Kinetic function of the colon.. Constructive contractions and motivation. When the driving contractions reach the rectal sinus junction, the ablative contractions in this area play the role of the brakes to prevent them from passing

The motor function includes two types of contractions:
A: Constipation is the basic strong and be non-motivating, slow and non-continuous function: Keep food inside the colon and mixing it which does not play a role in emptying, but give the colon the opportunity to absorb water and electrolytes as signals to him and the remnants of food decomposition and fermentation.
When the colon signals that its functions are not needed for mixing, storage and absorption, the driving contractions begin.
B - driving contractions:
- Be regular, and play a key role in emptying the colon.
- appear during the colloidal answer period.
- The severity of these contractions correspond to the amount of calories entering the body.
- Be in the direction or opposite of the movements.
- Food is pushed in the direction of the anus and sometimes reverses the direction of the anus when there is a disturbance of mobility.
When the compression contractions reach the rectal sinus junction, the pectoral contractions in this area play the role of the brakes to prevent them from passing. Therefore, the rectal stores the waste more often, ie, the defecation does not occur as the waste reaches the rectum. It is gradually stored until the wall of the rectum is extended to the point where the receptors Sensual in it, and thus send nerve signals to the brain translated by desire to defecate.
Important: All movements of the colon stop at night because the colon sleeps with the human at night, so the pain of the colon, no matter how strong, it does not wake from sleep, but during waking the person is "Yolol" of pain. Thus, the pain of the colon reverses the pain of the ulcer, the gallbladder, the pancreas. Any severe pain that does not wake up at night is a colonic disorder until proven otherwise. Of course there are exceptions.
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