Oesophagus and Stomach

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Oesophagus and Stomach PHIL THIRKELL + ASFAND BAIG

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Oesophagus and Stomach. Phil Thirkell + asfand baig. Anatomy. Blood supply to the oesophagus and stomach? Coeliac artery – a branch off the abdominal aorta Which embryonic structure does the oesophagus derive from? Foregut Endoderm. Histology. Cell Type - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Oesophagus and Stomach

Page 1: Oesophagus and Stomach

Oesophagus and StomachPHIL THIRKELL + ASFAND BAIG

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Anatomy Blood supply to the oesophagus and stomach?

◦ Coeliac artery – a branch off the abdominal aorta

Which embryonic structure does the oesophagus derive from?◦ Foregut◦ Endoderm

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Histology

Upper 1/3 oesophagus•Striated muscle

Middle 1/3 oesophagus•Striated muscle and Smooth muscle

Lower 1/3 oesophagus•Smooth muscle

Cell Type•Non- Keratinised Stratified Squamous Epithelium

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Smooth MuscleNarrow, rod shaped cellsNo striationsOne nucleus per cell

Striated MuscleTubular cellsStriationsMultiple nuclei

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Gastro-oesophageal Junction How can you tell where the junction is?

◦ Change from non-keratinised stratified squamous to simple columnar

What forms the lower oesophageal sphincter?◦ Compression from the diaphragm (right crus)◦ Angle of entry into the stomach◦ Intra-abdominal pressure◦ Mucosal folds (but I don’t know how these help form the junction)

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Pathology Gastro-Oesophageal Reflux Disease

◦ Failure of lower sphincter causes reflux of acid◦ Oedema/white cell infiltration◦ Increases risk of cancer

Barrett’s Oesophagus◦ Metaplasia from stratified squamous to simple columnar◦ Goblet cells

◦ Produce mucus to protect against acid environment◦ Considered a pre-malignant condition

◦ Association with adenocarcinoma

Oesophageal Cancer◦ Late presentation◦ Can cause obstruction◦ Poor prognosis◦ Risk Factors:

◦ Age, male, FH, smoking, alcohol, reflux, Barrett’s, hot drinks

Oesophageal Varices◦ Dilated veins of portal system◦ Form due to portal hypertension◦ Risk of bleeding◦ Difficult to treat

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Stomach Functions of the stomach?

◦ Storing food◦ Killing bacteria◦ Regulate food entry into duodenum◦ Dissolve and partially digest macromolecules into food◦ To secrete intrinsic factor

◦ the only indispensable role of the stomach

What are the folds in the stomach?◦ Rugae – same name for the folds in the bladder, which do the same – allow increase in size without

increasing the pressure within

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Stomach Anatomy

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Stomach Secretions Contents of stomach secretions?

◦ Hydrochloric acid◦ Enzymes – pepsinogen, gastric lipase◦ Mucus◦ Bicarbonate◦ Water◦ Intrinsic Factor

Chief cell◦ Pepsinogen

Parietal cell◦ HCl

G-cell◦ Gastrin

Mucus cell◦ Mucus

D-cell◦ Somatostatin

ECL-cell◦ Histamine

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Parietal Cell

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Stimulation of Acid Secretion

Stimulates acid secretion Inhibits acid secretion

Histamine Somatostatin

Gastrin Prostaglandins

Acetylcholine Enteric hormones - VIP

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Dysphagia difficulty swallowing

Disease of mouth/tonsils

Inflammation or cancer

Stricture

Pharyngeal pouch

Hiatus hernia Achalasia – problem with peristalsis co-ordination. (sorry to those I told wrong, I was getting confused with oesophageal atresia)

Goitre Infections (oesophagitis) Aortic aneurysm

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Peptic Ulcer Causes:

◦ Helicobacter pylori◦ NSAIDs◦ Crohn’s disease◦ Cancer◦ Zollinger-Ellison syndrome

◦ A non-beta islet cell, gastrin-producing tumour of the pancreas. Loads of gastrin causes huge acid secretion all the time, making patients really prone to ulcers

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Peptic Ulcer Epigastric pain – what happens on eating?

◦ A gastric ulcer gets worse on eating. Food enters stomach, acid is released and it comes into contact with the ulcer, aggravating it and causing pain.

◦ A duodenal ulcer is made better on eating as the pyloric sphincter closes and bicarbonate is released from the pancreas. The pain then starts again after 2-3 hours when the contents of the stomach is released and the acid comes into contact with the ulcer.

Nausea

Bloating/flatulence

Epigastric tenderness

Anaemia – chronic bleeding from the ulcer

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Why do NSAIDs cause ulcers? Normally, prostaglandins are released when gastric mucosa is damaged, causing increased production of mucus and bicarbonate.

Cyclo-oxygenase enzyme 1 (COX-1) creates prostaglandins.

NSAIDs inhibit COX-1, reducing prostaglandin production. This decreases the mucus and bicarbonate secretion

This increases the damage by acid on gastric mucosa ulcers

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Stomach Pharmacology Antacids

Alginates

Bismuth chelates

Prostaglandin analogues

H2 antagonist

Proton pump inhibitors

H. pylori eradication therapy

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Antacids React chemically to neutralise stomach acid (acid + base salt + water + carbon dioxide)

Magnesium hydroxide

Calcium Carbonate

e.g. Rennie

S/E - gas

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Alginates Polysaccharide which reacts with stomach contents to make a raft which floats on the surface to prevent reflux and protects mucosa

E.g. Sodium alginate

Gaviscon is combined antacid and alginate

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Bismuth Chelates Binds pepsin to prevent acid secretion

Coats the mucosa

Increases prostaglandin production

S/E – can cause black tongue and black faeces

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Prostaglandin Analogues Misoprostol

Inhibits acid secretion

Increases mucosal blood flow to generate HCO3

S/E: diarrhoea and stomach cramps

Can’t be used in pregnancy – causes uterine contractions and can cause a termination◦ women of child-bearing age should be using contraceptives if prescribed misoprostol as gastric acid

treatment

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H2-receptor antagonists (anti-histamines)

Blocks the histamine receptor on the parietal cell to reduce acid secretion

e.g. Cimetidine, ranitidine, nizatidine

(not loratidine – only blocks H1, so used in allergies)

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Proton Pump Inhibitors◦ e.g. omeprazole, lansoprazole, pantoprazole

Block the H+/K+-ATPase pump of the gastric parietal cell

Used in patients with reflux, GORD, NSAID ulcers and as 2° prevention in pts who’ve had ulcers

Used to control Zollinger-Ellison until something else can be done about it

Acts systemically, in that it is absorbed into the blood stream, circulates and then acts on the parietal cells – instead of just acting directly on them in the stomach lumen

In acidic conditions the drug can bind to the ATPase, but in neutral conditions it cant.

S/E - ↑risk of infection due to ↓ acid secretion to kill bacteria, decreased vitamin B12 absorption due to less acid, decreased calcium absorption.

Nausea + vomiting

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H. Pylori eradication 1 week of:

◦ 1 proton pump inhibitor – omeprazole, lansoprazole

◦ 2 antibiotics – amoxicillin and either: clarithromycin or metronidazole

Can’t use serology to check if the eradication therapy has worked because the antibodies will still be there even if all the bacteria are now dead