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Digestive system (apparatus digestorius)   201



                     In carnivores a subglandular layer (stratum subglandu-  ticulum ventriculi and half of the body of the stomach
       VetBooks.ir  lare) may be observed. This layer has two components: an  (Figure 10.29).
                                                                    The cardiac glands are typically branched and heavily
                  inner stratum granulosum, located at the base of tubular
                  glands containing mainly lymphocytes and plasma cells,  coiled tubular glands that empty via a short ‘neck’ into
                  and an outer stratum compactum, a dense layer rich in  the base of the gastric pits. The terminal portion of the
                  collagen fibres located adjacent to the lamina muscularis  glands is expanded. The glandular epithelium is cuboidal
                  mucosae (Figure 10.31).                        to columnar and produces an alkaline mucous secre-
                     The lamina muscularis mucosae is relatively promi-  tion that also contains the enzyme lysozyme. Parietal
                  nent in domestic mammals. Individual muscle fibre bundles  cells (dogs) and chief cells (pigs) are sometimes present
                  follow a criss-crossing spiral path, forming a contractile  within the epithelium. In addition to these exocrine glan-
                  system that manifests as two to three distinguishable lay-  dular cells, the cardiac gland region of the stomach of
                  ers. This muscle layer contributes to the folding of the  domestic mammals contains endocrine glandular cells
                  mucosa and supports gastric emptying.          that can be identified using silver staining and immuno-
                     The stomach has a typical tela submucosa containing  histocytochemical techniques. These cells form part of
                  vessels, nerves, adipose tissue and localised accumulations  the gastrointestinal endocrine system. Their secretory
                  of lymphatic tissue. The tela submucosa permits move-  product, including serotonin, somatostatin and endor-
                  ment of the layers of the stomach wall with respect to one  phins, passes into the capillary network of the stomach
                  another. It conforms to the shape of the gastric wall, as  wall.
                  determined by its degree of contraction, thus contributing
                  to the topography of the mucosal surface.      PROPER GASTRIC (FUNDIC) GLANDS
                     The tunica muscularis consists of an inner circular and  Proper gastric (fundic) glands occur over approximately
                  an outer longitudinal layer of smooth muscle. The passage  two thirds of the gastric mucosa in carnivores, in a small
                  of muscle fibres within these layers varies with region and  region near the greater curvature in pigs and across most
                  species, due to the presence of obliquely oriented fibre  of the body of the stomach in horses. While this portion
                  bundles (fibrae obliquae). Towards the pylorus, the inner  of the glandular mucosa is referred to as the proper gastric
                  circular muscle layer thickens to form the m. sphincter  gland (fundic) region, it only includes the fundus in carni-
                  pylori. In the pig and ox, the thickened muscle protrudes  vores (Figure 10.29).
                  into the lumen as the torus pyloricus. The oblique muscle   The proper gastric glands are tightly packed and are
                  fibres form a loop (ansa cardiaca) at the cardia of the stom-  longer and less branched than cardiac glands (Figures 10.31
                  ach, contributing to the m. sphincter cardiae (particularly  and 10.32). They extend through the lamina propria to the
                  well developed in the horse). The oblique fibres also form  lamina muscularis, surrounded by connective tissue, ves-
                  the muscular foundation of the lips of the gastric groove  sels, nerves, smooth muscle cells and cellular infiltrates.
                  (prominent in pigs and, particularly so, in ruminants; refer  Several glands empty via a common isthmus into the
                  to Veterinary Anatomy of  Domestic Mammals: Textbook and  gastric pits.
                  Colour Atlas). The outermost layer of the stomach com-  The  proper  gastric  glands are composed of three
                  prises a tunica serosa.                        regions characterised by structurally and functionally dis-
                     The tubular gastric glands in the tunica mucosa vary  tinct cell types:
                  in structure and exhibit species-related differences in their
                  regional distribution. Three types of glands are recognised:  ·  isthmus: isthmus cells (epitheliocytus nondifferen-
                                                                     tiatus),
                   ·  cardiac glands (glandulae cardiacae),        ·  neck (cervix): neck cells (mucocytus cervicalis),
                   ·  proper gastric (fundic) glands (glandulae gastricae   ·  body and fundus (pars principalis):
                      propriae) and                                     − chief cells (exocrinocytus principalis),
                   ·  pyloric glands (glandulae pyloricae).             − parietal cells (exocrinocytus parietalis) and
                                                                        − endocrine cells (endocrinocytus gastrointestinalis).
                  CARDIAC GLANDS
                  The zone containing the cardiac glands is referred to as  isthmus
                  the cardiac gland region (pars cardiaca) of the stom-  The isthmus is the portion of the gland located in the gas-
                  ach  (Figure  10.29).  In  carnivores  and  ruminants,  the  tric pits from which the gland itself develops. Its typically
                  cardiac glands are restricted to an annular zone at the  low cuboidal epithelium is continuous with the epithe-

                  entrance to the stomach (abomasum in ruminants). In  lial lining of the gastric pits. The cells increase in height
                  the horse, strips of mucosa containing cardiac glands adjoin  throughout this transition. The cells of the isthmus are
                  the saccus caecus. Cardiac glands extend over a larger  daughter cells of the mucous neck cells and are usually not
                  region of the mucosa in pigs, incorporating the diver-  fully differentiated (epitheliocyti nondifferentiati).









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