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Wikipedia

Liver

The liver is a major metabolic organ only found in vertebrate animals, which performs many essential biological functions such as detoxification of the organism, and the synthesis of proteins and biochemicals necessary for digestion and growth.[2][3][4] In humans, it is located in the right upper quadrant of the abdomen, below the diaphragm and mostly shielded by the lower right rib cage. Its other metabolic roles include carbohydrate metabolism, the production of hormones, conversion and storage of nutrients such as glucose and glycogen, and the decomposition of red blood cells.[4]

Liver
The human liver is located in the upper right abdomen
Location of human liver (in red) shown on a male body
Details
PrecursorForegut
SystemDigestive system
ArteryHepatic artery
VeinHepatic vein and hepatic portal vein
NerveCeliac ganglia and vagus nerve[1]
Identifiers
LatinJecur, iecur
GreekHepar (ἧπαρ)
root hepat- (ἡπατ-)
MeSHD008099
TA98A05.8.01.001
TA23023
FMA7197
Anatomical terminology
[edit on Wikidata]

The liver is also an accessory digestive organ that produces bile, an alkaline fluid containing cholesterol and bile acids, which emulsifies and aids the breakdown of dietary fat. The gallbladder, a small hollow pouch that sits just under the right lobe of liver, stores and concentrates the bile produced by the liver, which is later excreted to the duodenum to help with digestion.[5] The liver's highly specialized tissue, consisting mostly of hepatocytes, regulates a wide variety of high-volume biochemical reactions, including the synthesis and breakdown of small and complex organic molecules, many of which are necessary for normal vital functions.[6] Estimates regarding the organ's total number of functions vary, but is generally cited as being around 500.[7]

It is not known how to compensate for the absence of liver function in the long term, although liver dialysis techniques can be used in the short term. Artificial livers have not been developed to promote long-term replacement in the absence of the liver. As of 2018,[8] liver transplantation is the only option for complete liver failure.

Structure Edit

 
The liver, viewed from above, showing the left and right lobes separated by the falciform ligament

The liver is a dark reddish brown, wedge-shaped organ with two lobes of unequal size and shape. A human liver normally weighs approximately 1.5 kilograms (3.3 pounds)[9] and has a width of about 15 centimetres (6 inches).[10] There is considerable size variation between individuals, with the standard reference range for men being 970–1,860 grams (2.14–4.10 lb)[11] and for women 600–1,770 g (1.32–3.90 lb).[12] It is both the heaviest internal organ and the largest gland in the human body. It is located in the right upper quadrant of the abdominal cavity, resting just below the diaphragm, to the right of the stomach, and overlying the gallbladder.[5]

The liver is connected to two large blood vessels: the hepatic artery and the portal vein. The hepatic artery carries oxygen-rich blood from the aorta via the celiac trunk, whereas the portal vein carries blood rich in digested nutrients from the entire gastrointestinal tract and also from the spleen and pancreas.[8] These blood vessels subdivide into small capillaries known as liver sinusoids, which then lead to hepatic lobules.

Hepatic lobules are the functional units of the liver. Each lobule is made up of millions of hepatic cells (hepatocytes), which are the basic metabolic cells. The lobules are held together by a fine, dense, irregular, fibroelastic connective tissue layer extending from the fibrous capsule covering the entire liver known as Glisson's capsule after British doctor Francis Glisson.[4] This tissue extends into the structure of the liver by accompanying the blood vessels, ducts, and nerves at the hepatic hilum. The whole surface of the liver, except for the bare area, is covered in a serous coat derived from the peritoneum, and this firmly adheres to the inner Glisson's capsule.

Gross anatomy Edit

Terminology related to the liver often starts in hepat- from ἡπατο-, from the Greek word for liver.[13]

Lobes Edit

 
The liver, viewed from below, surface showing four lobes and the impressions

The liver is grossly divided into two parts when viewed from above – a right and a left lobe – and four parts when viewed from below (left, right, caudate, and quadrate lobes).[14]

The falciform ligament makes a superficial division of the liver into a left and right lobe. From below, the two additional lobes are located between the right and left lobes, one in front of the other. A line can be imagined running from the left of the vena cava and all the way forward to divide the liver and gallbladder into two halves.[15] This line is called Cantlie's line.[16]

Other anatomical landmarks include the ligamentum venosum and the round ligament of the liver, which further divide the left side of the liver in two sections. An important anatomical landmark, the porta hepatis, divides this left portion into four segments, which can be numbered starting at the caudate lobe as I in an anticlockwise manner. From this parietal view, seven segments can be seen, because the eighth segment is only visible in the visceral view.[17]

Surfaces Edit

On the diaphragmatic surface, apart from a triangular bare area where it connects to the diaphragm, the liver is covered by a thin, double-layered membrane, the peritoneum, that helps to reduce friction against other organs.[18] This surface covers the convex shape of the two lobes where it accommodates the shape of the diaphragm. The peritoneum folds back on itself to form the falciform ligament and the right and left triangular ligaments.[19]

These peritoneal ligaments are not related to the anatomic ligaments in joints, and the right and left triangular ligaments have no known functional importance, though they serve as surface landmarks.[19] The falciform ligament functions to attach the liver to the posterior portion of the anterior body wall.

The visceral surface or inferior surface is uneven and concave. It is covered in peritoneum apart from where it attaches the gallbladder and the porta hepatis.[18] The fossa of gallbladder lies to the right of the quadrate lobe, occupied by the gallbladder with its cystic duct close to the right end of porta hepatis.

Impressions Edit

 
Impressions of the liver

Several impressions on the surface of the liver accommodate the various adjacent structures and organs. Underneath the right lobe and to the right of the gallbladder fossa are two impressions, one behind the other and separated by a ridge. The one in front is a shallow colic impression, formed by the hepatic flexure and the one behind is a deeper renal impression accommodating part of the right kidney and part of the suprarenal gland.[20]

The suprarenal impression is a small, triangular, depressed area on the liver. It is located close to the right of the fossa, between the bare area and the caudate lobe, and immediately above the renal impression. The greater part of the suprarenal impression is devoid of peritoneum and it lodges the right suprarenal gland.[21]

Medial to the renal impression is a third and slightly marked impression, lying between it and the neck of the gall bladder. This is caused by the descending portion of the duodenum, and is known as the duodenal impression.[21]

The inferior surface of the left lobe of the liver presents behind and to the left of the gastric impression.[21] This is moulded over the upper front surface of the stomach, and to the right of this is a rounded eminence, the tuber omentale, which fits into the concavity of the lesser curvature of the stomach and lies in front of the anterior layer of the lesser omentum.

Microscopic anatomy Edit

 
Cells, ducts, and blood vessels

Microscopically, each liver lobe is seen to be made up of hepatic lobules. The lobules are roughly hexagonal, and consist of plates of hepatocytes, and sinusoids radiating from a central vein towards an imaginary perimeter of interlobular portal triads.[22] The central vein joins to the hepatic vein to carry blood out from the liver. A distinctive component of a lobule is the portal triad, which can be found running along each of the lobule's corners. The portal triad consists of the hepatic artery, the portal vein, and the common bile duct.[23] The triad may be seen on a liver ultrasound, as a Mickey Mouse sign with the portal vein as the head, and the hepatic artery, and the common bile duct as the ears.[24]

Histology, the study of microscopic anatomy, shows two major types of liver cell: parenchymal cells and nonparenchymal cells. About 70–85% of the liver volume is occupied by parenchymal hepatocytes. Nonparenchymal cells constitute 40% of the total number of liver cells but only 6.5% of its volume.[25] The liver sinusoids are lined with two types of cell, sinusoidal endothelial cells, and phagocytic Kupffer cells.[26] Hepatic stellate cells are nonparenchymal cells found in the perisinusoidal space, between a sinusoid and a hepatocyte.[25] Additionally, intrahepatic lymphocytes are often present in the sinusoidal lumen.[25]

Functional anatomy Edit

 
Hilum of the liver, circled in yellow

The central area or hepatic hilum, includes the opening known as the porta hepatis which carries the common bile duct and common hepatic artery, and the opening for the portal vein. The duct, vein, and artery divide into left and right branches, and the areas of the liver supplied by these branches constitute the functional left and right lobes. The functional lobes are separated by the imaginary plane, Cantlie's line, joining the gallbladder fossa to the inferior vena cava. The plane separates the liver into the true right and left lobes. The middle hepatic vein also demarcates the true right and left lobes. The right lobe is further divided into an anterior and posterior segment by the right hepatic vein. The left lobe is divided into the medial and lateral segments by the left hepatic vein.

The hilum of the liver is described in terms of three plates that contain the bile ducts and blood vessels. The contents of the whole plate system are surrounded by a sheath.[27] The three plates are the hilar plate, the cystic plate and the umbilical plate and the plate system is the site of the many anatomical variations to be found in the liver.[27]

Couinaud classification system Edit

 
Shape of human liver in animation, with eight Couinaud segments labelled

In the widely used Couinaud system, the functional lobes are further divided into a total of eight subsegments based on a transverse plane through the bifurcation of the main portal vein.[28] The caudate lobe is a separate structure that receives blood flow from both the right- and left-sided vascular branches.[29][30] The Couinaud classification divides the liver into eight functionally independent liver segments. Each segment has its own vascular inflow, outflow and biliary drainage. In the centre of each segment are branches of the portal vein, hepatic artery, and bile duct. In the periphery of each segment is vascular outflow through the hepatic veins.[31] The classification system uses the vascular supply in the liver to separate the functional units (numbered I to VIII) with unit 1, the caudate lobe, receiving its supply from both the right and the left branches of the portal vein. It contains one or more hepatic veins which drain directly into the inferior vena cava.[28] The remainder of the units (II to VIII) are numbered in a clockwise fashion:[31]

Gene and protein expression Edit

About 20,000 protein coding genes are expressed in human cells and 60% of these genes are expressed in a normal, adult liver.[32][33] Over 400 genes are more specifically expressed in the liver, with some 150 genes highly specific for liver tissue. A large fraction of the corresponding liver-specific proteins are mainly expressed in hepatocytes and secreted into the blood and constitute plasma proteins and hepatokines. Other liver-specific proteins are certain liver enzymes such as HAO1 and RDH16, proteins involved in bile synthesis such as BAAT and SLC27A5, and transporter proteins involved in the metabolism of drugs, such as ABCB11 and SLC2A2. Examples of highly liver-specific proteins include apolipoprotein A II, coagulation factors F2 and F9, complement factor related proteins, and the fibrinogen beta chain protein.[34]

Development Edit

 
CT scan showing an adult liver in the axial plane

Organogenesis, the development of the organs, takes place from the third to the eighth week during embryogenesis. The origins of the liver lie in both the ventral portion of the foregut endoderm (endoderm being one of the three embryonic germ layers) and the constituents of the adjacent septum transversum mesenchyme. In the human embryo, the hepatic diverticulum is the tube of endoderm that extends out from the foregut into the surrounding mesenchyme. The mesenchyme of septum transversum induces this endoderm to proliferate, to branch, and to form the glandular epithelium of the liver. A portion of the hepatic diverticulum (that region closest to the digestive tube) continues to function as the drainage duct of the liver, and a branch from this duct produces the gallbladder.[35] Besides signals from the septum transversum mesenchyme, fibroblast growth factor from the developing heart also contributes to hepatic competence, along with retinoic acid emanating from the lateral plate mesoderm. The hepatic endodermal cells undergo a morphological transition from columnar to pseudostratified resulting in thickening into the early liver bud. Their expansion forms a population of the bipotential hepatoblasts.[36] Hepatic stellate cells are derived from mesenchyme.[37]

After migration of hepatoblasts into the septum transversum mesenchyme, the hepatic architecture begins to be established, with liver sinusoids and bile canaliculi appearing. The liver bud separates into the lobes. The left umbilical vein becomes the ductus venosus and the right vitelline vein becomes the portal vein. The expanding liver bud is colonized by hematopoietic cells. The bipotential hepatoblasts begin differentiating into biliary epithelial cells and hepatocytes. The biliary epithelial cells differentiate from hepatoblasts around portal veins, first producing a monolayer, and then a bilayer of cuboidal cells. In ductal plate, focal dilations emerge at points in the bilayer, become surrounded by portal mesenchyme, and undergo tubulogenesis into intrahepatic bile ducts. Hepatoblasts not adjacent to portal veins instead differentiate into hepatocytes and arrange into cords lined by sinusoidal epithelial cells and bile canaliculi. Once hepatoblasts are specified into hepatocytes and undergo further expansion, they begin acquiring the functions of a mature hepatocyte, and eventually mature hepatocytes appear as highly polarized epithelial cells with abundant glycogen accumulation. In the adult liver, hepatocytes are not equivalent, with position along the portocentrovenular axis within a liver lobule dictating expression of metabolic genes involved in drug metabolism, carbohydrate metabolism, ammonia detoxification, and bile production and secretion. WNT/β-catenin has now been identified to be playing a key role in this phenomenon.[36]

 
Adult ultrasound showing the right lobe of the liver and right kidney

At birth, the liver comprises roughly 4% of body weight and weighs on average about 120 g (4 oz). Over the course of further development, it will increase to 1.4–1.6 kg (3.1–3.5 lb) but will only take up 2.5–3.5% of body weight.[38]

Hepatosomatic index (HSI) is the ratio of liver weight to body weight.[39]

Fetal blood supply Edit

In the growing fetus, a major source of blood to the liver is the umbilical vein, which supplies nutrients to the growing fetus. The umbilical vein enters the abdomen at the umbilicus and passes upward along the free margin of the falciform ligament of the liver to the inferior surface of the liver. There, it joins with the left branch of the portal vein. The ductus venosus carries blood from the left portal vein to the left hepatic vein and then to the inferior vena cava, allowing placental blood to bypass the liver. In the fetus, the liver does not perform the normal digestive processes and filtration of the infant liver because nutrients are received directly from the mother via the placenta. The fetal liver releases some blood stem cells that migrate to the fetal thymus, creating the T cells (or T lymphocytes). After birth, the formation of blood stem cells shifts to the red bone marrow. After 2–5 days, the umbilical vein and ductus venosus are obliterated; the former becomes the round ligament of liver and the latter becomes the ligamentum venosum. In the disorders of cirrhosis and portal hypertension, the umbilical vein can open up again.

Functions Edit

The various functions of the liver are carried out by the liver cells or hepatocytes. The liver is thought to be responsible for up to 500 separate functions, usually in combination with other systems and organs. Currently, no artificial organ or device is capable of reproducing all the functions of the liver. Some functions can be carried out by liver dialysis, an experimental treatment for liver failure. The liver also accounts for about 20% of resting total body oxygen consumption.

Blood supply Edit

The liver receives a dual blood supply from the hepatic portal vein and hepatic arteries. The hepatic portal vein delivers around 75% of the liver's blood supply and carries venous blood drained from the spleen, gastrointestinal tract, and its associated organs. The hepatic arteries supply arterial blood to the liver, accounting for the remaining quarter of its blood flow. Oxygen is provided from both sources; about half of the liver's oxygen demand is met by the hepatic portal vein, and half is met by the hepatic arteries.[40] The hepatic artery also has both alpha- and beta-adrenergic receptors; therefore, flow through the artery is controlled, in part, by the splanchnic nerves of the autonomic nervous system.

Blood flows through the liver sinusoids and empties into the central vein of each lobule. The central veins coalesce into hepatic veins, which leave the liver and drain into the inferior vena cava.[41]

Biliary flow Edit

 
Biliary tract

The biliary tract is derived from the branches of the bile ducts. The biliary tract, also known as the biliary tree, is the path by which bile is secreted by the liver then transported to the first part of the small intestine, the duodenum. The bile produced in the liver is collected in bile canaliculi, small grooves between the faces of adjacent hepatocytes. The canaliculi radiate to the edge of the liver lobule, where they merge to form bile ducts. Within the liver, these ducts are termed intrahepatic bile ducts, and once they exit the liver, they are considered extrahepatic. The intrahepatic ducts eventually drain into the right and left hepatic ducts, which exit the liver at the transverse fissure, and merge to form the common hepatic duct. The cystic duct from the gallbladder joins with the common hepatic duct to form the common bile duct.[41] The biliary system and connective tissue is supplied by the hepatic artery alone.

Bile either drains directly into the duodenum via the common bile duct, or is temporarily stored in the gallbladder via the cystic duct. The common bile duct and the pancreatic duct enter the second part of the duodenum together at the hepatopancreatic ampulla, also known as the ampulla of Vater.

Metabolism Edit

The liver plays a major role in carbohydrate, protein, amino acid, and lipid metabolism.

Carbohydrate metabolism Edit

The liver performs several roles in carbohydrate metabolism.

  • The liver synthesizes and stores around 100g of glycogen via glycogenesis, the formation of glycogen from glucose.
  • When needed, the liver releases glucose into the blood by performing glycogenolysis, the breakdown of glycogen into glucose.[42]
  • The liver is also responsible for gluconeogenesis, which is the synthesis of glucose from certain amino acids, lactate, or glycerol. Adipose and liver cells produce glycerol by breakdown of fat, which the liver uses for gluconeogenesis.[42]
  • Liver also does glyconeogenesis which is synthesis of glycogen from lactic acid.[43]

Protein metabolism Edit

The liver is responsible for the mainstay of protein metabolism, synthesis as well as degradation. All plasma proteins except Gamma-globulins are synthesised in the liver.[44] It is also responsible for a large part of amino acid synthesis. The liver plays a role in the production of clotting factors, as well as red blood cell production. Some of the proteins synthesized by the liver include coagulation factors I (fibrinogen), II (prothrombin), V, VII, VIII, IX, X, XI, XII, XIII, as well as protein C, protein S and antithrombin. The liver is a major site of production for thrombopoietin, a glycoprotein hormone that regulates the production of platelets by the bone marrow.[45]

Lipid metabolism Edit

The liver plays several roles in lipid metabolism: it performs cholesterol synthesis, lipogenesis, and the production of triglycerides, and a bulk of the body's lipoproteins are synthesized in the liver. The liver plays a key role in digestion, as it produces and excretes bile (a yellowish liquid) required for emulsifying fats and help the absorption of vitamin K from the diet. Some of the bile drains directly into the duodenum, and some is stored in the gallbladder. The liver produces insulin-like growth factor 1, a polypeptide protein hormone that plays an important role in childhood growth and continues to have anabolic effects in adults.

Breakdown Edit

The liver is responsible for the breakdown of insulin and other hormones. The liver breaks down bilirubin via glucuronidation, facilitating its excretion into bile. The liver is responsible for the breakdown and excretion of many waste products. It plays a key role in breaking down or modifying toxic substances (e.g., methylation) and most medicinal products in a process called drug metabolism. This sometimes results in toxication, when the metabolite is more toxic than its precursor. Preferably, the toxins are conjugated to avail excretion in bile or urine. The liver converts ammonia into urea as part of the ornithine cycle or the urea cycle, and the urea is excreted in the urine.[46]

Blood reservoir Edit

Because the liver is an expandable organ, large quantities of blood can be stored in its blood vessels. Its normal blood volume, including both that in the hepatic veins and that in the hepatic sinuses, is about 450 milliliters, or almost 10 percent of the body's total blood volume. When high pressure in the right atrium causes backpressure in the liver, the liver expands, and 0.5 to 1 liter of extra blood is occasionally stored in the hepatic veins and sinuses. This occurs especially in cardiac failure with peripheral congestion. Thus, in effect, the liver is a large, expandable, venous organ capable of acting as a valuable blood reservoir in times of excess blood volume and capable of supplying extra blood in times of diminished blood volume.[47]

Lymph production Edit

Because the pores in the hepatic sinusoids are very permeable and allow ready passage of both fluid and proteins into the perisinusoidal space, the lymph draining from the liver usually has a protein concentration of about 6 g/dl, which is only slightly less than the protein concentration of plasma. Also, the high permeability of the liver sinusoid epithelium allows large quantities of lymph to form. Therefore, about half of all the lymph formed in the body under resting conditions arises in the liver.

Other Edit

With aging Edit

The oxidative capacity of the liver decreases with aging, and therefore any medications that require oxidation (for instance, benzodiazepines) are more likely to accumulate to toxic levels. However, medications with shorter half-lives, such as lorazepam and oxazepam, are preferred in most cases when benzodiazepines are required in regard to geriatric medicine.

Clinical significance Edit

Disease Edit

 
Left lobe liver tumor

The liver is a vital organ and supports almost every other organ in the body. Because of its strategic location and multidimensional functions, the liver is prone to many diseases.[52] The bare area of the liver is a site that is vulnerable to the passing of infection from the abdominal cavity to the thoracic cavity. Liver diseases may be diagnosed by liver function tests–blood tests that can identify various markers. For example, acute-phase reactants are produced by the liver in response to injury or inflammation.

The most common chronic liver disease is nonalcoholic fatty liver disease, which affects an estimated one-third of the world population.[53]

Hepatitis is a common condition of inflammation of the liver. The most usual cause of this is viral, and the most common of these infections are hepatitis A, B, C, D, and E. Some of these infections are sexually transmitted. Inflammation can also be caused by other viruses in the family Herpesviridae such as the herpes simplex virus. Chronic (rather than acute) infection with hepatitis B virus or hepatitis C virus is the main cause of liver cancer.[54] Globally, about 248 million individuals are chronically infected with hepatitis B (with 843,724 in the U.S.),[55] and 142 million are chronically infected with hepatitis C[56] (with 2.7 million in the U.S.).[57] Globally there are about 114 million and 20 million cases of hepatitis A[56] and hepatitis E[58] respectively, but these generally resolve and do not become chronic. Hepatitis D virus is a "satellite" of hepatitis B virus (it can only infect in the presence of hepatitis B), and co-infects nearly 20 million people with hepatitis B, globally.[59]

Hepatic encephalopathy is caused by an accumulation of toxins in the bloodstream that are normally removed by the liver. This condition can result in coma and can prove fatal. Budd–Chiari syndrome is a condition caused by blockage of the hepatic veins (including thrombosis) that drain the liver. It presents with the classical triad of abdominal pain, ascites and liver enlargement.[60] Many diseases of the liver are accompanied by jaundice caused by increased levels of bilirubin in the system. The bilirubin results from the breakup of the hemoglobin of dead red blood cells; normally, the liver removes bilirubin from the blood and excretes it through bile.

Other disorders caused by excessive alcohol consumption are grouped under alcoholic liver diseases and these include alcoholic hepatitis, fatty liver, and cirrhosis. Factors contributing to the development of alcoholic liver diseases are not only the quantity and frequency of alcohol consumption, but can also include gender, genetics, and liver insult. Liver damage can also be caused by drugs, particularly paracetamol and drugs used to treat cancer. A rupture of the liver can be caused by a liver shot used in combat sports.

Primary biliary cholangitis is an autoimmune disease of the liver.[61][62] It is marked by slow progressive destruction of the small bile ducts of the liver, with the intralobular ducts (Canals of Hering) affected early in the disease.[63] When these ducts are damaged, bile and other toxins build up in the liver (cholestasis) and over time damages the liver tissue in combination with ongoing immune related damage. This can lead to scarring (fibrosis) and cirrhosis. Cirrhosis increases the resistance to blood flow in the liver, and can result in portal hypertension. Congested anastomoses between the portal venous system and the systemic circulation, can be a subsequent condition.

There are also many pediatric liver diseases, including biliary atresia, alpha-1 antitrypsin deficiency, alagille syndrome, progressive familial intrahepatic cholestasis, Langerhans cell histiocytosis and hepatic hemangioma a benign tumour the most common type of liver tumour, thought to be congenital. A genetic disorder causing multiple cysts to form in the liver tissue, usually in later life, and usually asymptomatic, is polycystic liver disease. Diseases that interfere with liver function will lead to derangement of these processes. However, the liver has a great capacity to regenerate and has a large reserve capacity. In most cases, the liver only produces symptoms after extensive damage.

Hepatomegaly refers to an enlarged liver and can be due to many causes. It can be palpated in a liver span measurement.

Symptoms Edit

The classic symptoms of liver damage include the following:

  • Pale stools occur when stercobilin, a brown pigment, is absent from the stool. Stercobilin is derived from bilirubin metabolites produced in the liver.
  • Dark urine occurs when bilirubin mixes with urine
  • Jaundice (yellow skin and/or whites of the eyes) This is where bilirubin deposits in skin, causing an intense itch. Itching is the most common complaint by people who have liver failure. Often this itch cannot be relieved by drugs.
  • Swelling of the abdomen, and swelling of the ankles and feet occurs because the liver fails to make albumin.
  • Excessive fatigue occurs from a generalized loss of nutrients, minerals and vitamins.
  • Bruising and easy bleeding are other features of liver disease. The liver makes clotting factors, substances which help prevent bleeding. When liver damage occurs, these factors are no longer present and severe bleeding can occur.[64]
  • Pain in the upper right quadrant can result from the stretching of Glisson's capsule in conditions of hepatitis and pre-eclampsia.

Diagnosis Edit

The diagnosis of liver disease is made by liver function tests, groups of blood tests, that can readily show the extent of liver damage. If infection is suspected, then other serological tests will be carried out. A physical examination of the liver can only reveal its size and any tenderness, and some form of imaging such as an ultrasound or CT scan may also be needed.

Sometimes a liver biopsy will be necessary, and a tissue sample is taken through a needle inserted into the skin just below the rib cage. This procedure may be helped by a sonographer providing ultrasound guidance to an interventional radiologist.[65]

Liver regeneration Edit

The liver is the only human internal organ capable of natural regeneration of lost tissue; as little as 25% of a liver can regenerate into a whole liver.[67] This is, however, not true regeneration but rather compensatory growth in mammals.[68] The lobes that are removed do not regrow and the growth of the liver is a restoration of function, not original form. This contrasts with true regeneration where both original function and form are restored. In some other species, such as zebrafish, the liver undergoes true regeneration by restoring both shape and size of the organ.[69] In the liver, large areas of the tissues are formed but for the formation of new cells there must be sufficient amount of material so the circulation of the blood becomes more active.[70]

This is predominantly due to the hepatocytes re-entering the cell cycle. That is, the hepatocytes go from the quiescent G0 phase to the G1 phase and undergo mitosis. This process is activated by the p75 receptors.[71] There is also some evidence of bipotential stem cells, called hepatic oval cells or ovalocytes (not to be confused with oval red blood cells of ovalocytosis), which are thought to reside in the canals of Hering. These cells can differentiate into either hepatocytes or cholangiocytes. Cholangiocytes are the epithelial lining cells of the bile ducts.[72] They are cuboidal epithelium in the small interlobular bile ducts, but become columnar and mucus secreting in larger bile ducts approaching the porta hepatis and the extrahepatic ducts. Research is being carried out on the use of stem cells for the generation of an artificial liver.

Scientific and medical works about liver regeneration often refer to the Greek Titan Prometheus who was chained to a rock in the Caucasus where, each day, his liver was devoured by an eagle, only to grow back each night. The myth suggests the ancient Greeks may have known about the liver's remarkable capacity for self-repair.[73]

Liver transplantation Edit

Human liver transplants were first performed by Thomas Starzl in the United States and Roy Calne in Cambridge, England in 1963 and 1967, respectively.

 
After resection of left lobe liver tumor

Liver transplantation is the only option for those with irreversible liver failure. Most transplants are done for chronic liver diseases leading to cirrhosis, such as chronic hepatitis C, alcoholism, and autoimmune hepatitis. Less commonly, liver transplantation is done for fulminant hepatic failure, in which liver failure occurs rapidly over a period of days or weeks.

Liver allografts for transplant usually come from donors who have died from fatal brain injury. Living donor liver transplantation is a technique in which a portion of a living person's liver is removed (hepatectomy) and used to replace the entire liver of the recipient. This was first performed in 1989 for pediatric liver transplantation. Only 20 percent of an adult's liver (Couinaud segments 2 and 3) is needed to serve as a liver allograft for an infant or small child.

More recently,[when?] adult-to-adult liver transplantation has been done using the donor's right hepatic lobe, which amounts to 60 percent of the liver. Due to the ability of the liver to regenerate, both the donor and recipient end up with normal liver function if all goes well. This procedure is more controversial, as it entails performing a much larger operation on the donor, and indeed there were at least two donor deaths out of the first several hundred cases. A 2006 publication addressed the problem of donor mortality and found at least fourteen cases.[74] The risk of postoperative complications (and death) is far greater in right-sided operations than that in left-sided operations.

With the recent advances of noninvasive imaging, living liver donors usually have to undergo imaging examinations for liver anatomy to decide if the anatomy is feasible for donation. The evaluation is usually performed by multidetector row computed tomography (MDCT) and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). MDCT is good in vascular anatomy and volumetry. MRI is used for biliary tree anatomy. Donors with very unusual vascular anatomy, which makes them unsuitable for donation, could be screened out to avoid unnecessary operations.

Society and culture Edit

Some cultures regard the liver as the seat of the soul.[75] In Greek mythology, the gods punished Prometheus for revealing fire to humans by chaining him to a rock where a vulture (or an eagle) would peck out his liver, which would regenerate overnight (the liver is the only human internal organ that actually can regenerate itself to a significant extent). Many ancient peoples of the Near East and Mediterranean areas practiced a type of divination called haruspicy or hepatomancy, where they tried to obtain information by examining the livers of sheep and other animals.

In Plato, and in later physiology, the liver was thought to be the seat of the darkest emotions (specifically wrath, jealousy and greed) which drive men to action.[76] The Talmud (tractate Berakhot 61b) refers to the liver as the seat of anger, with the gallbladder counteracting this. The Persian, Urdu, and Hindi languages (جگر or जिगर or jigar) refer to the liver in figurative speech to indicate courage and strong feelings, or "their best"; e.g., "This Mecca has thrown to you the pieces of its liver!".[77] The term jan e jigar, literally "the strength (power) of my liver", is a term of endearment in Urdu. In Persian slang, jigar is used as an adjective for any object which is desirable, especially women. In the Zulu language, the word for liver (isibindi) is the same as the word for courage. In English the term 'lily-livered' is used to indicate cowardice from the medieval belief that the liver was the seat of courage. Spanish hígados also means "courage".[78] However the secondary meaning of Basque gibel is "indolence".[79]

In biblical Hebrew, the word for liver, כבד (Kauved, stemmed KBD or KVD, similar to Arabic الكبد), also means heavy and is used to describe the rich ("heavy" with possessions) and honor (presumably for the same reason). In the Book of Lamentations (2:11) it is used to describe the physiological responses to sadness by "my liver spilled to earth" along with the flow of tears and the overturning in bitterness of the intestines.[80] On several occasions in the book of Psalms (most notably 16:9), the word is used to describe happiness in the liver, along with the heart (which beats rapidly) and the flesh (which appears red under the skin). Further usage as the self (similar to "your honor") is widely available throughout the old testament, sometimes compared to the breathing soul (Genesis 49:6, Psalms 7:6, etc.). An honorable hat was also referred to with this word (Job 19:9, etc.) and under that definition appears many times along with פאר Pe'er - grandeur.[81]

These four meanings were used in preceding ancient Afro-Asiatic languages such as Akkadian and Ancient Egyptian preserved in classical Ethiopic Ge'ez language.[82]

Food Edit

 
Maksalaatikko, a Finnish liver casserole

Humans commonly eat the livers of mammals, fowl, and fish as food. Domestic pig, ox, lamb, calf, chicken, and goose livers are widely available from butchers and supermarkets. In the Romance languages, the anatomical word for "liver" (French foie, Spanish hígado, etc.) derives not from the Latin anatomical term, jecur, but from the culinary term ficatum, literally "stuffed with figs," referring to the livers of geese that had been fattened on figs.[83] Animal livers are rich in iron, vitamin A and vitamin B12; and cod liver oil is commonly used as a dietary supplement.

Liver can be baked, boiled, broiled, fried, stir-fried, or eaten raw (asbeh nayeh or sawda naye in Lebanese cuisine, or liver sashimi in Japanese cuisine). In many preparations, pieces of liver are combined with pieces of meat or kidneys, as in the various forms of Middle Eastern mixed grill (e.g. meurav Yerushalmi). Well-known examples include liver pâté, foie gras, chopped liver, and leverpastej. Liver sausages, such as Braunschweiger and liverwurst, are also a valued meal. Liver sausages may also be used as spreads. A traditional South African delicacy, skilpadjies, is made of minced lamb's liver wrapped in netvet (caul fat), and grilled over an open fire. Traditionally, some fish livers were valued as food, especially the stingray liver. It was used to prepare delicacies, such as poached skate liver on toast in England, as well as the beignets de foie de raie and foie de raie en croute in French cuisine.[84]

Giraffe liver Edit

 
19th-century drinking scene in Kordofan, home to the Humr tribe, who made a drink from giraffe liver. Plate from Le Désert et le Soudan by Stanislas d'Escayrac de Lauture.

The Humr are one of the tribes in the Baggara ethnic group, native to southwestern Kordofan in Sudan who speak Shuwa (Chadian Arabic), make a non-alcoholic drink from the liver and bone marrow of the giraffe, which they call umm nyolokh. They claim it is intoxicating (Arabic سكران sakran), causing dreams and even waking hallucinations.[85] Anthropologist Ian Cunnison accompanied the Humr on one of their giraffe-hunting expeditions in the late 1950s, and noted that:

It is said that a person, once he has drunk umm nyolokh, will return to giraffe again and again. Humr, being Mahdists, are strict abstainers [from alcohol] and a Humrawi is never drunk (sakran) on liquor or beer. But he uses this word to describe the effects which umm nyolokh has upon him.[86]

Cunnison's remarkable account of an apparently psychoactive mammal found its way from a somewhat obscure scientific paper into more mainstream literature through a conversation between W. James of the Institute of Social and Cultural Anthropology at the University of Oxford and specialist on the use of hallucinogens and intoxicants in society, and R. Rudgley, who discussed it in a book on psychoactive drugs for general readers.[85] He speculated that a hallucinogenic compound N,N-Dimethyltryptamine in the giraffe liver might account for the intoxicating properties claimed for umm nyolokh.[85]

Cunnison, on the other hand, writing in 1958 found it hard to believe in the literal truth of the Humr's assertion that the drink was intoxicating:

I can only assume that there is no intoxicating substance in the drink, and that the effect it produces is simply a matter of convention, although it may be brought about subconsciously.[86]

The study of entheogens in general – including entheogens of animal origin (e.g. hallucinogenic fish and toad venom) – has, however, made considerable progress in the sixty-odd years since Cunnison's report; the idea that some intoxicating substance might reside in giraffe livers may no longer be as far-fetched as it seemed to Cunnison. However, to date, proof (or disproof) still waits on detailed analyses of the organ and the beverage made from it.[85]

Arrow/bullet poison Edit

Certain Tungusic peoples of northeast Asia formerly prepared a type of arrow poison from rotting animal livers, which was, in later times, also applied to bullets. Russian anthropologist S. M. Shirokogoroff wrote that:

Formerly the using of poisoned arrows was common. For instance, among the Kumarčen, [a subgroup of the Oroqen] even in recent times, a poison was used which was prepared from decaying liver.
[Note] This has been confirmed by the Kumarčen. I am not competent to judge as to the chemical conditions of production of poison which is not destroyed by the heat of explosion. However, the Tungus themselves compare this method [of poisoning ammunition] with the poisoning of arrows.[87]

Other animals Edit

 
Sheep's liver

The liver is found in all vertebrates and is typically the largest internal organ. The internal structure of the liver is broadly similar in all vertebrates, though its form varies considerably in different species, and is largely determined by the shape and arrangement of the surrounding organs. Nonetheless, in most species it is divided into right and left lobes; exceptions to this general rule include snakes, where the shape of the body necessitates a simple cigar-like form.[88]

An organ sometimes referred to as a liver is found associated with the digestive tract of the primitive chordate Amphioxus. Although it performs many functions of a liver, it is not considered a "true" liver but rather a homolog of the vertebrate liver.[89][90][91] The amphioxus hepatic caecum produces the liver-specific proteins vitellogenin, antithrombin, plasminogen, alanine aminotransferase, and insulin/Insulin-like growth factor.[92]

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  91. ^ Escriva, Hector; Chao, Yeqing; Fan, Chunxin; Liang, Yujun; Gao, Bei; Zhang, Shicui (2012). "A novel serpin with antithrombin-like activity in Branchiostoma japonicum: Implications for the presence of a primitive coagulation system". PLOS ONE. 7 (3): e32392. Bibcode:2012PLoSO...732392C. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0032392. PMC 3299649. PMID 22427833.
  92. ^ Guo, Bin; Zhang, Shicui; Wang, Shaohui; Liang, Yujun (2009). "Expression, mitogenic activity and regulation by growth hormone of growth hormone / insulin-like growth factor in Branchiostoma belcheri". Cell and Tissue Research. 338 (1): 67–77. doi:10.1007/s00441-009-0824-8. PMID 19657677. S2CID 21261162 – via researchgate.net.

Works cited Edit

  • Dorland's illustrated medical dictionary (32nd ed.). Philadelphia, PA: Elsevier / Saunders. 2012. ISBN 978-1-4557-0985-4.
  • Young, Barbara; O'Dowd, Geraldine; Woodford, Phillip (4 November 2013). Wheater's Functional Histology: A text and colour atlas (6th ed.). Philadelphia, PA: Elsevier. ISBN 9780702047473.

External links Edit

  • Liver at the Human Protein Atlas
  • VIRTUAL Liver – online learning resource
  • Liver enzymes
  • "Liver" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 16 (11th ed.). 1911. pp. 801–803. with several diagrams.
  • Beaver tail liver

liver, this, article, about, organ, other, uses, disambiguation, liver, major, metabolic, organ, only, found, vertebrate, animals, which, performs, many, essential, biological, functions, such, detoxification, organism, synthesis, proteins, biochemicals, neces. This article is about the organ For other uses see Liver disambiguation The liver is a major metabolic organ only found in vertebrate animals which performs many essential biological functions such as detoxification of the organism and the synthesis of proteins and biochemicals necessary for digestion and growth 2 3 4 In humans it is located in the right upper quadrant of the abdomen below the diaphragm and mostly shielded by the lower right rib cage Its other metabolic roles include carbohydrate metabolism the production of hormones conversion and storage of nutrients such as glucose and glycogen and the decomposition of red blood cells 4 LiverThe human liver is located in the upper right abdomenLocation of human liver in red shown on a male bodyDetailsPrecursorForegutSystemDigestive systemArteryHepatic arteryVeinHepatic vein and hepatic portal veinNerveCeliac ganglia and vagus nerve 1 IdentifiersLatinJecur iecurGreekHepar ἧpar root hepat ἡpat MeSHD008099TA98A05 8 01 001TA23023FMA7197Anatomical terminology edit on Wikidata The liver is also an accessory digestive organ that produces bile an alkaline fluid containing cholesterol and bile acids which emulsifies and aids the breakdown of dietary fat The gallbladder a small hollow pouch that sits just under the right lobe of liver stores and concentrates the bile produced by the liver which is later excreted to the duodenum to help with digestion 5 The liver s highly specialized tissue consisting mostly of hepatocytes regulates a wide variety of high volume biochemical reactions including the synthesis and breakdown of small and complex organic molecules many of which are necessary for normal vital functions 6 Estimates regarding the organ s total number of functions vary but is generally cited as being around 500 7 It is not known how to compensate for the absence of liver function in the long term although liver dialysis techniques can be used in the short term Artificial livers have not been developed to promote long term replacement in the absence of the liver As of 2018 update 8 liver transplantation is the only option for complete liver failure Contents 1 Structure 1 1 Gross anatomy 1 1 1 Lobes 1 1 2 Surfaces 1 1 3 Impressions 1 2 Microscopic anatomy 1 3 Functional anatomy 1 4 Couinaud classification system 1 5 Gene and protein expression 2 Development 2 1 Fetal blood supply 3 Functions 3 1 Blood supply 3 2 Biliary flow 3 3 Metabolism 3 3 1 Carbohydrate metabolism 3 3 2 Protein metabolism 3 3 3 Lipid metabolism 3 4 Breakdown 3 5 Blood reservoir 3 6 Lymph production 3 7 Other 3 8 With aging 4 Clinical significance 4 1 Disease 4 2 Symptoms 4 3 Diagnosis 4 4 Liver regeneration 4 5 Liver transplantation 5 Society and culture 5 1 Food 5 2 Giraffe liver 5 3 Arrow bullet poison 6 Other animals 7 See also 8 References 8 1 Works cited 9 External linksStructure Edit nbsp The liver viewed from above showing the left and right lobes separated by the falciform ligamentThe liver is a dark reddish brown wedge shaped organ with two lobes of unequal size and shape A human liver normally weighs approximately 1 5 kilograms 3 3 pounds 9 and has a width of about 15 centimetres 6 inches 10 There is considerable size variation between individuals with the standard reference range for men being 970 1 860 grams 2 14 4 10 lb 11 and for women 600 1 770 g 1 32 3 90 lb 12 It is both the heaviest internal organ and the largest gland in the human body It is located in the right upper quadrant of the abdominal cavity resting just below the diaphragm to the right of the stomach and overlying the gallbladder 5 The liver is connected to two large blood vessels the hepatic artery and the portal vein The hepatic artery carries oxygen rich blood from the aorta via the celiac trunk whereas the portal vein carries blood rich in digested nutrients from the entire gastrointestinal tract and also from the spleen and pancreas 8 These blood vessels subdivide into small capillaries known as liver sinusoids which then lead to hepatic lobules Hepatic lobules are the functional units of the liver Each lobule is made up of millions of hepatic cells hepatocytes which are the basic metabolic cells The lobules are held together by a fine dense irregular fibroelastic connective tissue layer extending from the fibrous capsule covering the entire liver known as Glisson s capsule after British doctor Francis Glisson 4 This tissue extends into the structure of the liver by accompanying the blood vessels ducts and nerves at the hepatic hilum The whole surface of the liver except for the bare area is covered in a serous coat derived from the peritoneum and this firmly adheres to the inner Glisson s capsule Gross anatomy Edit Terminology related to the liver often starts in hepat from ἡpato from the Greek word for liver 13 Lobes Edit Further information Lobes of liver nbsp The liver viewed from below surface showing four lobes and the impressionsThe liver is grossly divided into two parts when viewed from above a right and a left lobe and four parts when viewed from below left right caudate and quadrate lobes 14 The falciform ligament makes a superficial division of the liver into a left and right lobe From below the two additional lobes are located between the right and left lobes one in front of the other A line can be imagined running from the left of the vena cava and all the way forward to divide the liver and gallbladder into two halves 15 This line is called Cantlie s line 16 Other anatomical landmarks include the ligamentum venosum and the round ligament of the liver which further divide the left side of the liver in two sections An important anatomical landmark the porta hepatis divides this left portion into four segments which can be numbered starting at the caudate lobe as I in an anticlockwise manner From this parietal view seven segments can be seen because the eighth segment is only visible in the visceral view 17 Surfaces Edit On the diaphragmatic surface apart from a triangular bare area where it connects to the diaphragm the liver is covered by a thin double layered membrane the peritoneum that helps to reduce friction against other organs 18 This surface covers the convex shape of the two lobes where it accommodates the shape of the diaphragm The peritoneum folds back on itself to form the falciform ligament and the right and left triangular ligaments 19 These peritoneal ligaments are not related to the anatomic ligaments in joints and the right and left triangular ligaments have no known functional importance though they serve as surface landmarks 19 The falciform ligament functions to attach the liver to the posterior portion of the anterior body wall The visceral surface or inferior surface is uneven and concave It is covered in peritoneum apart from where it attaches the gallbladder and the porta hepatis 18 The fossa of gallbladder lies to the right of the quadrate lobe occupied by the gallbladder with its cystic duct close to the right end of porta hepatis Impressions Edit nbsp Impressions of the liverSeveral impressions on the surface of the liver accommodate the various adjacent structures and organs Underneath the right lobe and to the right of the gallbladder fossa are two impressions one behind the other and separated by a ridge The one in front is a shallow colic impression formed by the hepatic flexure and the one behind is a deeper renal impression accommodating part of the right kidney and part of the suprarenal gland 20 The suprarenal impression is a small triangular depressed area on the liver It is located close to the right of the fossa between the bare area and the caudate lobe and immediately above the renal impression The greater part of the suprarenal impression is devoid of peritoneum and it lodges the right suprarenal gland 21 Medial to the renal impression is a third and slightly marked impression lying between it and the neck of the gall bladder This is caused by the descending portion of the duodenum and is known as the duodenal impression 21 The inferior surface of the left lobe of the liver presents behind and to the left of the gastric impression 21 This is moulded over the upper front surface of the stomach and to the right of this is a rounded eminence the tuber omentale which fits into the concavity of the lesser curvature of the stomach and lies in front of the anterior layer of the lesser omentum Microscopic anatomy Edit nbsp Cells ducts and blood vesselsMicroscopically each liver lobe is seen to be made up of hepatic lobules The lobules are roughly hexagonal and consist of plates of hepatocytes and sinusoids radiating from a central vein towards an imaginary perimeter of interlobular portal triads 22 The central vein joins to the hepatic vein to carry blood out from the liver A distinctive component of a lobule is the portal triad which can be found running along each of the lobule s corners The portal triad consists of the hepatic artery the portal vein and the common bile duct 23 The triad may be seen on a liver ultrasound as a Mickey Mouse sign with the portal vein as the head and the hepatic artery and the common bile duct as the ears 24 Histology the study of microscopic anatomy shows two major types of liver cell parenchymal cells and nonparenchymal cells About 70 85 of the liver volume is occupied by parenchymal hepatocytes Nonparenchymal cells constitute 40 of the total number of liver cells but only 6 5 of its volume 25 The liver sinusoids are lined with two types of cell sinusoidal endothelial cells and phagocytic Kupffer cells 26 Hepatic stellate cells are nonparenchymal cells found in the perisinusoidal space between a sinusoid and a hepatocyte 25 Additionally intrahepatic lymphocytes are often present in the sinusoidal lumen 25 nbsp Microscopic anatomy of the liver nbsp Types of capillaries sinusoid on right nbsp 3D Medical Animation Still Shot Depicting parts of liverFunctional anatomy Edit nbsp Hilum of the liver circled in yellowThe central area or hepatic hilum includes the opening known as the porta hepatis which carries the common bile duct and common hepatic artery and the opening for the portal vein The duct vein and artery divide into left and right branches and the areas of the liver supplied by these branches constitute the functional left and right lobes The functional lobes are separated by the imaginary plane Cantlie s line joining the gallbladder fossa to the inferior vena cava The plane separates the liver into the true right and left lobes The middle hepatic vein also demarcates the true right and left lobes The right lobe is further divided into an anterior and posterior segment by the right hepatic vein The left lobe is divided into the medial and lateral segments by the left hepatic vein The hilum of the liver is described in terms of three plates that contain the bile ducts and blood vessels The contents of the whole plate system are surrounded by a sheath 27 The three plates are the hilar plate the cystic plate and the umbilical plate and the plate system is the site of the many anatomical variations to be found in the liver 27 Couinaud classification system Edit Main article Liver segment nbsp Shape of human liver in animation with eight Couinaud segments labelledIn the widely used Couinaud system the functional lobes are further divided into a total of eight subsegments based on a transverse plane through the bifurcation of the main portal vein 28 The caudate lobe is a separate structure that receives blood flow from both the right and left sided vascular branches 29 30 The Couinaud classification divides the liver into eight functionally independent liver segments Each segment has its own vascular inflow outflow and biliary drainage In the centre of each segment are branches of the portal vein hepatic artery and bile duct In the periphery of each segment is vascular outflow through the hepatic veins 31 The classification system uses the vascular supply in the liver to separate the functional units numbered I to VIII with unit 1 the caudate lobe receiving its supply from both the right and the left branches of the portal vein It contains one or more hepatic veins which drain directly into the inferior vena cava 28 The remainder of the units II to VIII are numbered in a clockwise fashion 31 Gene and protein expression Edit Further information Bioinformatics Gene and protein expression About 20 000 protein coding genes are expressed in human cells and 60 of these genes are expressed in a normal adult liver 32 33 Over 400 genes are more specifically expressed in the liver with some 150 genes highly specific for liver tissue A large fraction of the corresponding liver specific proteins are mainly expressed in hepatocytes and secreted into the blood and constitute plasma proteins and hepatokines Other liver specific proteins are certain liver enzymes such as HAO1 and RDH16 proteins involved in bile synthesis such as BAAT and SLC27A5 and transporter proteins involved in the metabolism of drugs such as ABCB11 and SLC2A2 Examples of highly liver specific proteins include apolipoprotein A II coagulation factors F2 and F9 complement factor related proteins and the fibrinogen beta chain protein 34 Development Edit nbsp CT scan showing an adult liver in the axial planeOrganogenesis the development of the organs takes place from the third to the eighth week during embryogenesis The origins of the liver lie in both the ventral portion of the foregut endoderm endoderm being one of the three embryonic germ layers and the constituents of the adjacent septum transversum mesenchyme In the human embryo the hepatic diverticulum is the tube of endoderm that extends out from the foregut into the surrounding mesenchyme The mesenchyme of septum transversum induces this endoderm to proliferate to branch and to form the glandular epithelium of the liver A portion of the hepatic diverticulum that region closest to the digestive tube continues to function as the drainage duct of the liver and a branch from this duct produces the gallbladder 35 Besides signals from the septum transversum mesenchyme fibroblast growth factor from the developing heart also contributes to hepatic competence along with retinoic acid emanating from the lateral plate mesoderm The hepatic endodermal cells undergo a morphological transition from columnar to pseudostratified resulting in thickening into the early liver bud Their expansion forms a population of the bipotential hepatoblasts 36 Hepatic stellate cells are derived from mesenchyme 37 After migration of hepatoblasts into the septum transversum mesenchyme the hepatic architecture begins to be established with liver sinusoids and bile canaliculi appearing The liver bud separates into the lobes The left umbilical vein becomes the ductus venosus and the right vitelline vein becomes the portal vein The expanding liver bud is colonized by hematopoietic cells The bipotential hepatoblasts begin differentiating into biliary epithelial cells and hepatocytes The biliary epithelial cells differentiate from hepatoblasts around portal veins first producing a monolayer and then a bilayer of cuboidal cells In ductal plate focal dilations emerge at points in the bilayer become surrounded by portal mesenchyme and undergo tubulogenesis into intrahepatic bile ducts Hepatoblasts not adjacent to portal veins instead differentiate into hepatocytes and arrange into cords lined by sinusoidal epithelial cells and bile canaliculi Once hepatoblasts are specified into hepatocytes and undergo further expansion they begin acquiring the functions of a mature hepatocyte and eventually mature hepatocytes appear as highly polarized epithelial cells with abundant glycogen accumulation In the adult liver hepatocytes are not equivalent with position along the portocentrovenular axis within a liver lobule dictating expression of metabolic genes involved in drug metabolism carbohydrate metabolism ammonia detoxification and bile production and secretion WNT b catenin has now been identified to be playing a key role in this phenomenon 36 nbsp Adult ultrasound showing the right lobe of the liver and right kidneyAt birth the liver comprises roughly 4 of body weight and weighs on average about 120 g 4 oz Over the course of further development it will increase to 1 4 1 6 kg 3 1 3 5 lb but will only take up 2 5 3 5 of body weight 38 Hepatosomatic index HSI is the ratio of liver weight to body weight 39 Fetal blood supply Edit In the growing fetus a major source of blood to the liver is the umbilical vein which supplies nutrients to the growing fetus The umbilical vein enters the abdomen at the umbilicus and passes upward along the free margin of the falciform ligament of the liver to the inferior surface of the liver There it joins with the left branch of the portal vein The ductus venosus carries blood from the left portal vein to the left hepatic vein and then to the inferior vena cava allowing placental blood to bypass the liver In the fetus the liver does not perform the normal digestive processes and filtration of the infant liver because nutrients are received directly from the mother via the placenta The fetal liver releases some blood stem cells that migrate to the fetal thymus creating the T cells or T lymphocytes After birth the formation of blood stem cells shifts to the red bone marrow After 2 5 days the umbilical vein and ductus venosus are obliterated the former becomes the round ligament of liver and the latter becomes the ligamentum venosum In the disorders of cirrhosis and portal hypertension the umbilical vein can open up again Functions EditThe various functions of the liver are carried out by the liver cells or hepatocytes The liver is thought to be responsible for up to 500 separate functions usually in combination with other systems and organs Currently no artificial organ or device is capable of reproducing all the functions of the liver Some functions can be carried out by liver dialysis an experimental treatment for liver failure The liver also accounts for about 20 of resting total body oxygen consumption Blood supply Edit The liver receives a dual blood supply from the hepatic portal vein and hepatic arteries The hepatic portal vein delivers around 75 of the liver s blood supply and carries venous blood drained from the spleen gastrointestinal tract and its associated organs The hepatic arteries supply arterial blood to the liver accounting for the remaining quarter of its blood flow Oxygen is provided from both sources about half of the liver s oxygen demand is met by the hepatic portal vein and half is met by the hepatic arteries 40 The hepatic artery also has both alpha and beta adrenergic receptors therefore flow through the artery is controlled in part by the splanchnic nerves of the autonomic nervous system Blood flows through the liver sinusoids and empties into the central vein of each lobule The central veins coalesce into hepatic veins which leave the liver and drain into the inferior vena cava 41 nbsp The liver and its veins nbsp Diagram of liver lobule and portal tract and their inter relations Biliary flow Edit Main article Enterohepatic circulation nbsp Biliary tractThe biliary tract is derived from the branches of the bile ducts The biliary tract also known as the biliary tree is the path by which bile is secreted by the liver then transported to the first part of the small intestine the duodenum The bile produced in the liver is collected in bile canaliculi small grooves between the faces of adjacent hepatocytes The canaliculi radiate to the edge of the liver lobule where they merge to form bile ducts Within the liver these ducts are termed intrahepatic bile ducts and once they exit the liver they are considered extrahepatic The intrahepatic ducts eventually drain into the right and left hepatic ducts which exit the liver at the transverse fissure and merge to form the common hepatic duct The cystic duct from the gallbladder joins with the common hepatic duct to form the common bile duct 41 The biliary system and connective tissue is supplied by the hepatic artery alone Bile either drains directly into the duodenum via the common bile duct or is temporarily stored in the gallbladder via the cystic duct The common bile duct and the pancreatic duct enter the second part of the duodenum together at the hepatopancreatic ampulla also known as the ampulla of Vater Metabolism Edit Further information Proteins produced and secreted by the liver The liver plays a major role in carbohydrate protein amino acid and lipid metabolism Carbohydrate metabolism Edit The liver performs several roles in carbohydrate metabolism The liver synthesizes and stores around 100g of glycogen via glycogenesis the formation of glycogen from glucose When needed the liver releases glucose into the blood by performing glycogenolysis the breakdown of glycogen into glucose 42 The liver is also responsible for gluconeogenesis which is the synthesis of glucose from certain amino acids lactate or glycerol Adipose and liver cells produce glycerol by breakdown of fat which the liver uses for gluconeogenesis 42 Liver also does glyconeogenesis which is synthesis of glycogen from lactic acid 43 Protein metabolism Edit The liver is responsible for the mainstay of protein metabolism synthesis as well as degradation All plasma proteins except Gamma globulins are synthesised in the liver 44 It is also responsible for a large part of amino acid synthesis The liver plays a role in the production of clotting factors as well as red blood cell production Some of the proteins synthesized by the liver include coagulation factors I fibrinogen II prothrombin V VII VIII IX X XI XII XIII as well as protein C protein S and antithrombin The liver is a major site of production for thrombopoietin a glycoprotein hormone that regulates the production of platelets by the bone marrow 45 Lipid metabolism Edit The liver plays several roles in lipid metabolism it performs cholesterol synthesis lipogenesis and the production of triglycerides and a bulk of the body s lipoproteins are synthesized in the liver The liver plays a key role in digestion as it produces and excretes bile a yellowish liquid required for emulsifying fats and help the absorption of vitamin K from the diet Some of the bile drains directly into the duodenum and some is stored in the gallbladder The liver produces insulin like growth factor 1 a polypeptide protein hormone that plays an important role in childhood growth and continues to have anabolic effects in adults Breakdown Edit The liver is responsible for the breakdown of insulin and other hormones The liver breaks down bilirubin via glucuronidation facilitating its excretion into bile The liver is responsible for the breakdown and excretion of many waste products It plays a key role in breaking down or modifying toxic substances e g methylation and most medicinal products in a process called drug metabolism This sometimes results in toxication when the metabolite is more toxic than its precursor Preferably the toxins are conjugated to avail excretion in bile or urine The liver converts ammonia into urea as part of the ornithine cycle or the urea cycle and the urea is excreted in the urine 46 Blood reservoir Edit Because the liver is an expandable organ large quantities of blood can be stored in its blood vessels Its normal blood volume including both that in the hepatic veins and that in the hepatic sinuses is about 450 milliliters or almost 10 percent of the body s total blood volume When high pressure in the right atrium causes backpressure in the liver the liver expands and 0 5 to 1 liter of extra blood is occasionally stored in the hepatic veins and sinuses This occurs especially in cardiac failure with peripheral congestion Thus in effect the liver is a large expandable venous organ capable of acting as a valuable blood reservoir in times of excess blood volume and capable of supplying extra blood in times of diminished blood volume 47 Lymph production Edit Because the pores in the hepatic sinusoids are very permeable and allow ready passage of both fluid and proteins into the perisinusoidal space the lymph draining from the liver usually has a protein concentration of about 6 g dl which is only slightly less than the protein concentration of plasma Also the high permeability of the liver sinusoid epithelium allows large quantities of lymph to form Therefore about half of all the lymph formed in the body under resting conditions arises in the liver Other Edit The liver stores a multitude of substances including vitamin A 1 2 years supply vitamin D 1 4 months supply 48 vitamin B12 3 5 years supply 49 vitamin K vitamin E iron copper zinc cobalt molybdenum etc Haemopoiesis The formation of blood cells is called haemopoiesis In embryonic stage RBC and WBC are formed by liver In the first trimester fetus the liver is the main site of red blood cell production By the 32nd week of gestation the bone marrow has almost completely taken over that task 50 The liver helps in the purification of blood The Kupffer cells of liver are phagocytic cells helps in phagocytosis of dead blood cells and bacteria from the blood 51 The liver is responsible for immunological effects the mononuclear phagocyte system of the liver contains many immunologically active cells acting as a sieve for antigens carried to it via the portal system The liver produces albumin the most abundant protein in blood serum It is essential in the maintenance of oncotic pressure and acts as a transport for fatty acids and steroid hormones The liver synthesizes angiotensinogen a hormone that is responsible for raising the blood pressure when activated by renin an enzyme that is released when the kidney senses low blood pressure The liver produces the enzyme catalase to break down hydrogen peroxide a toxic oxidising agent into water and oxygen With aging Edit The oxidative capacity of the liver decreases with aging and therefore any medications that require oxidation for instance benzodiazepines are more likely to accumulate to toxic levels However medications with shorter half lives such as lorazepam and oxazepam are preferred in most cases when benzodiazepines are required in regard to geriatric medicine Clinical significance EditDisease Edit Main article Liver disease nbsp Left lobe liver tumorThe liver is a vital organ and supports almost every other organ in the body Because of its strategic location and multidimensional functions the liver is prone to many diseases 52 The bare area of the liver is a site that is vulnerable to the passing of infection from the abdominal cavity to the thoracic cavity Liver diseases may be diagnosed by liver function tests blood tests that can identify various markers For example acute phase reactants are produced by the liver in response to injury or inflammation The most common chronic liver disease is nonalcoholic fatty liver disease which affects an estimated one third of the world population 53 Hepatitis is a common condition of inflammation of the liver The most usual cause of this is viral and the most common of these infections are hepatitis A B C D and E Some of these infections are sexually transmitted Inflammation can also be caused by other viruses in the family Herpesviridae such as the herpes simplex virus Chronic rather than acute infection with hepatitis B virus or hepatitis C virus is the main cause of liver cancer 54 Globally about 248 million individuals are chronically infected with hepatitis B with 843 724 in the U S 55 and 142 million are chronically infected with hepatitis C 56 with 2 7 million in the U S 57 Globally there are about 114 million and 20 million cases of hepatitis A 56 and hepatitis E 58 respectively but these generally resolve and do not become chronic Hepatitis D virus is a satellite of hepatitis B virus it can only infect in the presence of hepatitis B and co infects nearly 20 million people with hepatitis B globally 59 Hepatic encephalopathy is caused by an accumulation of toxins in the bloodstream that are normally removed by the liver This condition can result in coma and can prove fatal Budd Chiari syndrome is a condition caused by blockage of the hepatic veins including thrombosis that drain the liver It presents with the classical triad of abdominal pain ascites and liver enlargement 60 Many diseases of the liver are accompanied by jaundice caused by increased levels of bilirubin in the system The bilirubin results from the breakup of the hemoglobin of dead red blood cells normally the liver removes bilirubin from the blood and excretes it through bile Other disorders caused by excessive alcohol consumption are grouped under alcoholic liver diseases and these include alcoholic hepatitis fatty liver and cirrhosis Factors contributing to the development of alcoholic liver diseases are not only the quantity and frequency of alcohol consumption but can also include gender genetics and liver insult Liver damage can also be caused by drugs particularly paracetamol and drugs used to treat cancer A rupture of the liver can be caused by a liver shot used in combat sports Primary biliary cholangitis is an autoimmune disease of the liver 61 62 It is marked by slow progressive destruction of the small bile ducts of the liver with the intralobular ducts Canals of Hering affected early in the disease 63 When these ducts are damaged bile and other toxins build up in the liver cholestasis and over time damages the liver tissue in combination with ongoing immune related damage This can lead to scarring fibrosis and cirrhosis Cirrhosis increases the resistance to blood flow in the liver and can result in portal hypertension Congested anastomoses between the portal venous system and the systemic circulation can be a subsequent condition There are also many pediatric liver diseases including biliary atresia alpha 1 antitrypsin deficiency alagille syndrome progressive familial intrahepatic cholestasis Langerhans cell histiocytosis and hepatic hemangioma a benign tumour the most common type of liver tumour thought to be congenital A genetic disorder causing multiple cysts to form in the liver tissue usually in later life and usually asymptomatic is polycystic liver disease Diseases that interfere with liver function will lead to derangement of these processes However the liver has a great capacity to regenerate and has a large reserve capacity In most cases the liver only produces symptoms after extensive damage Hepatomegaly refers to an enlarged liver and can be due to many causes It can be palpated in a liver span measurement Symptoms Edit The classic symptoms of liver damage include the following Pale stools occur when stercobilin a brown pigment is absent from the stool Stercobilin is derived from bilirubin metabolites produced in the liver Dark urine occurs when bilirubin mixes with urine Jaundice yellow skin and or whites of the eyes This is where bilirubin deposits in skin causing an intense itch Itching is the most common complaint by people who have liver failure Often this itch cannot be relieved by drugs Swelling of the abdomen and swelling of the ankles and feet occurs because the liver fails to make albumin Excessive fatigue occurs from a generalized loss of nutrients minerals and vitamins Bruising and easy bleeding are other features of liver disease The liver makes clotting factors substances which help prevent bleeding When liver damage occurs these factors are no longer present and severe bleeding can occur 64 Pain in the upper right quadrant can result from the stretching of Glisson s capsule in conditions of hepatitis and pre eclampsia Diagnosis Edit The diagnosis of liver disease is made by liver function tests groups of blood tests that can readily show the extent of liver damage If infection is suspected then other serological tests will be carried out A physical examination of the liver can only reveal its size and any tenderness and some form of imaging such as an ultrasound or CT scan may also be needed Sometimes a liver biopsy will be necessary and a tissue sample is taken through a needle inserted into the skin just below the rib cage This procedure may be helped by a sonographer providing ultrasound guidance to an interventional radiologist 65 nbsp Axial CT image showing anomalous hepatic veins coursing on the liver s subcapsular anterior surface 66 nbsp Maximum intensity projection MIP CT image as viewed anteriorly showing the anomalous hepatic veins coursing on the anterior surface of the liver nbsp Lateral MIP view in the same patient as previous image nbsp A CT scan in which the liver and portal vein are shown Liver regeneration Edit Main article Liver regeneration The liver is the only human internal organ capable of natural regeneration of lost tissue as little as 25 of a liver can regenerate into a whole liver 67 This is however not true regeneration but rather compensatory growth in mammals 68 The lobes that are removed do not regrow and the growth of the liver is a restoration of function not original form This contrasts with true regeneration where both original function and form are restored In some other species such as zebrafish the liver undergoes true regeneration by restoring both shape and size of the organ 69 In the liver large areas of the tissues are formed but for the formation of new cells there must be sufficient amount of material so the circulation of the blood becomes more active 70 This is predominantly due to the hepatocytes re entering the cell cycle That is the hepatocytes go from the quiescent G0 phase to the G1 phase and undergo mitosis This process is activated by the p75 receptors 71 There is also some evidence of bipotential stem cells called hepatic oval cells or ovalocytes not to be confused with oval red blood cells of ovalocytosis which are thought to reside in the canals of Hering These cells can differentiate into either hepatocytes or cholangiocytes Cholangiocytes are the epithelial lining cells of the bile ducts 72 They are cuboidal epithelium in the small interlobular bile ducts but become columnar and mucus secreting in larger bile ducts approaching the porta hepatis and the extrahepatic ducts Research is being carried out on the use of stem cells for the generation of an artificial liver Scientific and medical works about liver regeneration often refer to the Greek Titan Prometheus who was chained to a rock in the Caucasus where each day his liver was devoured by an eagle only to grow back each night The myth suggests the ancient Greeks may have known about the liver s remarkable capacity for self repair 73 Liver transplantation Edit Main article Liver transplantation Human liver transplants were first performed by Thomas Starzl in the United States and Roy Calne in Cambridge England in 1963 and 1967 respectively nbsp After resection of left lobe liver tumorLiver transplantation is the only option for those with irreversible liver failure Most transplants are done for chronic liver diseases leading to cirrhosis such as chronic hepatitis C alcoholism and autoimmune hepatitis Less commonly liver transplantation is done for fulminant hepatic failure in which liver failure occurs rapidly over a period of days or weeks Liver allografts for transplant usually come from donors who have died from fatal brain injury Living donor liver transplantation is a technique in which a portion of a living person s liver is removed hepatectomy and used to replace the entire liver of the recipient This was first performed in 1989 for pediatric liver transplantation Only 20 percent of an adult s liver Couinaud segments 2 and 3 is needed to serve as a liver allograft for an infant or small child More recently when adult to adult liver transplantation has been done using the donor s right hepatic lobe which amounts to 60 percent of the liver Due to the ability of the liver to regenerate both the donor and recipient end up with normal liver function if all goes well This procedure is more controversial as it entails performing a much larger operation on the donor and indeed there were at least two donor deaths out of the first several hundred cases A 2006 publication addressed the problem of donor mortality and found at least fourteen cases 74 The risk of postoperative complications and death is far greater in right sided operations than that in left sided operations With the recent advances of noninvasive imaging living liver donors usually have to undergo imaging examinations for liver anatomy to decide if the anatomy is feasible for donation The evaluation is usually performed by multidetector row computed tomography MDCT and magnetic resonance imaging MRI MDCT is good in vascular anatomy and volumetry MRI is used for biliary tree anatomy Donors with very unusual vascular anatomy which makes them unsuitable for donation could be screened out to avoid unnecessary operations nbsp MDCT image Arterial anatomy contraindicated for liver donation nbsp MDCT image Portal venous anatomy contraindicated for liver donation nbsp MDCT image 3D image created by MDCT can clearly visualize the liver measure the liver volume and plan the dissection plane to facilitate the liver transplantation procedure nbsp Phase contrast CT image Contrast is perfusing the right liver but not the left due to a left portal vein thrombus Society and culture EditSome cultures regard the liver as the seat of the soul 75 In Greek mythology the gods punished Prometheus for revealing fire to humans by chaining him to a rock where a vulture or an eagle would peck out his liver which would regenerate overnight the liver is the only human internal organ that actually can regenerate itself to a significant extent Many ancient peoples of the Near East and Mediterranean areas practiced a type of divination called haruspicy or hepatomancy where they tried to obtain information by examining the livers of sheep and other animals In Plato and in later physiology the liver was thought to be the seat of the darkest emotions specifically wrath jealousy and greed which drive men to action 76 The Talmud tractate Berakhot 61b refers to the liver as the seat of anger with the gallbladder counteracting this The Persian Urdu and Hindi languages جگر or ज गर or jigar refer to the liver in figurative speech to indicate courage and strong feelings or their best e g This Mecca has thrown to you the pieces of its liver 77 The term jan e jigar literally the strength power of my liver is a term of endearment in Urdu In Persian slang jigar is used as an adjective for any object which is desirable especially women In the Zulu language the word for liver isibindi is the same as the word for courage In English the term lily livered is used to indicate cowardice from the medieval belief that the liver was the seat of courage Spanish higados also means courage 78 However the secondary meaning of Basque gibel is indolence 79 In biblical Hebrew the word for liver כבד Kauved stemmed KBD or KVD similar to Arabic الكبد also means heavy and is used to describe the rich heavy with possessions and honor presumably for the same reason In the Book of Lamentations 2 11 it is used to describe the physiological responses to sadness by my liver spilled to earth along with the flow of tears and the overturning in bitterness of the intestines 80 On several occasions in the book of Psalms most notably 16 9 the word is used to describe happiness in the liver along with the heart which beats rapidly and the flesh which appears red under the skin Further usage as the self similar to your honor is widely available throughout the old testament sometimes compared to the breathing soul Genesis 49 6 Psalms 7 6 etc An honorable hat was also referred to with this word Job 19 9 etc and under that definition appears many times along with פאר Pe er grandeur 81 These four meanings were used in preceding ancient Afro Asiatic languages such as Akkadian and Ancient Egyptian preserved in classical Ethiopic Ge ez language 82 Food Edit Main article Liver food nbsp Maksalaatikko a Finnish liver casseroleHumans commonly eat the livers of mammals fowl and fish as food Domestic pig ox lamb calf chicken and goose livers are widely available from butchers and supermarkets In the Romance languages the anatomical word for liver French foie Spanish higado etc derives not from the Latin anatomical term jecur but from the culinary term ficatum literally stuffed with figs referring to the livers of geese that had been fattened on figs 83 Animal livers are rich in iron vitamin A and vitamin B12 and cod liver oil is commonly used as a dietary supplement Liver can be baked boiled broiled fried stir fried or eaten raw asbeh nayeh or sawda naye in Lebanese cuisine or liver sashimi in Japanese cuisine In many preparations pieces of liver are combined with pieces of meat or kidneys as in the various forms of Middle Eastern mixed grill e g meurav Yerushalmi Well known examples include liver pate foie gras chopped liver and leverpastej Liver sausages such as Braunschweiger and liverwurst are also a valued meal Liver sausages may also be used as spreads A traditional South African delicacy skilpadjies is made of minced lamb s liver wrapped in netvet caul fat and grilled over an open fire Traditionally some fish livers were valued as food especially the stingray liver It was used to prepare delicacies such as poached skate liver on toast in England as well as the beignets de foie de raie and foie de raie en croute in French cuisine 84 Giraffe liver Edit nbsp 19th century drinking scene in Kordofan home to the Humr tribe who made a drink from giraffe liver Plate from Le Desert et le Soudan by Stanislas d Escayrac de Lauture The Humr are one of the tribes in the Baggara ethnic group native to southwestern Kordofan in Sudan who speak Shuwa Chadian Arabic make a non alcoholic drink from the liver and bone marrow of the giraffe which they call umm nyolokh They claim it is intoxicating Arabic سكران sakran causing dreams and even waking hallucinations 85 Anthropologist Ian Cunnison accompanied the Humr on one of their giraffe hunting expeditions in the late 1950s and noted that It is said that a person once he has drunk umm nyolokh will return to giraffe again and again Humr being Mahdists are strict abstainers from alcohol and a Humrawi is never drunk sakran on liquor or beer But he uses this word to describe the effects which umm nyolokh has upon him 86 Cunnison s remarkable account of an apparently psychoactive mammal found its way from a somewhat obscure scientific paper into more mainstream literature through a conversation between W James of the Institute of Social and Cultural Anthropology at the University of Oxford and specialist on the use of hallucinogens and intoxicants in society and R Rudgley who discussed it in a book on psychoactive drugs for general readers 85 He speculated that a hallucinogenic compound N N Dimethyltryptamine in the giraffe liver might account for the intoxicating properties claimed for umm nyolokh 85 Cunnison on the other hand writing in 1958 found it hard to believe in the literal truth of the Humr s assertion that the drink was intoxicating I can only assume that there is no intoxicating substance in the drink and that the effect it produces is simply a matter of convention although it may be brought about subconsciously 86 The study of entheogens in general including entheogens of animal origin e g hallucinogenic fish and toad venom has however made considerable progress in the sixty odd years since Cunnison s report the idea that some intoxicating substance might reside in giraffe livers may no longer be as far fetched as it seemed to Cunnison However to date proof or disproof still waits on detailed analyses of the organ and the beverage made from it 85 Arrow bullet poison Edit Certain Tungusic peoples of northeast Asia formerly prepared a type of arrow poison from rotting animal livers which was in later times also applied to bullets Russian anthropologist S M Shirokogoroff wrote that Formerly the using of poisoned arrows was common For instance among the Kumarcen a subgroup of the Oroqen even in recent times a poison was used which was prepared from decaying liver Note This has been confirmed by the Kumarcen I am not competent to judge as to the chemical conditions of production of poison which is not destroyed by the heat of explosion However the Tungus themselves compare this method of poisoning ammunition with the poisoning of arrows 87 Other animals Edit nbsp Sheep s liverThe liver is found in all vertebrates and is typically the largest internal organ The internal structure of the liver is broadly similar in all vertebrates though its form varies considerably in different species and is largely determined by the shape and arrangement of the surrounding organs Nonetheless in most species it is divided into right and left lobes exceptions to this general rule include snakes where the shape of the body necessitates a simple cigar like form 88 An organ sometimes referred to as a liver is found associated with the digestive tract of the primitive chordate Amphioxus Although it performs many functions of a liver it is not considered a true liver but rather a homolog of the vertebrate liver 89 90 91 The amphioxus hepatic caecum produces the liver specific proteins vitellogenin antithrombin plasminogen alanine aminotransferase and insulin Insulin like growth factor 92 See also EditPorphyria Johann Joseph Domling published Is the liver a purifying organ in 1798 References Edit Nosek Thomas M Section 6 6ch2 s6ch2 30 Essentials of Human Physiology Archived from the original on 2016 03 24 Elias H Bengelsdorf H 1 July 1952 The Structure of the Liver in Vertebrates Cells Tissues Organs 14 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S2CID 205786066 Spence Lewis 1916 10 The Magic and Demonology of Babylonia and Assyria Myths and Legends of Babylonia and Assyria Cosimo Classics New York Cosimo Inc published 2010 p 281 ISBN 9781616404642 Retrieved 2018 09 16 Now among people in a primitive state of culture the soul is almost invariably supposed to reside in the liver instead of in the heart or brain Krishna Gopi Hillman James 1970 Kundalini the evolutionary energy in man London Stuart amp Watkins p 77 ISBN 978 1570622809 Archived from the original on 2016 03 05 The Great Battle Of Badar Yaum E Furqan Archived 2014 06 30 at the Wayback Machine Shawuniversitymosque org 2006 07 08 Retrieved 2013 03 19 higado Diccionario de la lengua espanola in Spanish 23 4 ed ASALE RAE 2020 Retrieved 29 July 2021 Animo valentia U m en pl Azkue Resurreccion Maria de 1905 gibel Diccionario vasco espanol frances Dictionnaire basque espagnol francais in Spanish and French Bilbao Direccion del autor p 345 Retrieved 29 July 2021 Bc BN s R cachaza calme כלו בדמעות עיני חמרמרו מעי נשפך לארץ כבדי על שבר בת עמי בעטף עולל ויונק ברחבות קריה My eyes terminated with tears my intestines overturned with bitterness my liver spilled to the earth on the breaking of my nation s daughter when a suckling baby lies in the town squares Lamentations 2 11 this could be interpreted to be read as my honor spilled or myself being spilled Kavod Honor in Hebrew Israeli Linguist Ruvik Rosenthal s website Rosenthal hypothesized that the term s usage to describe heaviness comes perhaps from the liver being the heaviest of all body parts in some farm animals or in humans See Kabadu in Akkadian From online dictionary at Association Assyrophile de France organization website Foie Larousse fr Archived from the original on 2018 06 12 Retrieved 2019 04 16 Schwabe Calvin W 1979 Unmentionable Cuisine University of Virginia Press pp 313 ISBN 978 0 8139 1162 5 Archived from the original on 2015 10 26 Retrieved 2015 06 27 a b c d Rudgley R 1998 The Encyclopedia of Psychoactive Substances Abacus pp 20 21 ISBN 0 349 11127 8 a b Cunnison Ian 1958 Giraffe hunting among the Humr tribe SNR 39 49 60 Shirokogoroff S M 1935 Psychomental Complex of the Tungus Kegan Paul Trench Trubner amp Co p 89 Romer Alfred Sherwood Parsons Thomas S 1977 The Vertebrate Body Philadelphia PA Holt Saunders International pp 354 355 ISBN 978 0 03 910284 5 Yuan Shaochun Ruan Jie Huang Shengfeng Chen Shangwu Xu Anlong 2015 Amphioxus as a model for investigating evolution of the vertebrate immune system PDF Developmental amp Comparative Immunology 48 2 297 305 doi 10 1016 j dci 2014 05 004 PMID 24877655 Archived from the original PDF on 2015 12 22 Yu Jr Kai Sky Lecroisey Claire Le Petillon Yann Escriva Hector Lammert Eckhard Laudet Vincent 2015 Identification evolution and expression of an insulin like peptide in the cephalochordate Branchiostoma lanceolatum PLOS ONE 10 3 e0119461 Bibcode 2015PLoSO 1019461L doi 10 1371 journal pone 0119461 PMC 4361685 PMID 25774519 Escriva Hector Chao Yeqing Fan Chunxin Liang Yujun Gao Bei Zhang Shicui 2012 A novel serpin with antithrombin like activity in Branchiostoma japonicum Implications for the presence of a primitive coagulation system PLOS ONE 7 3 e32392 Bibcode 2012PLoSO 732392C doi 10 1371 journal pone 0032392 PMC 3299649 PMID 22427833 Guo Bin Zhang Shicui Wang Shaohui Liang Yujun 2009 Expression mitogenic activity and regulation by growth hormone of growth hormone insulin like growth factor in Branchiostoma belcheri Cell and Tissue Research 338 1 67 77 doi 10 1007 s00441 009 0824 8 PMID 19657677 S2CID 21261162 via researchgate net Works cited Edit Dorland s illustrated medical dictionary 32nd ed Philadelphia PA Elsevier Saunders 2012 ISBN 978 1 4557 0985 4 Young Barbara O Dowd Geraldine Woodford Phillip 4 November 2013 Wheater s Functional Histology A text and colour atlas 6th ed Philadelphia PA Elsevier ISBN 9780702047473 External links Edit nbsp Look up liver in Wiktionary the free dictionary nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Livers Liver at the Human Protein Atlas VIRTUAL Liver online learning resource Liver enzymes Liver Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 16 11th ed 1911 pp 801 803 with several diagrams Beaver tail liver Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Liver amp oldid 1178965809, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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