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83 Gastric Physiology The stomach stores food and facilitates digestion through a variety of secretory and motor functions. Important secretory functions include the production of acid, pepsin, intrinsic factor, mucus, and gastrointestinal hormones. Important motor functions include food storage (receptive relaxation and accommodation), grinding and mixing, controlled emptying of ingested food, and periodic interprandial “housekeeping.” Hydrochloric acid (HCl) stimulates both mechanical and biochemical breakdown of ingested food. In an acidic environment, pepsin and HCl facilitate proteolysis. Gastric acid also inhibits the proliferation of ingested bacteria and stimulates secretin release when it enters the duodenum. Parietal cells secrete HCl when one of three membrane receptor types is stimulated by acetylcholine (from vagal nerve fibers), gastrin (from G cells), or histamine (from enterochromaffinlike [ECL] cells). Somatostatin from mucosal D cells inhibits gastric acid secretion. The enzyme H+/K+-ATPase is the proton pump that is stored within the intracellular tubulovesicles and is the final common pathway for gastric acid secretion. Although electroneutral, this is an energy-requiring process, because the hydrogen is secreted against a gradient of at least 1 millionfold, which explains why the parietal cell is the most mitochondria-dense mammalian cell (about one third by volume). During acid production, K+ and Cl− are also secreted into the secretory canaliculus through separate channels. Food ingestion is the physiologic stimulus for acid secretion. The acid secretory response occurs in three phases: cephalic, gastric, and intestinal. The cephalic or vagal phase begins with the thought, sight, smell, and/or taste of food. These stimuli activate several cortical and hypothalamic sites, and signals are transmitted to the stomach by the vagal nerves. Acetylcholine is released, leading to stimulation of ECL cells and parietal cells. The cephalic phase accounts for 30% of total acid secretion in response to a meal. The gastric phase begins when food reaches the stomach and lasts until the stomach is empty. It accounts for 60% of the total acid secretion. The gastric phase of acid secretion has several components. Amino acids and small peptides directly stimulate antral G cells to secrete gastrin, which is carried in the bloodstream to the parietal cells and stimulates acid secretion in an endocrine fashion. In addition, proximal gastric distention stimulates acid secretion via a vagovagal reflex arc, which is abolished by truncal or highly selective vagotomy. Antral distention also stimulates antral gastrin secretion. Acetylcholine stimulates gastrin release, and gastrin stimulates histamine release from ECL cells. Enterochromaffin-like cells play a key role in the regulation of gastric acid secretion. A large part of the acid-stimulatory effects of both acetylcholine and gastrin are mediated by histamine released from mucosal ECL cells. This explains why H2blockers are effective inhibitors of acid secretion, even though histamine is only one of three parietal cell stimulants. The mucosal D cells release somatostatin, which inhibits histamine release from ECL cells and gastrin release from D cells. The function of D cells is inhibited by Helicobacter pylori infection and leads to an exaggerated acid secretory response. The intestinal phase of gastric secretion is poorly understood and is thought to be mediated by an unknown hormone from the proximal small bowel mucosa in response to luminal chyme. This phase starts when gastric emptying begins and continues as long as nutrients remain in the proximal small intestine. It accounts for about 10% of meal-induced acid secretion. Interprandial basal acid secretion is 2 to 5 mEq of HCl per hour, about 10% of maximal acid output, and it is greater at night. Basal acid secretion probably contributes to the relatively low bacterial counts found in the stomach. Basal acid secretion is reduced 75% to 90% by vagotomy or H2-receptor blockade. Pepsinogen secretion from chief cells is primarily stimulated by food ingestion; acetylcholine is the most impor201 202 tant mediator. Somatostatin inhibits pepsinogen secretion. Pepsinogen I is produced by chief cells in acidproducing glands; pepsinogen II is produced by chief cells in both acid-producing and gastrin-producing antral glands. Pepsinogen is cleaved to the active pepsin enzyme in an acidic environment and is maximally active at a pH of 2.5. The enzyme catalyzes the hydrolysis of proteins and is denatured at alkaline pH. Activated parietal cells secrete intrinsic factor in addition to HCl. Intrinsic factor binds to luminal vitamin B12, and the complex is absorbed in the terminal ileum via mucosal receptors. Gastric Mucosal Barrier The stomach’s durable resistance to autodigestion by caustic HCl and active pepsin is multifaceted. When these defenses break down, ulceration occurs. The mucus and bicarbonate secreted by surface epithelial cells form an unstirred mucous gel with a favorable pH gradient. Cell membranes and tight junctions prevent hydrogen ions from gaining access to the interstitial space. Hydrogen ions that occasionally break through are buffered by the alkaline tide created by basolateral bicarbonate secretion from stimulated parietal cells. Any sloughed or denuded surface epithelial cells are rapidly replaced by migration of adjacent cells via a process called restitution. Mucosal blood flow is crucial in maintaining a healthy mucosa by providing nutrients and oxygen for the cellular functions involved in cytoprotection. “Back-diffused” hydrogen is buffered and rapidly removed by the rich blood supply. When barrier breakers such as bile or aspirin lead to increased back-diffusion of hydrogen ions from the lumen into the lamina propria and submucosa, there is a protective increase in mucosal blood flow. If this protective response is blocked, gross ulceration can occur. Important mediators of these protective mechanisms include prostaglandins, nitric oxide, intrinsic nerves, and peptides such as calcitonin gene–related peptide and gastrin. Misoprostol is a commercially available prostaglandin E analogue that prevents gastric mucosal damage in chronic nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug users. In addition to these local defenses, there are important protective factors in swallowed saliva, duodenal secretions, and pancreatic and biliary secretions. Gastric Hormones Gastrin is produced by antral G cells and is the major hormonal stimulant of acid secretion during the gastric phase. A variety of molecular forms exist: the large majority of gastrin released by the human antrum is G17. Luminal peptides and amino acids are the most potent stimulants of gastrin release, and luminal acid is the most potent inhibitor of gastrin secretion. The inhibitor effect Part XII. Gastrointestinal Disorders is mediated in a paracrine fashion by somatostatin released from antral D cells. Gastrin also is trophic to gastric parietal cells and to other gastrointestinal mucosal cells. Important causes of hypergastrinemia include pernicious anemia, acid-suppressive medication, gastrinoma, retained antrum following distal gastrectomy and Billroth II surgery, and vagotomy. Somatostatin is produced by D cells located throughout the gastric mucosa. The major stimulus for somatostatin release is antral acidification; acetylcholine from vagal nerve fibers inhibits its release. Somatostatin inhibits acid secretion from parietal cells, gastrin release from G cells, and histamine release from ECL cells. The primary effect of somatostatin is mediated in a paracrine fashion, but an endocrine (bloodstream) effect is possible also. Gastrin-releasing peptide (GRP) in the antrum stimulates both gastrin and somatostatin release by binding to receptors on the G and D cells. Nerve terminals end near the mucosa in the gastric body and antrum, which are rich in GRP immunoreactivity. When GRP is given peripherally it stimulates acid secretion, but when it is given centrally into the cerebral ventricles of animals, it inhibits acid secretion, apparently via a pathway involving the sympathetic nervous system. Ghrelin is a small peptide that is produced primarily in the stomach. Ghrelin is a potent secretagogue of pituitary growth hormone but not adrenocorticotropic hormone, follicle-stimulating hormone, luteinizing hormone, prolactin, or thyroid-stimulating hormone. Ghrelin appears to be an orexigenic regulator of appetite. When ghrelin is elevated, appetite is stimulated, and when it is suppressed, appetite is suppressed. The gastric bypass operation is associated with suppression of plasma ghrelin levels and appetite. Gastric Motility and Emptying Gastric motor function has several purposes. Interprandial motor activity clears undigested debris, sloughed cells, and mucus. When feeding begins, the stomach relaxes to accommodate the meal. Regulated motor activity breaks down food into small particles and controls the output into the duodenum. The stomach accomplishes this via coordinated smooth muscle relaxation and contraction of the proximal, distal, and pyloric gastric segments. Smooth muscle myoelectric potentials are translated into muscular activity, which is modulated by extrinsic and intrinsic innervation and hormones. The intrinsic innervation consists of ganglia and nerves constituting the enteric nervous system with a variety of neurotransmitters. Important excitatory neurotransmitters include acetylcholine, the tachykinins, substance P, and neurokinin A. Important inhibitory neurotransmit- 83. Gastric Physiology ters include nitric oxide and vasoactive intestinal peptide. Serotonin has been shown to modulate both contraction and relaxation. A variety of other molecules affect motility, including GRP, histamine, neuropeptide Y, norepinephrine, and endogenous opioids. 203 Specialized cells in the muscularis propria, interstitial cells of Cajal, also are important modulators of gastrointestinal motility. They amplify both cholinergic excitatory and nitrergic inhibitory input to the smooth muscle of the stomach and intestine.