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About the education tab | All about the liver and liver disease


In this area you can learn all about the liver, what functions it performs and also about liver diseases.   Read about the liver below or click on the relevant links at the bottom of the page. You can see animations and more information about the liver at http://www.cldf-focus.org/the-liver.asp

The liver

The liver is a silent uncomplaining worker. It is not until it goes very wrong that it shows signs and symptoms of liver disease.

Most of us do not know just what the liver does in our body and how vital it is for our well-being. Inevitably, we take the liver for granted.

Whilst we have knowledge of the structure of the liver, there are still many aspects about the various cells of the liver, their role and functions that we do not understand. Until we do, prevention of liver diseases, more effective treatments and cures will still elude us. Basic liver cell research is still urgently needed and is recognised by the Foundation as an important area for CLDF research funding.

Where the liver is located? 

The liver is located behind the lower ribs of the right side of the abdomen.


  Digram showing the location of the liver

What does the liver look like?
The liver is reddish brown in colour. It has the consistency of foam rubber when healthy. In a child with liver disease, it is often firmer. In an adult, it is roughly the size of a rugby ball.

The liver has two main parts called the right and left lobes. There are over 300 billion specialised cells in the liver. These cells are served by a well organised intricate system of bile ducts and blood vessels. The bile ducts, which drain every liver cell, join like tributaries entering a stream, to form one main bile duct from each lobe. These join together to form the common hepatic duct.

Picture of what the liver looks like

The common hepatic duct in turn joins with the duct from the gall bladder (called the cystic duct) to form the common bile duct. The common bile duct leads into the duodenum through the ampulla of vater.

The gall bladder is a pear-shaped organ which rests in a shallow furrow in the right lobe of the liver. The narrow end of the gall bladder, called the neck, opens into the cystic duct. The gall bladder collects the bile, produced by the liver, concentrates it and passes into the duodenum following a meal. The concentration process is not essential and digestion is rarely affected by removal of the gall bladder.

The blood supply to and from the liver
The liver is a unique organ with a dual blood supply. Blood enters the live by two separate routes:

  • The hepatic artery which brings freshly oxygenated blood to the liver. Within the liver, the artery divides into fine branches which supply blood to the fine bile ducts.
  • The portal vein which carries blood containing nutrients from the stomach and intestine to the liver. The portal vein also carries blood from the spleen.

The blood leaves the liver by the hepatic vein and returns to the heart.

The development of the liver
The liver is first seen in the developing embryo at four weeks of pregnancy. As the foetus develops, the liver is divided into two forming the right and left lobes. The right lobe is six times bigger than the left. By the time the baby is born, the liver constitutes about 5% of the baby's body weight and grows with the baby. In the adult the liver weighs about 1.5kg.


 
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