Digestion
Metabolism
Disorders
Diarrhea
Random
100

What is the role of PGE2?

Inhibits gastric acid and pepsin and increases mucus and bicarbonate

100

What is the function of Glucose-6-Phosphatase? (what hormones are involved)

Converts glucose-6-phosphate into glucose during fasting in a process called Glycogenolysis 

(glucagon and epinephrine stimulate this)

100

What physical finding can act as supportive evidence for Primary Tympany upon necropsy? (can you describe it)

Bloat line 

(separates pale, bloodless cervical esophagus from congested, dark red thoracic esophagus)

100

What type of diarrhea results in the separation of apical junctions?

Exudative (mucosal damage - PLE, bloody, mucus)

100

What could be a consequence of prolonged use of Proton pump inhibitors like Ompeprazole or Histamine-2 antagonists like Cimetidine?

Bacterial overgrowth

200

What cells help saliva go from isotonic to hypotonic? How?

Ductal cells reabsorb most NaCl from the isotonic fluid and secrete K and HCO3

200

What is the name of the enzyme that activates trypsinogen to trypsin, which is important for proper protein digestion? (bonus if you can tell me the consequence of a secretin deficiency on this enzyme)

Enteropeptidase 

(no secretin = no HCO3 = acidic pH = denatures enteropeptidase = reduced trypsin activation = poor protein digestion)

200

What viral disease seen in young cattle is caused by Parapoxvirus and known by farmers as “Milkers nodules”?

Bovine papular Stomatitis

200

Out of the 4 toxins that Clostridium spp. (bacteria) produces, which one is produced by all strains and causes hemolysis?

Alpha toxin

200

What disorder often affects the wolf and canine teeth of horses and is described as an epithelial-lined, cystic structure in soft tissue including the bone of the jaw?

Dentigerous cysts

300

What is Chymosin?

Enzyme secreted by young mammals from chief cells that helps slow milk passage, allowing more time for digestion

(replaced by pepsin later)

300

What 4 hormones inhibit gastric acid? (bonus if you tell me how)

Secretin: inhibit parietal cells and gastrin release

Somatostatin: inhibit parietal cells, gastrin and histamine release

CCK: indirectly suppresses

GIP: inhibits in duodenum and jejunum


300

A maltese dog comes into the clinic with halitosis, mucosal ulcerations where oral mucosa contacts teeth (Kissing ulcers), and weight loss. The dog is later diagnosed with Chronic Ulcerative Paradental Stomatitis (CUPS). What is the cause of this disorder?

Chronic immune response to bacteria in plaque

300

A dog presents with both small and large intestinal bowel diarrhea. The owner reports that the diarrhea is watery, but no other symptoms have been noted. What parasite is most likely causing this? Bonus points if you can describe the egg.

Cystoisospora (hard boiled egg)

300

What enzyme hydrolyzes stored triglycerides (lipolysis)?

Hormone-Sensitive Lipase (HSL)

400

Why do herbivores need microbial fermentation? (hint* something about structural carbs vs non-structural carbs)

Mammals cannot break down structural carbs (cellulose, hemicellulose, pectin) because they are made of beta-configurations, therefore fermentation is needed 

Non-structural carbs (starch, glycogen, simple sugars) are alpha-configurations which mammals produce enzymes capable of breaking these down

400

What causes the formation of ketone bodies? Name 3 types of Ketone bodies.

Starvation, beta-oxidation generates Acetyl CoA in the liver (mitochondria), excess acetyl-CoA becomes ketone bodies

Acetoacetate, Beta hydroxybutyrate, Acetone

400

Vagal Indigestion is classified as damage to the vagus nerve anywhere along its length that results in functional outflow problem from the forestomach. What are the 4 types?

(1) Inflammatory lesions = bloat 

(2) Failure of omasal transport 

(3) Dietary 

(4) Pregnancy

400

A cat comes into the clinic for chronic watery diarrhea, fecal incontinence, and flatulence. Upon further investigation, the issue appears to be coming from the cecum. What parasite is most likely causing this? (Bonus points if you can describe the trophozoite)

Tritrichomonas (purple)

400

There are 3 phases of vomiting: Prodromal, Retching, and Ejection. If premonitory clinical signs occur during Prodromal, and abdominal muscle contraction occurs during Ejection, what happens in the Retching phase?

Proximal small intestine and gastric antrum contract

Propelling contents into stomach

Gastroesophageal sphincter moves into thoracic cavity

500

What occurs during the Pharyngeal phase of swallowing? (aka Reflexive Phase)

Touch receptors stimulate Central Pattern Generator (CPG) via glossopharyngeal nerve (CN IX)

Soft palate close and epiglottis folds down

Pharyngeal Constrictors propel bolus to esophagus



500

Explain the mechanism of peristalsis. Start with the cells of cajal

Cells of cajal create slow waves (pacemaker) which get the muscles ready to contract 

When stretch receptors are activated, it causes a slow wave to reach its threshold, opening calcium channels 

The influx of calcium causes peristalsis

500

We learned about Polioencephalomalacia in both DMN pt. 1 and pt. 2, but do you know the pathogenesis of grain overload leading to this Vitamin B1 deficiency?

Grain overload - excess fermentation - increased VFAs and lactic acid - rumen acidosis - decreased good microbiota - overgrowth of bacteria that produce thiaminase enzyme - thiamine deficiency - cerebral necrosis

500

Enterotoxigenic Escherichia coli (ETEC) produces Heat-labile and Heat-stable enterotoxins. Heat-labile increases cAMP and Heat-stable increases cGMP. How does this lead to diarrhea?

Chloride, Sodium, and water are actively secreted by the CFTR channels on the apical membrane of enterocytes = Hypersecretory/Osmotic diarrhea

500

Ostertagia spp. (Trichostrongyles) are known for causing anorexia, weight loss, and diarrhea in cattle. Where are the infective L3 found and do they cause small or large bowel diarrhea?

Abomasum

Small intestine 

(eggs look like anchlyostoma)