TBL 18 Flashcards
What does initial outgrowth of the liver bud form? And subsequent ventral growth?
It forms the bile duct. Ventral growth from the bile duct forms the cystic duct.
What is the liver bud an outgrowth from? What does this outgrowth site mark?
The liver bud is an endodermal outgrowth from the second part of the duodenum. The site of outgrowth marks the end of the foregut derived portion of the duodenum.
What forms the gallbladder?
Proliferation of the cystic duct epithelium within the septum transversum
What happens to the bile duct distal to the cystic duct? What forms the liver cords?
The bile duct divides and forms the left and right hepatic ducts. The liver cords are formed by epithelial proliferation from the hepatic ducts and they proliferate into the septum transversum.
What do the liver cord differentiate into? What makes the liver stroma?
Liver cords differentiate into hepatocytes (parenchymal liver cells)
Mesenchymal fibroblasts in the septum transversum generate the liver stroma.
What form the hepatic sinusoids and hepatic veins?
Right and left vitelline veins
What causes the duodenum to be C-shaped?
It is caused by the stomach’s rotation around its anteroposterior axis.
What forms the dorsal and ventral pancreatic buds? Where do they grow?
Adjacent to the bile duct, endodermal outgrowths from the 2nd part of the duodenum forms the dorsal and ventral pancreatic buds.
The large dorsal pancreatic bud grows into the dorsal mesentery and the small ventral bud remains close to the proximal portion of the bile duct.
What happens to the pancreatic buds during rotation?
The ventral pancreatic bud moves dorsally to join the dorsal pancreatic bud in the dorsal mesentery.
The rotation of the stomach place the conjoined buds int he retroperitoneal space.
How is an annular pancreas formed, when can it induce vomiting that contains bile, and what creates its characteristic “double bubble” radiographic sign?
The ventral pancreatic bud consists of two components that normally fuse and rotate around the duodenum so they come to lie below the dorsal pancreatic bud. Sometimes, however, the right portion of the ventral bud migrates along its normal route but the left migrates in the opposite direction. The duodenum is surrounded by pancreatic tissue and an annular pancreas is formed.
Bile is usually released into the duodenum and reabsorbed in the distal parts of the small intestine. Due to constriction, bile cannot be reabsorbed and is found in the vomit.
The radiograph shows two bubbles. One is the dilation of the stomach in the LUQ and the proximal duodenum in the RUQ.
What forms the main pancreatic duct? Where does it empty into?
After the union of the pancreatic buds, the endoderm derived duct systems of the buds fuse to form the main pancreatic duct.
The pancreatic duct empties into the bile duct.
What forms the pancreatic stroma?
It is derived from mesenchymal cells of the dorsal mesentery.
What separates the right and left hepatic lobes?
The falciform ligament separates the right and left hepatic lobes. The lobes form the convex diaphragmatic surface of the liver.
Where is the subphrenic recess located?
It is between the diaphragm and the anterior and superior aspects of the right and left hepatic lobes. The recess is a superior extension of the greater sac.
What is the subhepatic space?
It is a portion of the supracolic compartment inferior to the visceral (inferior) surface of the liver.
What is the hepatorenal recess?
It is a recess between the right hepatic lobe and the right kidney. It is an extension of the subhepatic space.
In the supine position, fluid in the supracolic compartment drains into the hepatorenal recess.
What forms the hepatoduodenal ligament and what does it do?
The free border of the lesser omentum forms the hepatoduodenal ligament and it conveys the bile duct, proper hepatic artery and hepatic portal vein to the liver.
What are the cuadate and quadrate lobes? What are the visceral surfaces of the lobes associated with?
cuadate and quadrate lobes are accessory parts of the large right hepatic lobe
visceral surface of the cuadate lobe: IVC
visceral surface of the quadrate lobe: gallbladder
What is the arterial supply of the right and left lobes of the liver?
common hepatic artery –> proper hepatic artery (terminal branch) –> bifurcates to right and left hepatic arteries that enter the lobes of the liver with the right and left hepatic ducts
Why would clamping the omental foramen’s anterior border (the Pringle maneuver) rapidly control hepatic hemorrhaging during emergency surgery?
It would compress the hepatic artery and hepatic portal vein so hemorrhaging can be controlled.
How is the liver commonly palpated? How do increases in central venous pressure or metastatic carcinomas from the large intestine cause hepatomegaly and where is the liver palpated under the conditions?
The liver may be palpated in a supine person because of the inferior movement of the diaphragm and liver that accompanies deep inspiration. Place the left hand posterior behind the lower rib cage. Then, put the right hand on the persons RUQ, lateral to the rectus abdominis and inferior to the costal margin. Ask the person to take a deep breath as the examiner presses postero-superiorly with the right hand and pulls anteriorly with the left hand.
Any rise in central venous pressure is directly transmitted to the liver which enlarges as it becomes engorged with blood.
When the liver is massively enlarged, its inferior edge may be readily palpated below the right costal margin and may even reach the pelvic brim in the RLQ of the abdomen.
What is the pathogenesis of cirrhosis of the liver and why does it cause portal hypertension? Why is metabolic evidence of liver failure late to appear?
There is progressive destruction of hepatocytes and replacement of these cells by fat and fibrous tissue in cirrhosis. Alcoholic cirrhosis is the most common cause of portal hypertension because the fibrous tissue surrounds the intrahepatic blood vessels and binary ducts, making the liver firm. This impedes circulation of blood. The liver has great functional reserve therefore the metabolic evidence of liver failure is late to appear.
How is a liver biopsy properly obtained?
The liver is located in the right hypochondriac region where it receives protection from the overlying thoracic cage, the needle is commonly directed through the right 10th intercostal space in the midaxillary line. The person is asked to hold his or her breath in full expiration to reduce the costodiaphragmatic recess and to lessen the possibility of damaging the lung and contaminating the pleural cavity.
What is the subcutaneous paraumbilical vein?
It originates near the umbilicus and is a tributary of the hepatic portal vein.
What happens to the paraumbilical vein inferior to the sternal xiphoid process?
The paraumbilical vein pierces the linea alba and parietal peritoneum to enter the falciform ligament. It courses inferior to the border of the falciform ligament to join the portal vein.
What is the pathogenesis of caput medusa?
In severe cases of portal obstruction, the veins of the anterior abdominal wall (normally caval tributaries) that anastomose with the para-umbilical veins (normally portal tributaries) may become varicose and look somewhat like small snakes radiating under the skin around the umbilicus.
Why does a portacaval anastomosis or a splenorenal shunt surgically reduce portal hypertension?
It diverts blood from the portal venous system to the systemic venous system by creating communication between the hepatic portal vein and the IVC.
What happens to lymph from the liver?
Before reaching the thoracic duct, lymph from the liver is filtered by hepatic lymph nodes in the hepatoduodenal ligament and the celiac lymph nodes around the celiac trunk. Half the lymph entering the thoracic duct is liver lymph.
What forms hepatic triads? Where do they course?
Hepatic portal vein
Proper hepatic arteries
Hepatic ducts
They course in the liver stroma.
What creates subunits of the hepatic lobes? What surrounds the margins of these subunits?
Polyhedral hepatic lobules create subunits of hepatic lobes. In the lobules, rows of hepatocytes are separated by the hepatic sinusoids that terminate in central veins.
Portal triads form an incomplete ring around the peripheral margins of the polyhedral hepatic lobes.