75% of gastric glands are present in Oxyntic Mucosa and contain endocrine,chief,parietal and enterochromaffin cells. Oxyntic mucosa is a subtype of mucosal lining present in gastric lumen,a neck like structure subdevided in isthmus,neck and base(fundus)wher all these glands are found
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Manjary Upadhyay,
Business Training Manager,
True Care Business,
Piramal Health Care,
Delhi
The thin epithelial casing that covers the hard palate is called the oral mucosa.
Erythematous mucosa refers to redness of the lining of a body cavity, typically due to irritation or inflammation. The absence of bleeding indicates that the mucosa is not actively damaged or ulcerated. This finding is often seen in conditions such as gastritis or mild inflammation of the gastrointestinal tract.
Erythematous mucosa is a symptom, not a disease, and the underlying cause must be identified and treated. Once the cause is addressed, the erythema typically resolves. Therefore, the curability of erythematous mucosa depends on treating the underlying condition.
The lumen of the GI tract is the inner space or hollow area within the digestive tube where food and fluids pass through. It is lined with mucous membranes and is where digestion and absorption of nutrients occur.
Gastric folds are the rugae or wrinkles in the inner lining of the stomach. These folds help the stomach expand to accommodate food and aid in the mechanical digestion process. The folds also contain gastric glands which secrete gastric juices to help break down food.
Parietal cells (or oxyntic cells) are epithelium cells found in the gastric mucosa, they secrete hydrochloric acid (HCl) and intrinsic factor (which is required for vitamin B12 absorption). Chief cells are not the same as parietal cells. Chief cells secrete pepsinogen and rennin.
diagnosis ulcerated gastric hyperplastic poly with focal intestinal metaplasia with lymphoplasmactic infiltrate also gastric oxyntic-type mucosa with lymphoid aggregate what does this mean
The plural form of mucosa is mucosae.
what is erythematous mucosa in the distal rectum
Oxyntic cells, also known as parietal cells, are specialized cells located in the gastric glands of the stomach lining. Their primary function is to produce and secrete hydrochloric acid (HCl), which helps create an acidic environment necessary for digestion and activates the enzyme pepsin. Additionally, oxyntic cells secrete intrinsic factor, a glycoprotein essential for the absorption of vitamin B12 in the intestine.
The three main types of oral mucosa are masticatory mucosa (found on the gingiva and hard palate, suited for chewing), lining mucosa (on the cheeks, lips, and floor of the mouth, for flexibility), and specialized mucosa (on the dorsum of the tongue, with unique features for taste sensation).
Buccal mucosa is the mucosa lining the inside of the cheeks, and lips. Although the mucosa lining the inside of the lips is sometimes referred to labial mucosa, but it essentially just a continuation of the buccal mucosa. It is composed of stratified non-keritinised epithelium.This type of epithelliem in the oral cavity is also termed 'lining mucosa'. As apposed to 'masticatory mucosa' which covers the hard palate, attached gingiva, and dorsal surface of the tongue. There is also 'specialized mucosa' which is only found on the dorsal surface f the tongue.
i dont even know what a mucosa line in the trachea is
The respiratory mucosa is primarily made of pseudostratified columnar epithelium.
The tongue is covered by a mucosa containing taste buds.
It’s the mucosa, not the submucosa.
gingival mucosa