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Normal stomach
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Normal stomach

Esophageal-gastric junction(black arrow)
Cardia(white arrow) is poorly defined zone 1.0-1.5cm below esophageal-gastric junction
Antrum is triangular area occupying distal third of stomach(green arrows)
Fundus is remainder of stomach shown here with prominent rugal folds
(Description By:Martin Nadel, M.D. )
(Image Contrib. by: Saint Francis Hospital )
Normal Stomach
Etiology

Not applicable.
Pathogenesis

Not applicable.,
Epidemiology

Not applicable.
General Gross Description

Located in the left upper quadrant connecting esophagus and duodenum
Four zones including cardia (transition from esophagus), fundus or body, antrum and pylorus
Supplied by celiac axis, hepatic artery, and splenic artery
General Microscopic Description

Tall columnar epithelium covers surface with intervening pits (foveolae, crypts)
Glands emptying into pits vary with location in stomach
Cardiac and antral glands are mucin secreting with occasional parietal cells; glands and pits occupy approximately 1/2 the mucosal thickness
Fundic glands occupy 1/4 mucosal thickness, straight, and have abundant chief cells with basal nuclei and gray-blue cytoplasm as well as numerous parietal cells with deep pink cytoplasm
Lamina propria contains lymphocytes, fibroblasts and histiocytes; intraepithelial lymphocytes are rare; plasma cells are not considered normal
Muscularis mucosa above submucosa which lies on muscularis propria and serosa
Clinical Correlation

Not applicable.
References

Histology for Pathologists. Sternberg SS ed. New York: Raven Press, 1992. pp. 533-539.
Normal Stomach
Synopsis by: Melinda Sanders M.D. (T63000M00100)[543]
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