Lecture 10: Liver Physiology Flashcards

1
Q

describe the blood flow between the liver and small intestine

A
  • 9mmHg pressure difference
  • low resistance for good blood flow
  • 10% capacitance level
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2
Q

describe how cirrhosis affects blood flow to and in the liver

A

causes the liver to harden which increases resistance thus decreasing blood flow

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3
Q

name the metabolic functions of the liver

A
  • carb metabolism
  • fat metabolism
  • protein metabolism
  • detoxification
  • tackling pathogens
  • bile manufacture
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4
Q

how does the liver function as a glucose buffer

A
  • glycogen store
  • decrease blood glucose after a meal (increased glucose uptake)
  • increase blood glucose between meals or during prolonged starvation (glycolysis and glucose release)
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5
Q

how does the liver function as a fat buffer

A
  • right types of fats can be stored and released as and when needed
  • fats stores can be used to make new glucose or make ketones + ATP
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6
Q

describe the relation in flow between the hepatic portal vein and hepatic artery

A

inversely related

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7
Q

which vessel in the portal area will experience more blood flow after a large meal

A

hepatic portal vein

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8
Q

which vessel in the portal area will experience more blood flow after a period of fasting

A

hepatic artery

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9
Q

what kind of pressure difference exists driving blood from artery to vein in the liver

A

small pressure difference therefore need low resistance to achieve big flow

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10
Q

describe the liver’s function in protein metabolism

A
  • liver is principal site of synthesis of all circulating proteins except y-globulins
  • amino acids from intestine and muscles undergo transamination to then make up around 90% of plasma proteins
  • some amino acids undergo deamination to from ammonia; liver detoxifies ammonia to form urea which can be excreted by kidneys
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11
Q

describe the role of the liver in vitamin storage and activation

A
  • liver stores vit A,D,E,K in fat stores (fat soluble vitamins)
  • B12 also stored in liver (appx 80%)
  • vit D activated in liver –> hydroxylated in liver then further hydroxylated in kidney
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12
Q

describe the detox function of the liver

A
  • Kupffer cells present on inner wall of sinusoids –> phagocytic and remove old RBC
  • haemoglobin formed into bile
  • alcohol, drugs, ALP, cholesterol detoxified for excretion
  • fat soluble drugs detoxified –> water soluble then removed in bile or urine
  • trace metals, steroid, ammonia detoxified
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13
Q

describe the composition of bile

A

bile pigments and bile acids among other substances contained within an alkaline medium

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14
Q

describe the function of bile

A
  • excretion of Hb degradation by products (pigments)

- digestion of fats (bile acids aid formation of micelles)

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15
Q

describe the metabolism and extraction of bilirubin

A
  • globin part of Hb binds to bilirubin (bilirubin combines with albumin)
  • this means bilirubin is not excreted in kidneys
  • bound bilirubin absorbed into hepatocytes
  • conjugated with glucuronic acid –> bilirubin diglucuronide (doesn’t cross into blood stream)
  • then released into the bile
  • broken down by bacteria in the intestine into urobilinogens
  • urobilinogens can be reabsorbed into plasma (enterohepatic circulation)
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16
Q

describe the cause of jaundice

A

excess bilirubin (free or conjugated) in the blood

17
Q

what symptom indicates a problem with bile excretion

A

dark urine –> excess conjugated bilirubin dissolves in water and can appear in kidneys

18
Q

name some symptoms of jaundice

A
  • yellow skin
  • yellow sclera
  • yellow mucous membranes
19
Q

what causes prehepatic jaundice

A

excess production of bilirubin (haemolytic jaundice)

20
Q

what causes hepatic jaundice

A

decreased uptake of bilirubin, disturbed binding or insufficient transport of conjugated bilirubin into canaliculi

21
Q

what is posthepatic jaundice (cholestatic jaundice)

A

obstruction of the bile duct or gall bladder

22
Q

what is cholelithiasis

A

gallstones

23
Q

where do gallstones come from

A

cholesterol crystals OR calcium bilirubinate

24
Q

what causes newborn jaundice

A

newborn liver is very poorly formed so can take some weeks for metabolic processes to take place