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Not many people appreciate the importance and the intricacies
of their liver until there is a problem with it. Weighing
about three pounds, the liver is a production plant,
a refinery, and a warehouse all in one organ.
It processes the various components in the food received
from the intestines and removes toxins from the bloodstream.
This "manufacturing plant" also produces
bile, a substance that is essential to the digestive
process, as well as albumin and other important proteins
required for normal clotting of the blood, certain hormones,
and cholesterol.
The liver is also a storehouse for vitamins (such as
vitamins A, D, E and K), minerals, and glycogen. Glycogen
is converted into glucose by the liver, enabling the
body to handle the call for quick bursts of energy.
It stores iron, and helps transport fat stores as well.
Unlike any other organ in the body, a damaged liver
can regenerate itself (as in the Promethean Greek legend),
provided that there is no cirrhosis- an accumulation
of scar tissue. The liver's ability to grow back is
what enables surgeons to remove tumor-containing sections
of the organ or to take a healthy section of the liver
from a living donor for transplant. Several weeks after
surgery, the liver grows back to its original size,
but not its original shape.
The liver is located behind the lower right ribs. The
organ is connected by ligaments to the diaphragm on
its upper section, and on the left, to the stomach.
The liver receives approximately 3-4 pints of blood
every minute. Unlike other organs, which receive blood
via only one artery, the liver receives blood from an
artery (hepatic artery) and also a vein (portal vein).
The liver has three primary sections, or lobes: right,
left, and caudate. The right lobe is the largest lobe-accounting
for approximately 3/5 th-2/3rd of the liver size.
The gallbladder is a pear-shaped sac, which stores
the bile produced by the liver. The bile passes through
a series of bile ducts, or passageways (similar to the
drainage system in and out of a house), known collectively
as the biliary tree. The bile continues its journey
into the gallbladder, where it is stored in between
the meals. When food enters the intestine, the gallbladder
contracts and releases bile into the small intestine.
There, the bile mixes with the food and further aids
in digestion, especially of fatty foods.
Although not considered part of the hepatobiliary
system, the location and function of the pancreas is
closely associated with the bile producing and storing
organs. The pancreas is a small organ located behind
the stomach. .The bile duct travels through the pancreas
immediately before it enters the small intestine. Thus
any problem in the pancreas (such as cancer, pancreatitis
and cysts) that is adjacent to the bile duct often causes
blockage of the bile duct and jaundice.
Many people are familiar with one of the roles of the
pancreas, which is the production of insulin. But another
function of the pancreas, performed by its exocrine
gland,is to secrete pancreatic “juice” that
also aids in the digestive process. Like bile, pancreatic
juice is transported by ducts. Both the common bile
duct and the pancreatic duct empty into the duodenum,
part of the small intestine.

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