7.1 Liver Structure and Function (Do 2nd Video) Flashcards
Where is albumin produced?
The liver
True or false: the liver receives a majority of its blood supply from the hepatic artery
- False
- It receives blood from the hepatic artery and the hepatic portal vein; majority is actually venous!
Liver surface anatomy (ribs, quadrants, surfaces etc.)
- Superior surface aligns w/ 5th rib
- Inferior-most tip is 10th rib (makes sense; liver is best organ, gets to use cool #s)
- Sits mostly in RUQ, but also extends into LUQ
- Has a diaphragmatic and visceral surface
Which ligament separates the two lobes of the liver? What are the lobes called?
- Separated by falciform ligament (falx = sickle, like Getafix)
- They are called the left and right lobe.
What is the functional relevance of the 8 segments of the liver?
- Each has their own blood supply and branch of bile duct
- If we have a cancer/metastasis, we can remove a segment/segments, and the rest of the liver functions normally
Which segments of the liver are supplied by the left vs right branches of the hepatic artery proper?
- Left: I to IV
- Right: V to VIII
What are the two lobes on the posterior surface of the liver? Where do they sit?
- Quadrate and caudate lobes
- Along the midline of the liver
- Quadrate = lower visceral surface
- Caudate = upper visceral surface
Describe the three fissures on the posterior surface of the liver (and the structures that sit in them)
- Right sagittal fissure (IVC superiorly, and gall bladder inferiorly)
- Left sagittal fissure (round ligament and ligamentum venosum; both previously veins before birth)
- Porta hepatis between caudate and quadrate (portal triad)
What stops the liver from falling forwards or backwards?
- Held to anterior abdominal wall by the same falciform ligament
- Held to diaphragm by L/R triangular ligaments and coronary ligament
Which ligament does the hepatic triad travel through? What is this structure a part of?
- Travels through hepatoduodenoal ligament
- Together w/ hepatogastric ligament, forms lesser omentum
True or false: the liver only has sparse lymphatic connections. This is why there’s no lymphatic vessels in the hepatic triad
- False
- It had extensive connections to phrenic, mammary, pericardiac, and many other lymph nodes.
- This is why liver metastases can be so dangerous.
The inferior border of the liver’s falciform ligament becomes the…
- Round ligament
- It runs aROUND the inferior lip of the liver
The septae between hepatic lobules are continuous with…
The fibrous capsule of the liver
Blood drains from portal triads into central veins in the liver through…
Sinusoids
What are the boundaries of a hepatic acinus? What do the three zones mean?
- Corners are two central veins and two vertices, forming a diamond shape
- The line between the two triad vertices indicates most oxygenated [zone 1], and the areas nearest the central veins are least oxygenated [zone 3]