Gastric mucosa

Gastric mucosa
Stomach
Section of mucous membrane of human stomach, near the cardiac orifice. X 45. c. Cardiac glands. d. Their ducts. cr. Gland similar to the intestinal glands, with goblet cells. mm. Mucous membrane. m. Muscularis mucosæ. m’. Muscular tissue within the mucous membrane.
Details
Identifiers
Latintunica mucosa gastris
MeSHD005753
TA98A05.5.01.027
TA22914
FMA14907
Anatomical terminology

The gastric mucosa is the mucous membrane layer that lines the entire stomach.[1] The mucus is secreted by gastric glands, and surface mucous cells in the mucosa to protect the stomach wall from harmful gastric acid, and from digestive enzymes that may start to digest the tissue of the wall. Mucus from the glands is mainly secreted by pyloric glands in the lower region of the stomach, and by a smaller amount in the parietal glands in the body and fundus of the stomach.

The mucosa is studded with millions of gastric pits, which the gastric glands empty into. In humans, it is about one millimetre thick, and its surface is smooth, and soft. It consists of simple secretory columnar epithelium, an underlying supportive layer of loose connective tissue called the lamina propria, and the muscularis mucosae, a thin layer of muscle that separates the mucosa from the underlying submucosa. The gastric mucosa serves as a gastric barrier, reinforced by tight junctions between the epithelial cells.

Three types of cell in the mucosa secrete mucus. Mucus cells in the pyloric glands produce a large amount of thin mucus. Mucous neck cells produce mucus in the parietal glands. Surface mucous cells cover the entire mucosa between the gastric pits and into their upper parts, the mucus produced here is viscid, and alkaline.[2]

  1. ^ Cite error: The named reference Moore2018 was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  2. ^ Hall, John E.; Guyton, Arthur C. (2011). Guyton and Hall textbook of medical physiology (12th ed.). Philadelphia, Pa: Saunders/Elsevier. pp. 777–779. ISBN 9781416045748.