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GI Pharm
GI Ulceration
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Ffion Jones
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Cards (33)
Structure
of the GI tract
Muscosal
layer
Submucosal
layer
Muscularis exerna
Serosa
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Mucosa
Epithelia layer -
single layer
of cells that lines the
GI tract
Lamina propria - cells
and structures that hold the
GI tract together
Muscularis mucosa
- thin innermost layer of
intestinal SM
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Submucosal
layer
Made mostly of connective tissue -
collagen
,
elastin
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Muscularis
externa
Thick layer of muscle, made of
circular
and longitudinal muscle, controls
peristalsis
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Serosa
Another
connective
tissue layer
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Plexus
Innervate the smooth muscle and the
secretory
processes of the
gut
(meissners plexus and auerbacks plexus)
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Plexus are important for CONTRACTION of the gut and SECRETION OF
ACID
AND
MUCUS
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Gastric ulceration
Occurs due to an imbalance between the protective elements of the
mucosa
VS the aggressive elements (the acid secreted from
stomach
)
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Cells
in the gland region of the stomach mucosa
Mucus neck
cells - secrete thick
protective
mucus
Parietal
cells - principle
acid
secreting cells
Chief
cells - secrete
pepsinogens
Endocrine
cells - e.g. ECL cells that secrete
histamine
G
cells - secrete
gastrin
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Pepsinogens
Get turned into active
pepsins
(the digestive enzymes that degrade proteins into
amino acids
)
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Histamine
Regulates
the activity of other
cells
within the system (e.g the parietal cells)
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Gastrin
Hormone
that helps in the regulation of
gastric acid
secretion
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Protective
factors against gastric ulceration
Mucous
gel
Secretion of
bicarbonate
to
neutralise
the acid
Ability to
regenerate
epithelial cells quickly
Presence of
tight
junctions between epithelial cells
Blood
supply able to protect the integrity of the
stomach
lining
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pH gradient
Gastric
lumen = pH
1.5
(strong acidic)
Mucus
cells of the stomach = pH
7.4
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How
the pH gradient is maintained
1.
Mucus gel neutralisation
zone
decreases
H+ concentration
2.
Bicarbonate
secreted into
mucosal cell layer
to buffer acid
3.
Bicarbonate gradient
(
low
in lumen, high near mucosal cells)
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Prostaglandins
Maintain the
protective
mechanisms of the
GI tract
, especially PG-E2 and PG-I2
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Aggressive
factors that may promote gastric ulceration
H+ protons
from
acid
Pepsins
-
proteolytic digestive
enzymes
Helicobacter pylori bacterial
infection
Some
drugs
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Helicobacter pylori
Lives attached to/just above the Gastric mucosal cells, secretes factors that break up the
mucosal layer
and secretes urease to
neutralise
stomach acid
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Aspirin
Blocks the synthesis of
protective
prostaglandins by
inhibiting
COX enzymes
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Adrenaline
and NA
Block the production of
protective
prostaglandins
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Management
of peptic ulcers
1.
Treat H.pylori infection
with
antibiotics
2. Control
acid secretion
and enhance
mucus production
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Histamine
Central
regulator
, acts on
H2
receptors on parietal cells to induce acid secretion
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Gastrin
Acts on
CCK-B
receptors on
parietal
cells
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Acetylcholine
Acts on
Muscarinic
receptors of the
parietal
cells
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Pharmacological
interventions
1. Block
muscarinic
receptors on parietal cells
2. Block histamine
H2
receptors on parietal cells
3. Use direct
proton
pump inhibitors
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H2
receptor antagonists
e.g. Cimetidine, blocks
H2
receptors on
parietal
cells, reduces basal and food stimulated acid secretion by 90%
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Muscarinic
receptor antagonists
e.g. Pirenzepine, targets
M1
receptors on parietal cells, reduces basal and
food
stimulated acid secretions
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Proton
pump inhibitors
e.g. Omeprazole and Lansoprazole, directly block the
H+/K+ ATPase exchanger
, irreversibly inhibit the
proton pump
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Antacids
e.g.
sodium bicarbonate
, directly
neutralise gastric
acid, but can cause side effects like gas and alkalosis
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Aluminium
and magnesium salts
React with
HCl
to form an insoluble colloid that is retained in the
stomach
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Sucralfate
Forms a
protective gel complex
with
stomach mucus
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Bismuth
chelate
Coats the ulcer, absorbs pepsin, toxic to H.pylori, stimulates bicarbonate and prostaglandin secretion
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Misoprostol
Synthetic PG-E1 analogue,
decreases
acid secretion,
increases
mucus and bicarbonate secretion, maintains blood supply
View source
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