Physiology and Pharmacology of the Large Intestine Professor John Peters

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Copyright © 2013, 2010 by Saunders, an imprint of Elsevier Inc. Chapter 79 Laxatives.
Advertisements

The Straight Poop… or how I learned to stop worrying and love the bomb Michael F. Ziegler, MD Assistant Professor Departments of Pediatrics and Emergency.
Nutrient Transport. Balance Between Absorptive and Secretory Processes in Gut Figures for adult human Secretion 1500 ml saliva 2000 ml gastric secretion.
Large Intestine Afflictions APPENDICITS Inflamed appendix causes severe pain. Very common in children and adolescents. Other symptoms include fever,
PHARMACOLOGISTS’ PERSPECTIVE ON COLON PHYSIOLOGY.
Chapter 3: The Human Body. Body Cells  Form tissues  Tissues form Organs  Organs form Systems (e.g., digestive)  Turnover  Require nutrients.
Large Intestine Physiology Harvey Davies & Sean Botham Peer Support.
Movements of Small Intestine
Colon meter long Parts Appendix Caecum Ascending colon Transverse colon Descending colon Sigmoid colon Rectum Anal Canal.
The Urinary System and Tract
GASTROINTESTINAL PHYSIOLOGY Chapter-III (Gastrointestinal Motility) Ass. Prof. Dr. Emre Hamurtekin EMU Faculty of Pharmacy.
Oral Rehydration Therapy. What is the main danger of diarrhoea and sickness? Dehydration Can be treated by ORT – a mixture of glucose and salts in water.
Renal Structure and Function. Introduction Main function of kidney is excretion of waste products (urea, uric acid, creatinine, etc). Other excretory.
Physiological functions of pancrease & large intestine
The Large Intestine Dr. Alzoghaibi. Reabsorb water and compact material into feces Absorb vitamins produced by bacteria Store fecal matter prior to defecation.
The Large Intestine Mohammed Alzoghaibi, Ph.D
LECTURE - 9 Dr. Zahoor Ali Shaikh 1.  Large Intestine consist of cecum, appendix, colon [ascending colon, transverse colon and descending colon, end.
The Human Digestive System
Functions of the digestive system
DIGESTIVE SYSTEM Professor Andrea Garrison Biology 11
The Urinary System Removing waste, balancing blood pH, and maintaining water balance.
Renal (Urinary) System
IV MOTILITY OF THE SMALL INTESTINE
Diarrhoea and Constipation By Priyanca Patel. What is Constipation? Infrequent bowel movements due to increased transit time or pelvic dysfunction What.
Motility function of the gastrointestinal system
Assessment and Management of Constipation
Large Intestine Working knowledge of physiological changes during disease processes & the effects of these on nutrition care.
Antidiarrheal Drugs. Normal bowel movement: An average, healthy person has anywhere from three bowel movements a day to three a week, depending on that.
 Food must be broken down into nutrients that can be absorbed into the blood and carried to our body  The collection of organs that carry out digestion.
By Purwaningsih.
P2 Digestion.
The Large Bowel and Elimination of Faeces
Chapter 23 Anatomy of the Digestive System – Part 4
Function of Ureter and Urinary Bladder
Diarrhoea Revision PBL. Definition Diarrhoea is defined as: – >3 bowel motions per day – Looser than normal stools – Stool volume > 300g – May be associated.
3.5 Digestion in the Small and Large Intestines Pages
Diarrhea. Defined as bowel movements which are excessive in volume, frequency, or liquidity. Frequency & consistency of fecal discharge are variable among.
UWCM/SONMS/nutrition/MJohn
Digestive System.
1- Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS) 2- Constipation
Anatomy and Physiology Part 3: Large Intestine and Defecation
Laxative and anti-diarrheal
Small and Large Intestines
THE DIGESTIVE SYSTEM IT’S INTESTINE TIME!!.
Movements of large intestine & defecation reflex
Laxatives and Antidiarrheals
Pancreas  Exocrine function  Secretes pancreatic juice which breaks down all categories of foodstuff  The pancreas also has an endocrine function –
Digestion Digestion in the small intestine (31) Virtually all nutrient absorption takes place in the small intestine Chime is released slowly into.
LARGE INTESTINE Dr. Zahoor Ali Shaikh DR. ABDELRAHMAN MUSTAFA Department of Basic Medical Sciences Division of Physiology Faculty of Medicine Almaarefa.
4. THE SMALL INTESTINE (Chemical digestion and absorption) The small intestine although only 2.5 cm wide, is a coiled tube approximately 7 m long! It fills.
The Digestive System GR 15 B How Digestion Happens.
Large Intestine. aka the colon greater diameter than small intestine and is about 1.5 meters long goes up on the right, across abdomen, down on the left,
DR. AMEL EASSAWI Dr. Shaikh Mujeeb Ahmed
CHOLERA. Disease caused by infection with cholera bacterium – from? Symptoms = Diarrhoea and hence dehydration How the Cholera bacteria causes the disease.
Digestive System Part 2. Small Intestine Functions to: 1. Complete digestion 2. Absorb nutrients 3. Produce regulating hormones.
Large Intestine.
1- Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS) 2- Constipation
Movements of the small intestine
Mohammed Alzoghaibi, Ph.D
Digestive System- Continued
SMALL INTESTINE.
Dr. Mujeeb Ahmed Shaikh Dr. Mohammed Sharique Ahmed Qaudri
Chapter 3 The Human Body: From Food to Fuel
Drugs for the treatment of irritable bowel syndrome (IBS)
Cholera and ORT 17/11/2018 Varinder SB.
The Lower Alimentary Organs
Bio 449 Lecture 31 – Digestive Physiology III Nov. 22, 2010
Large Intestine and Digestion Regulation
Biological function of inorganic elements
Physiology of the colon: motility
Presentation transcript:

Physiology and Pharmacology of the Large Intestine Professor John Peters

After this lecture, students should be able to:  Describe the structure and function of the large intestine and the patterns of motility that it exhibits  Provide an account of the defaecation reflex  Outline the causes of constipation and its treatment by purgatives  Describe water balance within the G.I. Tract  Understand the principles of oral rehydration therapy and the role of SGLT1 in this process  Outline the causes of diarrhoea and its treatment by antimotility agents Learning Objectives

The Large Intestine - General  Approximately 1.5 m long, 6 cm diameter  Comprises Colon o Ascending o Transverse o Descending o Sigmoid Caecum Appendix Rectum  Is primarily involved in: Absorption of fluids and electrolytes (Na +, Cl - ) Secretion of electrolytes (K + and HCO 3 - ) and mucus Formation, storage and periodic elimination of faeces  Normally receives approximately 500 ml of chyme (indigestible residues, unabsorbed biliary components, unabsorbed fluid) per day – entry permitted by the gastroilial reflex

Patterns of Motility in the Large Intestine (1)  Haustration  Peristaltic propulsive movements  Mass movement  Defaecation  Haustration - haustra are saccules caused by contraction of the circular muscle – similar to segmentation in function, but much lower frequency  Peristaltic propulsive movement – occur in both the aboral and oral directions. Oral movements occur principally in the ascending and transverse colon – contributes to long transit time (16 – 48 hours)  Mass movement – simultaneous contraction of large sections (about 20 cm) of the circular muscle of the ascending and transverse colon - drives faeces into distal regions Occurs about one to three times daily Typically triggered by a meal (often breakfast) via the gastrocolic response involving o gastrin o extrinsic nerve plexuses

Patterns of Motility in the Large Intestine (2)  Defaecation Mass movement - rectum fills with faecal matter Activation of rectal stretch receptors Activation of afferents to spinal cord Activation of parasympathetic efferents Activation of afferents to brain (urge to defaecate) Contraction of smooth muscle of colon and rectum – internal anal sphincter relaxes Relaxation of skeletal muscle of external anal sphincter Contraction of skeletal muscle of external anal sphincter Pelvic nerve Altered firing in efferents to spinal cord Pudendal nerve Defaecation assisted by abdomenal contraction and expiration against closed glottis Defaecation delayed – rectal wall gradually relaxes

CONSTIPATION and PURGATIVES Medically sound uses of laxatives include: when ‘straining’ is potentially damaging to health (e.g. patients with angina), or when defaecation is painful (e.g. haemorrhoids) predisposing to constipation to treat drug-induced constipation, or constipation in bedridden, or elderly patients to clear the bowel before surgery or endoscopy Numerous causes of constipation: e.g. improper diet, drugs, metabolic disorders Constipation is the presence of hard dried faeces within the colon  increase peristalsis and/or soften faeces causing, or assisting, evacuation  are resorted to far too readily in some societies by individuals obsessed by ‘regularity’  can be abused in eating disorders and may also disguise underlying disease Pugatives:

Absorption of Water in the GI Tract  Absorption of water is a passive process driven by the transport of solutes (particularly Na + ) from the lumen of the intestines to the bloodstream  Water ingested and secreted is normally in balance with water absorbed  Typical values are:  9.3 litre entering tract per day  8.3 litre absorbed by small intestine  1 litre enters large intestine of which 90% is absorbed Thus faeces normally contain 100 ml water along with 50 ml cellulose, bilirubin and bacteria Diarrhoea is defined as loss of fluid and solutes from the GI tract in excess of 500 ml per day

CAUSES OF DIARRHOEA (1) Diarrhoea can have numerous causes:  infectious agents – viruses, bacteria (e.g. traveller’s diarrhoea)  chronic disease  toxins  drugs  psychological factors Diarrhoea  may involve the small, or large, intestine  can result in dehydration, metabolic acidosis (HCO 3 - loss) and hypokalaemia (K + loss)  may be fatal if severe (e.g. cholera) Treatment of severe acute diarrhoea can include:  maintenance of fluid and electrolyte balance (first priority)  use of anti-infective agents (if appropriate)  use of non-antimicrobial antidiarrhoeal agents (symptomatic)

CAUSES OF DIARRHOEA (2)  Impaired absorption of NaCl Congenital defects Inflammation Infection (e.g. enterotoxins from some strains of E.coli and campylobacter sp.) Excess bile acid in colon  Non-absorbable, or poorly absorbable, solutes in intestinal lumen Lactase deficiency  Hypermotility  Excessive secretion Cholera provides a classic (and extreme) example Na + /K + ATPase Na + /K + /2Cl - co-tranporter Chloride channel (CFTR) cholera toxin enters enterocyte enzymatically inhibits GTPase activity of the Gs  subunit increased activity of adenylate cyclase increased concentration of cAMP cAMP stimulates CFTR hypersecretion of Cl -, with Na + and water following

Rehydration Therapy Exploits SGLT1 1.2 Na + bind 2.Affinity for glucose increases, glucose binds 3.Na + and glucose translocate from extracellular to intracellular 4.2 Na + dissociate, affinity for glucose falls 5.Glucose dissociates 6.Cycle is repeated Oral rehydration salts contain (for example) Glucose 20 g Sodium chloride 3.5 g Sodium bicarbonate 2.5 g Potassium chloride 1.5 g Dissolved in a volume of 1 L drinking water Absorption of Na + and glucose by SGLT1 cause accompanying absorption of H 2 0

ANTIMOTILITY AGENTS USED IN TREATMENT OF DIARRHOEA  Many morphine-like (or opiate) drugs have anti-diarrhoeal activity  The major opiates used in diarrhoea are: codeine diphenoxylate - low CNS penetration, low solubility in water (  abuse potential) loperamide – low CNS penetration, low solubility in water, undergoes enterohepatic recycling inhibition of enteric neurones (hyperpolarization via activation of  -opioid receptors) decreased peristalis, increased segmentation (i.e. constipating) increased fluid absorption constriction of pyloric, ileocolic and anal sphincters  The actions of opiates on the alimentary tract include: