Liver
Structure and Function
Structure
The liver is soft and pliable and situated the upper part of the abdominal cavity, just below ‘t diaphragm. It is found just under the right hand side of the costal margin. The convex upper surface of the liver is moulded to the under surface of the domes of the diagram. The visceral surface is moulded to adjacent viscera and is therefore irregular in shape. The liver may be divided into a large right lobe and a small left lobe, divided by the falciform ligament of the peritoneum. The right lobe is divided into quadrate and caudate by the gall bladder, the fissure for the ligamentum venosum, the inferior vena cava and the ligamentum teres. The liver is completely surrounded by fibrous capsule which is partly covered by the peritoneum.
The lobes contain thousands of subunits called lobules. Each lobule has a central vein which is a tributary to the hepatic veins. There are portal canals in the spaces between lobes. These contains the portal triad:
- Branches of the portal vein
- Branches of the hepatic artery
- Tributaries of the bile duct
The porta hepatis or hilum of the liver is found on the posterioinferior surface and lies between the quadrate and caudate lobes. Attached to upper part of the lesser omentum it contains the:
- Hepatic Ducts (R+L)
- Hepatic Artery (R+L)
- Portal Vein
- Para + sympa nerve fibres
- Lymph nodes (drain liver and gallbladder into coeliac nodes)
Functions
Production and secretion of bile:
- Synthesizes heparin which is an anticoagulant
- Synthesises bile pigments from the haemoglobin of worn out rb corpuscles.
- Secretes bile salts
Involved in metabolic processes:
Carbohydrate metabolism:
- Gluconeogenesis (aminos, lactate or glycerol -> glucose)
- Glycogenolysis (glycogen -> glucose)
- Glycogenesis (glucose -> glycogen)
Lipid metabolism
- Cholesterol synthesis
- Production of triglycerides
Storage:
- Glycogen
- Vitamin B12
- Iron
- Copper
Other functions
- Breaks down haemoglobin (bile pigments are its metabolites), toxic stuff and some drugs. This sometimes results in toxication, where the metabolite is more toxic than its precursor.
- Converts Ammonia to urea.
- Production of coagulation factors
- In the first 3 months, the liver is the main site of RDC production in the foetus, but by the 42nd the bone marrow has completely taken over.
Arterial and Venous supply
Nervous Supply
Lymph
Liver produce 1/3 to ½ of all body lymph. Lymph vessels in liver -> lymph nodes in porta hepatis -> celiac nodes.
Histology
Clinical conditions
Hepatitus viruses
Virus | Type of virus | Incubation Period | Illness | Carriers | Serological markers | Patient susceptibility | Transmission |
HAV | ssRNA enterovirus | 15-40 days | Mild; very low mortality | No | IgM anti-HAV antibody | Young | Faecal-oral |
HBV | dsDNA hepadnavirus | 50-180 days | Significant risk of chronicity and mortality | Yes | HBsAg, HBeAg | Any age | Blood and blood; needles; venereal. |
HCV | Ss+RNA | 40-55 | Fluctuating; significant risk of chronicity and mortality | Yes | Anti-HCV antibody, HCV RNA | Any age | Blood and blood products; needles; possibly venereal. |
HEV | ssRNA virus | 30-50 | No risk of chronicity; high mortality in pregnancy | No | Anti-HEV antibody | Any age | Faecal-oral |
===Hepatitis A===
- Usually an epidemic.
- Virus excreted in faeces before the symptoms occur.
- Liver damage is direct cytopathic effect – rather than autoimmune.
===Hepatitis B===
- HBsAG – the Hep B surface antigen sticks to the liver cell surface, thus initiating an immune response, so the liver cell is attacked.
- HBeAG – prescence of this indicates liver disease.
- B goes chronic in 5% of patients
===Hepatitis C===
- High mutation rate. These ongoing changes in the virus make it difficult for the immune system to fight it off. For the same reason it is very difficult to develop a vaccine.
- Almost always blood born.
- It becomes chronic in 50-80% of cases, though when so is generally milder than chronic B.
- In chronic, cirrhosis occurs in 20-30%, though primary liver cancer appears to be much less common.