Skip to main content

Human Liver It's Structure and Functions

Human Liver : 

Anatomy of Liver  :The liver is a roughly triangular organ that extends across the entire abdominal cavity just inferior to the diaphragm. Most of the liver’s mass is located on the right side of the body where it descends inferiorly toward the right kidney.
The liver is made of very soft, pinkish-brown tissues encapsulated by a connective tissue capsule. This capsule is further covered and reinforced by the peritoneum of the abdominal cavity, which protects the liver and holds it in place within the abdomen.

The peritoneum connects the liver in 4 locations: the coronary ligament, the left and right triangular ligaments, and the falciform ligament. These connections are not true ligaments in the anatomical sense; rather, they are condensed regions of peritoneal membrane that support the liver.

The wide coronary ligament connects the central superior portion of the liver to the diaphragm.Located on the lateral borders of the left and right lobes, respectively, the leftand right triangular ligaments connect the superior ends of the liver to the diaphragm.The falciform ligament runs inferiorly from the diaphragm across the anterior edge of the liver to its inferior border. At the inferior end of the liver, the falciform ligament forms the round ligament (ligamentum teres) of the liver and connects the liver to the umbilicus. The round ligament is a remnant of the umbilical vein that carries blood into the body during fetal development.

LIVER : 


The liver consists of 4 distinct lobes — the left, right, caudate, and quadrate lobes.
The left and right lobes are the largest lobes and are separated by the falciform ligament. The right lobe is about 5 to 6 times larger than the tapered left lobe.The small caudate lobe extends from the posterior side of the right lobe and wraps around the inferior vena cava.The small quadrate lobe is inferior to the caudate lobe and extends from the posterior side of the right lobe and wraps around the gallbladder.

Bile Ducts :
The tubes that carry bile through the liver and gallbladder are known as bile ducts and form a branched structure known as the biliary tree. Bile produced by liver cells drains into microscopic canals known as bile canaliculi. The countless bile canaliculi join together into many larger bile ducts found throughout the liver.
These bile ducts next join to form the larger left and right hepatic ducts, which carry bile from the left and right lobes of the liver. Those two hepatic ducts join to form the common hepatic duct that drains all bile away from the liver. The common hepatic duct finally joins with the cystic duct from the gallbladder to form the common bile duct, carrying bile to the duodenum of the small intestine. Most of the bile produced by the liver is pushed back up the cystic duct by peristalsis to arrive in the gallbladder for storage, until it is needed for digestion.

Blood Vessels :
The blood supply of the liver is unique among all organs of the body due to the hepatic portal vein system. Blood traveling to the spleenstomachpancreas, gallbladder, and intestinespasses through capillaries in these organs and is collected into the hepatic portal vein. The hepatic portal vein then delivers this blood to the tissues of the liver where the contents of the blood are divided up into smaller vessels and processed before being passed on to the rest of the body. Blood leaving the tissues of the liver collects into the hepatic veins that lead to the vena cava and return to the heart. The liver also has its own system of arteries and arterioles that provide oxygenated blood to its tissues just like any other organ.

Lobules :
The internal structure of the liver is made of around 100,000 small hexagonal functional units known as lobules. Each lobule consists of a central vein surrounded by 6 hepatic portal veins and 6 hepatic arteries. These blood vessels are connected by many capillary-like tubes called sinusoids, which extend from the portal veins and arteries to meet the central vein like spokes on a wheel.
Each sinusoid passes through liver tissue containing 2 main cell types: Kupffer cells and hepatocytes.

Kupffer cells are a type of macrophage that capture and break down old, worn out red blood cells passing through the sinusoids.Hepatocytes are cuboidal epithelial cells that line the sinusoids and make up the majority of cells in the liver. Hepatocytes perform most of the liver’s functions — metabolism, storage, digestion, and bile production. Tiny bile collection vessels known as bile canaliculi run parallel to the sinusoids on the other side of the hepatocytes and drain into the bile ducts of the liver.

Physiology of the Liver
Digestion

The liver plays an active role in the process of digestion through the production of bile. Bile is a mixture of water, bile salts, cholesterol, and the pigment bilirubin. Hepatocytes in the liver produce bile, which then passes through the bile ducts to be stored in the gallbladder. When food containing fats reaches the duodenum, the cells of the duodenum release the hormone cholecystokinin to stimulate the gallbladder to release bile. Bile travels through the bile ducts and is released into the duodenum where it emulsifies large masses of fat. The emulsification of fats by bile turns the large clumps of fat into smaller pieces that have more surface area and are therefore easier for the body to digest.

Bilirubin present in bile is a product of the liver’s digestion of worn out red blood cells. Kupffer cells in the liver catch and destroy old, worn out red blood cells and pass their components on to hepatocytes.
Hepatocytes metabolize hemoglobin, the red oxygen-carrying pigment of red blood cells, into the components heme and globin. Globin protein is further broken down and used as an energy source for the body. The iron-containing heme group cannot be recycled by the body and is converted into the pigment bilirubin and added to bile to be excreted from the body. Bilirubin gives bile its distinctive greenish color. Intestinal bacteria further convert bilirubin into the brown pigment stercobilin, which gives feces their brown color.

Metabolism :
The hepatocytes of the liver are tasked with many of the important metabolic jobs that support the cells of the body. Because all of the blood leaving the digestive system passes through the hepatic portal vein, the liver is responsible for metabolizing carbohydrate, lipids, and proteins into biologically useful materials.
Our digestive system breaks down carbohydrates into the monosaccharide glucose, which cells use as a primary energy source. Blood entering the liver through the hepatic portal vein is extremely rich in glucose from digested food. Hepatocytes absorb much of this glucose and store it as the macromolecule glycogen, a branched polysaccharide that allows the hepatocytes to pack away large amounts of glucose and quickly release glucose between meals. The absorption and release of glucose by the hepatocytes helps to maintain homeostasis and protects the rest of the body from dangerous spikes and drops in the blood glucose level.
                   Fatty acids in the blood passing through the liver are absorbed by hepatocytes and metabolized to produce energy in the form of ATP. Glycerol, another lipid component, is converted into glucose by hepatocytes through the process of gluconeogenesis. Hepatocytes can also produce lipids like cholesterol, phospholipids, and lipoproteins that are used by other cells throughout the body. Much of the cholesterol produced by hepatocytes gets excreted from the body as a component of bile.

Dietary proteins are broken down into their component amino acids by the digestive system before being passed on to the hepatic portal vein. Amino acids entering the liver require metabolic processing before they can be used as an energy source. Hepatocytes first remove the amine groups of the amino acids and convert them into ammonia and eventually urea. Urea is less toxic than ammonia and can be excreted in urine as a waste product of digestion. The remaining parts of the amino acids can be broken down into ATP or converted into new glucose molecules through the process of gluconeogenesis.

Detoxification :
As blood from the digestive organs passes through the hepatic portal circulation, the hepatocytes of the liver monitor the contents of the blood and remove many potentially toxic substances before they can reach the rest of the body. Enzymes in hepatocytes metabolize many of these toxins such as alcohol and drugs into their inactive metabolites. And in order to keep hormone levels within homeostatic limits, the liver also metabolizes and removes from circulation hormones produced by the body’s own glands.

Storage :
The liver provides storage of many essential nutrients, vitamins, and minerals obtained from blood passing through the hepatic portal system. Glucose is transported into hepatocytes under the influence of the hormone insulin and stored as the polysaccharide glycogen. Hepatocytes also absorb and store fatty acids from digested triglycerides. The storage of these nutrients allows the liver to maintain the homeostasis of blood glucose. Our liver also stores vitamins and minerals - such as vitamins A, D, E, K, and B12, and the minerals iron and copper - in order to provide a constant supply of these essential substances to the tissues of the body.


Production :
The liver is responsible for the production of several vital protein components of blood plasma: prothrombin, fibrinogen, and albumins. Prothrombin and fibrinogen proteins are coagulation factors involved in the formation of blood clots. Albumins are proteins that maintain the isotonic environment of the blood so that cells of the body do not gain or lose water in the presence of body fluids.

Immunity :
             The liver functions as an organ of the immune system through the function of the Kupffer cells that line the sinusoids. Kupffer cells are a type of fixed macrophage that form part of the mononuclear phagocyte system along with macrophages in the spleen and lymph nodes. Kupffer cells play an important role by capturing and digesting bacteria, fungi, parasites, worn-out blood cells, and cellular debris. The large volume of blood passing through the hepatic portal system and the liver allows Kupffer cells to clean large volumes of blood very quickly.


Bilirubin :
              is a waste product made from destruction of old red blood cells. It is a yellow compound that causes the jaundice and dark yellow coloured urine when present in increased amounts. Bilirubin is removed from the blood by the liver that chemically modifies it by a process called conjugation and secretes as bile. Tests for bilirubin are Total bilirubin measures all the bilirubin in the blood (direct + indirect) Conjugated or direct bilirubin - measures a form produced in the liverUn-conjugated or indirect bilirubin- measures an indirect form of bilirubin that was not converted to the conjugated form in the liver.A Variation in the ratios of direct and indirect bilirubin may be an indication for a liver disease that could be due toincreased production decreased uptake by the liver decreased conjugation decreased secretion from the liver due to blockage in the bile duct .

By,
Apniduniyas,
Modesofmods,


Also visit our GAMING blog click below link
LINK : https://modesofmods.blogspot.com/?m=1

Comments

Popular post

Human digestive system,(DIGESTIVE SYSTEM)

Your Digestive System:  Your digestive system is uniquely designed to turn the food you eat into nutrients, which the body uses for energy, growth and cell repair. Here's how it works. For more pharmacy Notes check PharmacyTheory Digestion  definition : The energy required for all the processes and activities that take place in our bodies is derived from the foods we ingest. The digestive system allows us to utilize food from such diverse sources as meat from an animal and the roots of a plant, and utilize them as an energy source. Whether it is the ability to coordinate the chewing of the food without injuring our tongue and lips or the propulsion of the food from the stomach into the duodenum while releasing the appropriate enzymes, our digestive system allows us to manage the process without much thought and often while performing other tasks. What is digestion? The process of digestion is a fascinating and complex one that takes the food we place in our mo

Non-aqueous titration

Nonaqueous titration  is the  titration  of substances dissolved in  solvents  other than water. It is the most common titrimetric procedure used in  pharmacopoeial   assays and serves a double purpose: it is suitable for the titration of very weak  acids  and very weak  bases , and it provides a  solvent  in which  organic compounds  are  soluble . The most commonly used procedure is the titration of  organic bases  with  perchloric acid in  anhydrous   acetic acid . These assays sometimes take some perfecting in terms of being able to judge the  endpoint  precisely. For obvious reasons  Karl Fischer titration  for water content is nonaqueous, usually done in  methanol  or sometimes in  ethanol . PRINCIPLE : The organic acids and bases are insoluble in water. These are extremely weak and cannot be analysed using normal titrimetric methods. Hence the non-aqueous titrimetric method is used. The main principle involved in the non-aqueous titrimetric method is the samples

Female Reproductive System Anatomy-Physiology-Functions-Examples

Female Reproductive System Anatomy-Physiology-Functions-Examples What Is the female reproductive System? Most species have 2 sexes: male and feminine. every sex has its own distinctive system. they're totally different in form and structure, however each ar specifically designed to provide, nourish, and transport either the egg or spermatozoon. Unlike the male, the human feminine incorporates a system placed entirely within the pelvis (that's the bottom a part of the abdomen). The external a part of the feminine procreative organs is named the female genital organ, which implies covering. placed between the legs, the female genital organ covers the gap to the duct and different procreative organs placed within the body. For Students Study Materials Are Available At: https://Pharmacytheory.com The fleshy space placed simply higher than the highest of the canal gap is named the mons pubis(pronounced: MONZ PYOO-bis). 2 pairs of skin flaps known as the lip surround the canal ga

Principle of Conductometry Titration

Principle of Conductometry Titration What is the principle of conductometric titration? The main principle concerned during this technique is that the movement of the ions creates the electrical conduction. The movement of the ions is especially relied on the concentration of the ions. Conductometric volumetric analysis theory states that the end-point of the volumetric analysis method is set by means that of activity conduction. This theory is employed for colloids that have ionazable practical teams like latexes.  These practical teams ar acidic and therefore the theory uses caustic soda as a titrant.  To test conductometric volumetric analysis theory, add caustic soda from the measuring device, then plot the conduction readings that correspond to the increments against the titrant’s volume. CLICK HERE TO SEE NON-AQUEOUS TITRATION Conductometric Titration Experiment Benefits of the idea Conductometric volumetric analysis theory may be used for either murky or colored liquids in cas