IB 3 Liver - susanpittinaro
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Transcript IB 3 Liver - susanpittinaro
The Liver
Anatomy
Largest
gland in the body (1.5 kg)
Under the diaphragm, within the rib
cage in the upper right quadrant of
the abdomen
Only human organ
that can selfregenerate
Anatomy
4
lobes
Major:
left & right
Minor: caudate &
quadrate
Ducts
Common
hepatic
Cystic
From gallbladder
Common
bile
Joins pancreatic duct at
hepatopancreatic ampulla
Anatomy
Blood flow
Hepatic
artery
Brings
oxygenated
blood to liver
Hepatic
vein
Carries
deoxygenated
blood away from the liver
Hepatic
Brings
portal vein
blood from small intestine
Deoxygenated but full of nutrients
Blood flow
Hepatic portal vein divides into smaller
vessels called sinusoids
Sinusoids eventually drain into the central
vein of the lobule
Eventually
drains into the hepatic vein
Hepatic vein
drains into the
inferior vena cava
Bile production
Hepatocytes (liver cells)
secrete bile
Bile is secreted into the
canaliculi
To
the bile ductules
To the common bile duct
To the gall bladder
Storage
To
the bile duct
To the small intestine
Helps digest fats
Gallbladder anatomy
Thin-walled green muscular
sac
On the inferior surface of the
liver
Stores bile that is not
immediately needed for
digestion
When muscular wall of
gallbladder contracts, bile is
expelled into the bile duct
Functions
The liver has more than 200 functions,
including:
Regulation
of blood glucose & glycogen
Storage of nutrients
Including iron, vitamin A, & vitamin D
Breakdown
of erythrocytes
Bile secretion
Synthesis of plasma proteins
Incl globulins, albumin, prothrombin, & fibrinogen
Synthesis
of cholesterol
Detoxification of harmful substances
Functions
Normal blood glucose
= 90 mg/100 mL
Liver pulls excess
glucose from blood
plasma and stores it
as glycogen
As blood sugar levels
decrease, glycogen
reserves are converted
back to glucose
Functions
Adjusts amino acid
levels in blood
Excess amino acids
are deaminated and
excreted through the
kidney
Functions
What gets broken down?
Insulin & other hormones
Hemoglobin
Toxic substances
Alcohol
& drugs
Some antibiotics & hormones
Including
estrogen & testosterone
Converts ammonia to urea
Waste products are excreted through the
kidneys
Erythrocyte breakdown
Red blood cells have a life span of 120
days
RBCs weaken and rupture, releasing
hemoglobin into the blood plasma
Erythrocyte breakdown
Hemoglobin is absorbed by phagocytosis by
Kuppfer cells in the liver
Hemoglobin is split into:
Heme groups
Iron is removed from heme
Iron is carried to bone marrow
Used for hemoglobin in new
RBCs
Remaining substance = bilirubin
Becomes bile pigment
Globins
Hydrolyzed into amino acids and returned to blood
Erythrocyte breakdown
Problems with excessive alcohol
consumption
Metabolized alcohol may still be toxic to cells
Healthy liver cells are replaced with fibrous scar
tissue
Reduces
ability to metabolize carbohydrates, fats, &
proteins
Reduces ability to transport materials through the
body
Blood flow is blocked to and from the liver
Over time, this may lead to nutritional
deprivation & increased susceptibility to infection
Problems with excessive alcohol
consumption
Long term alcohol abuse results in 3 primary
effects on the liver:
– swelling of damaged liver tissue
Fat accumulation
Cirrhosis – build up scar tissue left in areas of liver
destroyed by prolonged alcohol exposure
Inflammation
Any questions?