Microscopic Anatomy of Digestive System

Microscopic Anatomy of Digestive System

Microscopic Anatomy of Digestive System

On this page

GIT Layers & Esophagus - Tube's Basic Threads

  • GIT Layers (Inner to Outer): 📌 M.S.M.S.

    • Mucosa: Epithelium, Lamina Propria, Muscularis Mucosae.
    • Submucosa: CT, Meissner's plexus. Glands in esophagus/duodenum.
    • Muscularis Externa: Inner Circular, Outer Longitudinal smooth muscle; Myenteric (Auerbach's) plexus.
    • Serosa/Adventitia: Outermost. Serosa (intraperitoneal), Adventitia (retroperitoneal).
  • Esophagus Specifics:

    • Mucosa: Non-keratinized Stratified Squamous Epithelium (protection).
    • Submucosa: Connective tissue, mucous esophageal glands.
    • Muscularis Externa: Skeletal (upper 1/3), Mixed (middle 1/3), Smooth (lower 1/3).
    • Outer Layer: Mostly Adventitia; abdominal part has Serosa.

⭐ The Z-line (ora serrata) indicates the sharp transition from stratified squamous epithelium (esophagus) to simple columnar epithelium (stomach) at the gastroesophageal junction.

Stomach Histology - Acid Factory Glands

  • Gastric Glands: Tubular invaginations in lamina propria; open into gastric pits.
  • Fundic/Oxyntic Glands (Body & Fundus): Major glands for gastric secretion.
    • Parietal (Oxyntic) Cells: Large, eosinophilic. Secrete HCl (via $H^+/K^+$ ATPase pump) & Intrinsic Factor (IF for Vit B12 absorption).
      • Stimulated by: Gastrin, Histamine (H2), ACh (M3).
      • Inhibited by: Somatostatin, Prostaglandins.
    • Chief (Peptic/Zymogenic) Cells: Basophilic. Secrete Pepsinogen (activated to pepsin by HCl) & Gastric Lipase.
    • Mucous Neck Cells: Gland neck; soluble mucus.
    • Enteroendocrine (APUD) Cells:
      • G cells: Gastrin (↑acid, mucosal growth).
      • D cells: Somatostatin (↓acid, gastrin, histamine).
      • ECL cells: Histamine (↑acid via H2).
  • Pyloric Glands (Antrum): Branched. Mainly G cells (gastrin) & mucus cells.
  • Cardiac Glands (Cardia): Simple tubular; mucus-secreting.

⭐ Pernicious anemia: autoimmune destruction of parietal cells/IF → Vit B12 malabsorption, megaloblastic anemia.

Small Intestine Histology - Absorb & Conquer Villi

Small intestine villi and microvilli structure

  • Core Function: Nutrient absorption, facilitated by massive surface area amplification.
  • Layers (Inside to Out): Mucosa, Submucosa, Muscularis Externa, Serosa.
  • Mucosal Adaptations for ↑ Absorption:
    • Plicae Circulares (Valves of Kerckring): Gross circular folds (mucosa & submucosa).
    • Villi: Finger-like mucosal projections; core of lamina propria, covered by epithelium.
    • Microvilli: Brush border on apical surface of enterocytes.
  • Key Cell Types:
    • Enterocytes: Absorptive cells; tall columnar with microvilli.
    • Goblet Cells: Mucus secretion; ↑ in number distally (ileum > jejunum > duodenum).
    • Paneth Cells: Base of crypts of Lieberkühn; secrete antimicrobial lysozyme, defensins.
    • Enteroendocrine Cells: Hormone secretion (e.g., CCK, secretin).
    • Stem Cells: Base of crypts; regenerate epithelium.
  • Regional Variations:
    • Duodenum: Brunner's glands (submucosa) secreting alkaline mucus.
    • Jejunum: Tallest villi, most prominent plicae circulares; major absorption site.
    • Ileum: Peyer's patches (lymphoid aggregates in submucosa); shortest villi.

Exam Favourite: Paneth cells, located at the base of intestinal crypts, play a crucial role in innate immunity by secreting lysozyme and defensins.

📌 Mnemonic (Layers): My Stomach Makes Soup (Mucosa, Submucosa, Muscularis Externa, Serosa).

Large Intestine & Anal Canal - Waste's Final Path

  • Large Intestine:
    • Mucosa: No villi, ↑ goblet cells, crypts of Lieberkühn. Colonocytes for absorption.
    • Muscularis: Inner circular, outer longitudinal (teniae coli → haustra).
    • Key Functions: H₂O/electrolyte absorption, mucus secretion, vitamin K/B synthesis.
  • Anal Canal:
    • Epithelial Zones (superior→inferior): Simple columnar → Strat. columnar/cuboidal (Anal Transitional Zone/ATZ) → Strat. squamous (keratinized at anal verge).
    • Pectinate Line: Crucial landmark.
      • Above: Visceral nerve, portal drainage, internal hemorrhoids.
      • Below: Somatic nerve, systemic drainage, external hemorrhoids.
    • Sphincters: Internal (smooth, involuntary), External (skeletal, voluntary). Anal canal transition zones and anatomy diagram

⭐ The pectinate line is a key anorectal landmark; internal hemorrhoids (above, painless, visceral innervation) differ from external hemorrhoids (below, painful, somatic innervation).

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Brunner's glands in duodenal submucosa secrete alkaline mucus.
  • Peyer's patches, lymphoid aggregates, are characteristic of the ileum.
  • Paneth cells at crypt bases release lysozyme and defensins.
  • Goblet cell numbers progressively increase from duodenum to colon.
  • Auerbach's plexus (muscularis externa) controls motility; Meissner's plexus (submucosa) for secretions.
  • Barrett's esophagus: squamous to columnar metaplasia with goblet cells.
  • Gastric chief cells secrete pepsinogen; parietal cells secrete HCl & intrinsic factor.

Practice Questions: Microscopic Anatomy of Digestive System

Test your understanding with these related questions

Oxyntic cells are present in -

1 of 5

Flashcards: Microscopic Anatomy of Digestive System

1/9

_____ canals communicate with each other by the transverse perforating canals, which are called as Volkmann's canals.

TAP TO REVEAL ANSWER

_____ canals communicate with each other by the transverse perforating canals, which are called as Volkmann's canals.

Haversian

browseSpaceflip

Enjoying this lesson?

Get full access to all lessons, practice questions, and more.

Start Your Free Trial