gastric juices - meaning and definition. What is gastric juices
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What (who) is gastric juices - definition

DIGESTIVE FLUID FORMED IN THE STOMACH
Stomach acid; Digestive fluid; Gastric juice; Gastric Juice; Stomach juice; Gastric juices; Digestive juices; Gastric fluid; Digestive juice; Gastric hydrochloric acid; Acid gland
  • Determinants of Gastric Acid Secretion

gastric juice         
¦ noun an acid fluid secreted by the stomach glands and active in promoting digestion.
Gastric acid         
Gastric acid, gastric juice, or stomach acid is a digestive fluid formed within the stomach lining. With a pH between 1 and 3, gastric acid plays a key role in digestion of proteins by activating digestive enzymes, which together break down the long chains of amino acids of proteins.
Gastric chief cell         
TYPE OF GASTRIC GLAND CELL
Chief cells, gastric; Gastric chief cells
A gastric chief cell (or peptic cell, or gastric zymogenic cell) is a type of gastric gland cell that releases pepsinogen and gastric lipase. It is the cell responsible for secretion of chymosin in ruminant animals.

Wikipedia

Gastric acid

Gastric acid, gastric juice, or stomach acid is a digestive fluid formed within the stomach lining. With a pH between 1 and 3, gastric acid plays a key role in digestion of proteins by activating digestive enzymes, which together break down the long chains of amino acids of proteins. Gastric acid is regulated in feedback systems to increase production when needed, such as after a meal. Other cells in the stomach produce bicarbonate, a base, to buffer the fluid, ensuring a regulated pH. These cells also produce mucus – a viscous barrier to prevent gastric acid from damaging the stomach. The pancreas further produces large amounts of bicarbonate and secretes bicarbonate through the pancreatic duct to the duodenum to neutralize gastric acid passing into the digestive tract.

The active components of gastric acid are protons and chloride. Often simplistically described as hydrochloric acid, these species are produced by parietal cells in the gastric glands in the stomach. The secretion is a complex and relatively energetically expensive process. Parietal cells contain an extensive secretory network (called canaliculi) from which the "hydrochloric acid" is secreted into the lumen of the stomach. The pH of gastric acid is 1.5 to 3.5 in the human stomach lumen, a level maintained by the proton pump H+/K+ ATPase. The parietal cell releases bicarbonate into the bloodstream in the process, which causes a temporary rise of pH in the blood, known as an alkaline tide.

The highly acidic environment in the stomach lumen degrades proteins (e.g., food). Peptide bonds, which comprise proteins, are labilized. The gastric chief cells of the stomach secrete enzymes for protein breakdown (inactive pepsinogen, and in infancy rennin). The low pH activates pepsinogen into the enzyme pepsin, which then aids digestion by breaking the amino acid bonds, a process called proteolysis. In addition, many microorganisms are inhibited or destroyed in an acidic environment, preventing infection or sickness.

Examples of use of gastric juices
1. "You can‘t get Aids by eating at restaurants and cafeterias because gastric juices destroy the virus.
2. During stomach stapling, surgeons usually close off some of the patient‘s small intestine, leaving a smaller area where food and gastric juices can mix.
3. Every few minutes he was required to wait out an interlude of nausea, while disused gastric juices bubbled up in the sump of his throat.
4. With the smell of sizzling meat whipping my gastric juices to a frenzy, we move on to the house speciality: the lomo, or tenderloin medallion, also known as the Argentine diamond.
5. Second, even if it is still present after cooking, the virus is destroyed by saliva and gastric juices.‘ Retailers are poised for substantial drops in chicken sales this week, although officially yesterday they were denying that there were any signs of consumers shunning poultry.