Pylorus
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Pylorus
Outline of stomach, showing its anatomical landmarks.
Interior of the stomach. (Pylorus labeled at center left.)
Latin valvula pylori
Gray's subject #247 1164

The pylorus (from Greek πυλωρος = "gate guard") is the region of the stomach that connects to the duodenum. It is divided in two parts:

The pyloric sphincter, or valve, is a strong ring of smooth muscle at the end of the pyloric canal and lets food pass from the stomach to the duodenum. It receives sympathetic innervation from celiac ganglion.

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Medical significance

One medical condition associated with the pylorus is pyloric stenosis. In such conditions as stomach cancer, when tumours may partly block the pyloric canal, a special tube can be implanted surgically to connect the stomach to the duodenum to assist food to pass from one to the other. This tube is called a pyloric stent.

In popular culture

In John Kennedy Toole's A Confederacy of Dunces, the protagonist complains frequently about his pyloric valve, which, he claims, opens or shuts according to stress levels.

In Umberto Eco's The Mysterious Flame of Queen Loana, translated from the Italian by Geoffrey Brock, the protagonist, Giambattista Bodoni, alternately describes a tickling or a knot in his pylorus that feels like "a mysterious flame".

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External links

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