The cecum ( caecum, ; plural ceca or caeca, ) is a pouch within the peritoneum that is considered to be the beginning of the large intestine. It is typically located on the right side of the body (the same side of the body as the appendix, to which it is joined). The term stems from the Latin , meaning "blindness".
It receives chyme from the ileum, and connects to the ascending colon of the large intestine. It is separated from the ileum by the ileocecal valve (ICV), also called Bauhin's valve. It is also separated from the colon by the cecocolic junction. While the cecum is usually intraperitoneal, the ascending colon is retroperitoneal.
In , the cecum stores food material where bacteria are able to break down the cellulose. In humans, the cecum is involved in absorption of salts and Electrolyte and lubricates the solid waste that passes into the large intestine.
In by the Ancient Greece Greek philosophy, the connection between the ileum of the small intestine and the cecum was not fully understood. Most of the studies of the digestive tract were done on animals and the results were compared to human human anatomy.
The junction between the small intestine and the colon, called the ileocecal valve, is so small in some animals that it was not considered to be a connection between the small and large intestines. During a dissection, the colon could be traced from the rectum, to the sigmoid colon, through the descending colon, transverse colon, and ascending colon sections. The cecum is an end point for the colon with a dead-end portion terminating with the appendix.
The connection between the end of the small intestine (ileum) and the start (as viewed from the perspective of food being processed) of the colon (cecum) is now clearly understood, and is called the ileocecal orifice. The connection between the end of the cecum and the beginning of the ascending colon is called the cecocolic orifice.
Neutropenic enterocolitis (typhlitis) is the condition of inflammation of the cecum, primarily caused by bacterial infections.
Over 99% of the bacteria in the gut are ,University of Glasgow. 2005. The normal gut flora. Available through web archive. Accessed May 22, 2008 but in the cecum, aerobic bacteria reach high densities.
Most mammalian have a relatively large cecum. In many species, it is considerably wider than the colon. For some herbivores such as lagomorpha (rabbits, hares, pikas), easily digestible food is processed in the gastrointestinal tract and expelled as regular feces. But in order to get nutrients out of hard to digest fiber, lagomorphs ferment fiber in the cecum and then expel the contents as , which are reingested (cecotrophy). The cecotropes are then absorbed in the small intestine to utilize the nutrients.
In contrast, obligate , whose diets contain little or no plant matter, have a reduced cecum, which is often partially or wholly replaced by the appendix. Mammalian species which do not develop a cecum include , , and the red panda. , unlike other mammals, have two paired ceca.
Many fish have a number of small outpockets, called pyloric ceca, along their intestine; despite the name, they are not homologous with the cecum of amniotes – their purpose is to increase the overall area of the digestive epithelium. Some invertebrates, such as squid, may also have structures with the same name, but these have no relationship with those of vertebrates.
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