W10.1_Liver Physiology Flashcards

1
Q

State the related organs to liver. Describe how the liver is separated into lobes or segments. Explain the characteristics of the liver in terms of its blood volume and supply.

A
  • Related organs: liver, gallbladder, pancreas, bile passage
  • Two lobes (L/R) separated by midline (falciform ligament)
  • Subdivided into nine functional segments based on vascular supply and biliary drainage
  • Receives disproportionally high blood volume
    (2% body weight vs 20% cardiac output)
  • Dual blood supply of splanchnic blood (nutrient rich and deoxygenated) from gut via hepatic portal vein and oxygenated blood from hepatic artery to sustain hepatocytes
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2
Q

What are liver composed of? Explain how they receive blood and its blood flow. State the function and special feature of sinusoids.

A
  • Composed of small lobules
  • Lobule is surrounded by branches of hepatic artery and portal vein (to receive oxygen and nutrients)
  • Vessels drain into sinusoids (capillary-like structures) -> drain to a central vein (deoxygenated blood in hepatic vein)
  • Sinusoids conduct material exchange (similar to capillaries)
  • Incomplete surrounding diaphragm (basement membrane) and large intercellular gaps in endothelial layer causes them to have increased permeability -> larger molecules/proteins to cross
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3
Q

State the properties and functions of different hepatic cells (5).

A
  • Sinusoidal endothelial cells: form sinusoidal blood vessels, less tight junctions
  • Kupffer cells: macrophages of liver, reside in lumen of sinusoids, exposed to immunogens from gut
  • Stellate cells: in perisinusoidal space, in quiescent state/activated in response to damage to repair
  • Hepatocytes: large, cuboid, extremely metabolically active, large numbers of smooth ER, binucleate, contains bile canaliculus that starts production of bile
  • Cholangiocytes: epithelial cells lining the bile ducts
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4
Q

Explain how liver process nutrients. Discuss it in terms of proteins, carbohydrates, and fats.

A
  • Metabolism of nutrients absorbed and transported from small intestine
  • Convert into forms that can be stored (glycogen/fat/iron/vitamin A) or used
  • Mediates transport to other tissues
  • Proteins: break down and excrete excess proteins (as body cannot store amino acids) by removing toxic amine group through deamination and converting into harmless urea -> excreted by kidneys
  • Synthesising of non-essential amino acids is also possible (transamination)
  • Carbohydrates: excess glucose stored as glycogen/breaks down glycogen into glucose and exports it, synthesise from fats/proteins when hepatic glycogen reserves is exhausted, coordinated by pancreatic hormone (insulin, glucagon)
  • Fats: synthesis of phospholipids and cholesterol, converting excess carbohydrates/proteins into fat, surplus cholesterol is converted into bile salts and excreted
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5
Q

Explain the functions of VLDL, LDL, and HDL.

A
  • VLDL (very low density lipoprotein): allows triglycerides made in liver to be transported
  • LDL: transports cholesterol to cells -> raises blood cholesterol levels
  • HDL: transports excess cholesterol from cells back to liver -> lowers blood cholesterol cells
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6
Q

Explain how vitamin A is stored in liver and used by some immune cells.

A
  • Vitamin A/retinol absorbed from gut -> carried in blood in a complex with TTR -> stored in stellate cells
  • Some immune cells (dendritic cells) convert retinol to retinoic acid -> very metabolically active to deliver to cells that need it -> metabolised by liver again
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7
Q

What are the toxins that can be processed in the liver? How does the detoxification in liver work?

A
  • Pollutants, pesticides, drugs, alcohol, microorganisms…
  • Liver converts them into less harmful/more hydrophilic forms -> excretion
  • Through phase 1 and 2 metabolism routes as well
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8
Q

Briefly explain the production of proteins in liver and each of their functions.

A
  • (except immunoglobulins)
  • ex. albumins (regulate osmotic pressure in blood), globulins (transport and antibodies), fibrinogens (part of blood clotting cascade to form fibrin clot)
  • Made in hepatocytes (ER, golgi apparatus)
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9
Q

Explain how bile is produced in liver and secreted into the small intestine. What is the function of gallbladder? How is bile recylced in the body?

A
  • Stimulated by chyme -> neutralise acidic environment in stomach to favour intestinal enzymes
  • Produced in liver (bile acids secreted by hepatocytes, cholangiocytes modify bile volume and composition) -> stored in gallbladder -> secreted into small intestine to emulsify fats
  • Gallbladder: storage of bile, absorption of water to concentrate bile, release to duodenum when responds to cholecystokinin (CCK released from duodenum) by dilating and contracting through pressure control
  • Bile is recycled through hepatic portal vein -> bile salts stimulate hepatocytes to secrete more
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