7.1 Liver Structure and Function (Do 2nd Video) Flashcards

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1
Q

Where is albumin produced?

A

The liver

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2
Q

True or false: the liver receives a majority of its blood supply from the hepatic artery

A
  • False
  • It receives blood from the hepatic artery and the hepatic portal vein; majority is actually venous!
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3
Q

Liver surface anatomy (ribs, quadrants, surfaces etc.)

A
  • 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
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4
Q

Which ligament separates the two lobes of the liver? What are the lobes called?

A
  • Separated by falciform ligament (falx = sickle, like Getafix)
  • They are called the left and right lobe.
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5
Q

What is the functional relevance of the 8 segments of the liver?

A
  • 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
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6
Q

Which segments of the liver are supplied by the left vs right branches of the hepatic artery proper?

A
  • Left: I to IV
  • Right: V to VIII
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7
Q

What are the two lobes on the posterior surface of the liver? Where do they sit?

A
  • Quadrate and caudate lobes
  • Along the midline of the liver
  • Quadrate = lower visceral surface
  • Caudate = upper visceral surface
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8
Q

Describe the three fissures on the posterior surface of the liver (and the structures that sit in them)

A
  • 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)
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9
Q

What stops the liver from falling forwards or backwards?

A
  • Held to anterior abdominal wall by the same falciform ligament
  • Held to diaphragm by L/R triangular ligaments and coronary ligament
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10
Q

Which ligament does the hepatic triad travel through? What is this structure a part of?

A
  • Travels through hepatoduodenoal ligament
  • Together w/ hepatogastric ligament, forms lesser omentum
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11
Q

True or false: the liver only has sparse lymphatic connections. This is why there’s no lymphatic vessels in the hepatic triad

A
  • False
  • It had extensive connections to phrenic, mammary, pericardiac, and many other lymph nodes.
  • This is why liver metastases can be so dangerous.
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12
Q

The inferior border of the liver’s falciform ligament becomes the…

A
  • Round ligament
  • It runs aROUND the inferior lip of the liver
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13
Q

The septae between hepatic lobules are continuous with…

A

The fibrous capsule of the liver

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14
Q

Blood drains from portal triads into central veins in the liver through…

A

Sinusoids

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15
Q

What are the boundaries of a hepatic acinus? What do the three zones mean?

A
  • 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]
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16
Q

What are the boundaries of a portal lobule? What does the lobule represent?

A
  • Three corners in a triangle; each a central vein, with triad in centre
  • Represents how newly-made bile flows inward from each vein into a triad for the liver’s exocrine function
17
Q

True or false: all hepatocytes have the same organelles

A
  • False
  • Varies based on function/oxygenation; RER might mean protein synthesis, SER might mean VLDL production, lysozyme might mean detoxification etc.
18
Q

Describe the canalicular vs sinusoidal hepatocyte membrane surfaces

A

Canalicular: tight junctions + bile canaliculi
Sinusoidal: microvilli (space of disse)

19
Q

What’s important about the endothelial structure lining hepatic sinusoids?

A
  • No basal lamina, highly fenestrated
  • Allows easy interaction of blood components with cells in space of disse + the hepatocytes themselves
20
Q

What are two functions of Kupffer cells? How does this affect their distribution?

A
  1. Breakdown of worn out RBCs
  2. Clearing foreign debris

More common in periportal space (new blood) than centrolobular (pre-filtered)

21
Q

List all the functions of the liver

A
  • Secretes bile (and therefore cholesterol/bilirubin)
  • Detoxification
  • Metabolism (glyconeogenesis, lipogenesis, gluconeogenesis)
  • Synthesises plasma proteins (e.g. albumin)