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Cardia |  | Cardia: Encyclopedia - Cardia |  | The cardia is the anatomical term for the junction orifice of the stomach and the esophagus. At the cardia, the mucosa of the esophagus transitions into gastric mucosa.
The cardia is also called the Lower esophageal sphincter (LES), cardiac sphincter and gastroesophageal sphincter. The word comes from the Greek kardia meaning heart, the cardiac orifice of the stomach.
There is disagreement in the academic anatomy community over whether the cardia is part of the stomach, part of the esophagus or a dis ...
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|  | | Cardia, Cardia - Artificial cardia |  | |
|  |  | Cardia: Encyclopedia - Cardia
Cardia
The cardia is the anatomical term for the junction orifice of the stomach and the esophagus. At the cardia, the mucosa of the esophagus transitions into gastric mucosa.
The cardia is also called the Lower esophageal sphincter (LES), cardiac sphincter and gastroesophageal sphincter. The word comes from the Greek kardia meaning heart, the cardiac orifice of the stomach.
There is disagreement in the academic anatomy community over whether the cardia is part of the stomach, part of the esophagus or a distinct entity, as described in this article. Classical anatomy textbooks describe the cardia as the first of 4 regions of the stomach. This makes sense histologically because the mucosa of the cardia is the same as that of the stomach. Recent writings describe it as the LES. The difference is more than semantic when used in clinical studies and applied to individual patients. The diagram shows a stomach with 3 regions and a cardia, presumably referring to the LES. Image:Stomach2.gif
The stomach generates strong acids and enzymes to aid in food digestion. This digestive mixture is called gastric juice. The inner lining of the stomach has several mechanisms to resist the effect of gastric juice on itself, but the mucosa of the esophagus does not. The esophagus is normally protected from these acids by a one-way valve mechanism at its junction with. This one-way valve is called the lower esophageal sphincter (LES), and prevents gastric juice from flowing back into.
Cardia - Artificial cardia
The Shanghai No. 9 People's Hospital affiliated to the No. 2 Medical Sciences University has successfully transplanted artificial cardia. The hospital developed the artificial cardia with metallic and macromolecule materials.
Other related archivesGreek, Image:Stomach2.gif, Lower esophageal sphincter, Shanghai, acids, anatomical, anatomy, digestion, enzymes, esophagus, gastric juice, histologically, mucosa, stomach
 Adapted from the Wikipedia article "Cardia", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki |
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