three smooth muscular layers, adding an exception to the pattern:

  • Inner circular smooth muscle
  • Middle oblique smooth muscle (a "deep inner" layer)
  • Outer longitudinal smooth muscle

Generally, the epithelium of the stomach "pits" into the lamina propria, where various stomach glands are located. There are regional differences between the 1) cardia 2) pylorus) and 3) stomach body

Gland histology edit

Fundus glands edit

Small intestine edit

 
Brunner's glands

General organization edit

Broadly distributed cells edit

Enterocyte absorption physiology edit

  • Proteins are broken up into peptide fragments and amino acids via pancreatic proteases in the lumen of the small intestine. The free amino acids and peptides are imported into the apical portion of the enterocyte via apical surface (brush border) via peptide transporter 1 (cotransported with H+) and sodium-dependent amino acid transporters. Peptides should be 2-3 AA long; any longer than 4 AA will not be imported.
  • Imported into the bloodstream via basal surface amino acid and peptide transporters

Duodenum edit

  • Brunner's glands (submucosal! other than the esophagus, which lack villi, unique to the duodenum)

Large intestine edit

Appendix edit

  • Many lymphoid aggregates - dominated by lymphoid tissue

Cecum edit

Colon edit

Renal edit

Reproductive edit

Female edit

Male edit

Spermatogenesis edit