Basic ruminants
Contractions
all about the rumen
pH and buffers
Gas and turnover
100

The reticulum vs rumen?

reticulum = No sphincter separating the reticulum from the rumen, allows small digesta particles to move to omasum, traps heavy objects, contraction form esophageal groove in neonates

Rumen = microbial fermentation, large volume, lined with papillae (for surface area and absorption)

100

What is stratification?

Layers form based on particle density and size

low density fiber raft - rumination and fermentation

Light large particles on top, Medium density small particles in middle, Very dense particles on bottom

100

What controls gastric secretions?

Stimulatory signals - buccal mechanoreceptors, rumen tension receptors, rumen epithelial mechanoreceptors, abomasal chemoreceptors 

inhibitory signals - high threshold tension receptors in reticulum and rumen, tension receptors in abomasum, rumen epithelial chemoreceptors, pain, medications

100

What affects rumen pH?

Diet - high forage = neutral, high concentrate = 4.9-6

feed processing - Chopping & grinding reduces particle size which lowers rumen pH

feed intake - going from restriction to full intake - drops pH by ~1 full unit

Time - pH is lowest 3-4 hours after feeding - more frequent meals = less pH flucuation

100

What is the gas composition that the rumen produces?

CO2 - 65% (decarboxylation and carbonic anhydrase)

CH4 - 25% (methanogens, energy is lost when CH4 is produced, ionophores reduce CH4 production)

N2 - 7%

O2 - 0.5% (used up rapidly by facultative anaerobes

H2 - 0.2% (H mostly as H+ ions in solution

H2S - 0.01%

200

the Omasum vs abomasum?

O = Water absorption, volatile fatty acid absorption, electrolyte absorption, many leaves

A = Glandular "true" stomach, secretes HCl (pH 2.5-3.5), digestive enzymes (pepsin and lysozyme)

200

1 degree contraction cycle?

Major mixing cycle, loud, occurs ~1/min

Biphasic contraction of reticulum, contraction of cranial sac and cranial pillar, contraction of dorsal sac, contraction of ventral sac, relaxation of cranial pillar

200

Rumen tension receptors vs rumen epithelial receptors?

Tension = located in muscle wall, low to moderate distension (excites tension receptors, stimulates gastric centers, increased motility), Severe distension (inhibits gastric centers = reduced motility, mechanism is not known)

Epithelial = located in the epithelial lining of the rumen, mechanoreceptors (light touch), chemoreceptors (low pH in rumen, low pH is abomasum)

200

What does an abnormal pH do to the rumen?

Effects motility 

effects microbes

Acute acidosis

sub-acute ruminal acidosis

200

Gas production within the rumen?

Product of microbial fermentation

Maximum occurred ~2-4 hours after a meal

cattle = 30-50L/hour or 400L/day

eliminated by eructation 

bloat can occur very quickly

300

What are the benefits of ruminant fermentation?

More extensive and efficient fermentation - able to break down fibrous plant material 

Rumination = more mastication

Microbial proteins = from plant protein and non-protein nitrogen

B vitamins can be absorbed in small intestine

Detoxification of plant compounds

300

2 degree contraction cycle

occurs once for every 1 degree cycles, release of gas produced from fermentation, contractions tilt gas pocket forward which allows gas to be released - begins with same steps as 1 degree

Biphasic contraction of reticulum, contraction of cranial sac and cranial pillar, contraction of dorsal sac, contraction of ventral sac, contraction of caudoventral blind sac, contraction move cranially through caudodorsal blind sac, contraction of ventral sac

300

How to evaluate motility?

Visual - chewing cud

Palpation - left paralumbar fossa = should be soft

listening - stethoscope in left paralumbar fossa, rumbling, splashing or tinkling, percussion

300

How to test rumen pH?

Through a stomach tube - this risks saliva contaminations and fluctuations

sensor bolus - given orally so it stays in the rumen, lasts 3-5 months, records daily patterns

300

What is rumen turnover?

Time required to replace rumen contents with an equivalent volume

Fluid vs solid

fluid turnover - inputs (saliva, drinking, H2O movement across rumen wall), outputs (H2O absorption, passage to omasum), high forage = faster, high concentrate = slower, mostly influences by salivation and drinking

400

What are the disadvantages of ruminant fermentation?

Takes a long time - slow transit of material through tract

Rumen capacity limits feed intake - large volume = heavy and takes up space

Only small particles can pass to omasum

Lower digestibility = slower passage rate

400

How does rumination occur?

Regurgitation of digesta from reticulum 

Reticulum contraction just before 1 degree, or 2 degree contraction cycle

relaxation of esophageal sphincter 

Reverse peristalsis of esophagus

tongue squeezes out liquid

mastication & salivation

400

What causes a decreased motility of the rumen?

Direct depression of gastric center - medications, acute phase proteins, pain

failure or neuromuscular transmission

increased sympathetic stimulation

400

What does buffering do to the rumen? how is it buffered?

Acids constantly being produced during fermentation - buffering keeps pH relatively close to neutral

saliva has large amounts of HCO3- and phosphate buffers

Carbonic anhydrase - enzyme in rumen epithelium, H+ absorbed into blood, HCO3- stays in rumen as a buffer

400

What is solid turnover?

Rate of loss of solid material

factors include - feed digestibility, feed intake, particle size

500

What are the 3 types of ruminants? aspects?

Browsers - high quality plant material, higher concentrate diet, more frequent meals = deer

Grazers - eat most plant material, higher fiber, less frequent meals = cattle and sheep

Intermediate

500

How is motility controlled?

No autonomous smooth muscle contractions

Intrinsic nerve plexi - does not produce motility contractions, small variations in smooth muscle tone

Extrinsic control - autonomic nervous system

Vagal never is required for rumen motility

splanchnic nerve - sympathetic 

Controlled by the gastric centers of the medulla

500

What are rumen characteristics? 

Temperature and pH

500

Aspects of saliva in ruminant digestion?

Modifies rumen pH through buffering

nutrients for microbes - nitrogen recycling

Anti-frothing properties - reduces surface tension

Enzymes - pre gastric esterase (fat digestion), and no salivary amylase

500

What is the turnover and efficiency of the rumen?

More turnover = more substrate for bacteria - increases VFA production

Increased microbial efficiency

Potential reasons - favours faster-growing bacteria, more bacteria in exponential growth phase, increase dilution rate = decrease protozoa to eat bacteria 

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