Dictionary Definition
liver
Noun
1 large and complicated reddish-brown glandular
organ located in the upper right portion of the abdominal cavity;
secretes bile and functions in metabolism of protein and
carbohydrate and fat; synthesizes substances involved in the
clotting of the blood; synthesizes vitamin A; detoxifies poisonous
substances and breaks down worn-out erythrocytes
2 liver of an animal used as meat
3 a person who has a special life style; "a high
liver"
4 someone who lives in a place; "a liver in
cities"
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Pronunciation
-
- Rhymes: -ɪvə(r)
Noun
- A large organ in the body that stores and metabolizes nutrients, destroys toxins and produces bile. Responsible for thousands of biochemical reactions.
- This livestock organ used as food.
- A dark brown colour, tinted with red and gray, like that of
liver.
- liver colour:
Derived terms
Translations
organ of the body
- Albanian: mëlçi a zëzë
- Aramaic:
- Catalan: fetge
- Chinese: 肝脏 (gān zāng)
- Croatian: jetra n, pl
- Czech: játra
- Danish: lever
- Dutch: lever
- Erzya: максо (makso)
- Esperanto: hepato
- Finnish: maksa
- French: foie
- Galician: fígado
- German: Leber
- Greek: συκώτι [sykóti] , ήπαρ [ípar]
- Hebrew: כבד
- Hindi: कलेजा
- Hungarian: máj
- Icelandic: lifur
- Indonesian: hati
- Italian: fegato
- Japanese: 肝臓 (かんぞう, kanzou)
- Korean: 간장 (肝臓 ganjang); 간 (肝, gan)
- Kurdish: جهرگ
- Latvian: aknas f|p
- Lithuanian: kepenys p
- Malagasy: aty
- Maltese: fwied
- Maori: ate
- Pitjantjatjara: alu
- Polish: wątroba
- Portuguese: fígado
- Romanian: ficat
- Russian: печень
- Slovak: pečeň
- Slovene: jetra
- Spanish: hígado
- Swedish: lever
- Tagalog: atay
- Telugu: కాలేయం (kaaleayam)
- Tok Pisin: lewa
- Turkish: karaciğer
organ as food
- Dutch: lever , levertjes m, dim, pl
- Erzya: максо (makso)
- Finnish: maksa
- French: foie
- Greek: συκώτι
- Icelandic: lifur
- Indonesian: hati
- Italian: fegato
- Japanese: レバー (rebā)
- Kurdish:
- Latvian: aknas f|p
- Lithuanian: kepenys p
- Maltese: fwied
- Portuguese: fígado
- Russian: печень
- Slovene: jetrca n pl
- Swedish: lever
colour
Adjective
(the noun as a modifier) liver (no or forms)- Concerning or relating to the liver.
- liver transplant
- Intended for the liver.
- liver salts
- Of food, made of liver.
- liver pâté
Translations
concerning the liver
intended for the liver
made of liver
colour
- Hungarian: májszínű
Derived terms
- cod-liver oil
- hepatotoxin
- lily-livered
- liver fluke
- liver salts
- liver sausage
- liver spot
- liverish
- liverwort
- liverwurst
Related terms
See also
Breton
Noun
liverExtensive Definition
The liver is the largest internal organ in the
human body, and is an organ
present in vertebrates and some other
animals. The liver is necessary for survival, a human can only last
up to 24 hours without liver function. It plays a major role in
metabolism and has a
number of functions in the body, including glycogen storage, decomposition
of red blood cells, plasma
protein synthesis, and detoxification. The liver is also the
largest gland in the
human
body. It lies below the diaphragm in the thoracic region of the
abdomen. It produces bile,
an alkaline compound which aids in digestion, via the
emulsification of lipids.
It also performs and regulates a wide variety of high-volume
biochemical reactions requiring very specialized tissues.
Medical terms related to the liver often start in
hepato- or hepatic from the Greek word
for liver, hēpar (ήπαρ).
Anatomy
The adult human liver normally weighs between 1.4
- 1.6 kilograms (3.1 -
3.5 pounds), and it is a soft, pinkish-brown, triangular organ.
Averaging about the size of an American football in adults, it is
both the largest internal organ and the largest gland in the human
body.
It is located on the right side of the upper
abdomen below the diaphragm anatomy. The liver lies to the right of
the stomach and overlies the gallbladder.
Flow of blood
The splenic vein joins the inferior mesenteric vein, which then together join the superior mesenteric vein to form the hepatic portal vein, bringing venous blood from the spleen, pancreas, stomach, small intestine, and large intestine, so that the liver can process the nutrients and by-products of food digestion.The hepatic
veins of the blood can be from other branches such as the
superior
mesenteric artery.
Both the portal venules & the hepatic
arterioles enter approximately one million identical lobules
acini, likened to and
changes in the size of chylomicrons
lipoproteins of dietary origin brought about by the quantity
& types of food fats.
Approximately 60% to 80% of the blood flow to the
liver is from the portal venous system, and 1/4 is from the hepatic
artery.
Flow of bile
The bile produced in the liver is collected in bile canaliculi, which merge to form bile ducts.These eventually drain into the right and left
hepatic ducts, which in turn merge to form the common
hepatic duct. The cystic duct
(from the gallbladder) joins with the
common
hepatic duct to form the common
bile duct.
Bile can either drain directly into the duodenum via the common
bile duct or be temporarily stored in the gallbladder via the cystic
duct. The common
bile duct and the pancreatic
duct enter the duodenum together at the
ampulla of
Vater.
The branchings of the bile ducts
resemble those of a tree, and indeed the term "biliary
tree" is commonly used in this setting.
Regeneration
The liver is among the few internal human organs capable of natural regeneration of lost tissue; as little as 25% of remaining liver can regenerate into a whole liver again.This is predominantly due to the hepatocytes reentering the
cell
cycle (i.e. the hepatocytes go from the quiescent G0 phase to
the G1 phase and undergo mitosis). There is also some evidence of
bipotential stem cells,
called ovalocyte
(o´və-lo-sīt), which exist in the Canals of
Hering. These cells can differentiate into either hepatocytes or cholangiocytes (cells
that line the bile
ducts).
Traditional (Surface) anatomy
Peritoneal ligaments
Apart from a patch where it connects to the diaphragm, the liver is covered entirely by visceral peritoneum, a thin, double-layered membrane that reduces friction against other organs. The peritoneum folds back on itself to form the falciform ligament and the right and left triangular ligaments.These "ligaments" are in no way
related to the true anatomic ligaments in joints, and have essentially no
functional importance, but they are easily recognizable surface
landmarks.
Lobes
Traditional gross anatomy divided the liver into
four lobes
based on surface features. The falciform
ligament is visible on the front (anterior side) of the liver.
This divides the liver into a left
anatomical lobe, and a right
anatomical lobe.
If the liver flipped over, to look at it from
behind (the visceral
surface), there are two additional lobes between the right and
left. These are the caudate lobe
(the more superior), and below this the quadrate
lobe.
From behind, the lobes are divided up by the
ligamentum
venosum and ligamentum
teres (anything left of these is the left lobe), the
transverse fissure (or porta
hepatis) divides the caudate
from the quadrate
lobe, and the right sagittal
fossa, which the inferior
vena cava runs over, separates these two lobes from the right
lobe.
Each of the lobes is made up of lobules, a vein
goes from the centre of each lobule which then joins to the hepatic
vein to carry blood out from the liver.
On the surface of the lobules there are ducts,
veins and arteries that carry fluids to and from them.
Modern (Functional) anatomy
The central area where the common bile duct, hepatic portal vein, and hepatic artery enter is the hilum or "porta hepatis". The duct, vein, and artery divide into left and right branches, and the portions of the liver supplied by these branches constitute the functional left and right lobes.The liver performs over 500 jobs, and produces
over 1,000 essential enzymes.
The functional lobes are separated by a plane
joining the gallbladder fossa to the inferior vena cava. This
separates the liver into the true right and left lobes. The middle
hepatic vein also demarcates the true right and left lobes. The
right lobe is further divided into an anterior and posterior segment by the right
hepatic vein. The left lobe is divided into the medial and lateral segments by the left
hepatic vein. The fissure for the ligamentum
teres (the ligamentum teres becomes the falciform ligament)
also separates the medial and lateral segments. The medial segment
is what used to be called the quadrate
lobe. In the widely used Couinaud or
"French" system, the functional lobes are further divided into a
total of eight subsegments based on a transverse plane through the
bifurcation of the main portal vein. The caudate lobe
is a separate structure which receives blood flow from both the
right- and left-sided vascular branches. The subsegments
corresponding to the anatomical lobes are as follows:
- or lobe in the Caudate's case.
Caudate Superior subsegment of the lateral
segment Inferior subsegment of the lateral segment
Superior subsegment of the medial segment
Inferior subsegment of the medial segment
Inferior subsegment of the anterior segment
Inferior subsegment of the posterior segment Superior subsegment of
the posterior segment Superior subsegment of the anterior
segment
Physiology
The various functions of the liver are carried out by the liver cells or hepatocytes.- The liver produces and excretes bile (a greenish liquid) required for emulsifying fats. Some of the bile drains directly into the duodenum, and some is stored in the gallbladder.
- The liver performs several roles in carbohydrate
metabolism:
- Gluconeogenesis (the synthesis of glucose from certain amino acids, lactate or glycerol)
- Glycogenolysis (the breakdown of glycogen into glucose) (muscle tissues can also do this)
- Glycogenesis (the formation of glycogen from glucose)
- The breakdown of insulin and other hormones
- The liver is responsible for the mainstay of protein metabolism. For instance, the liver can convert lactic acid to alanine.
- The liver also performs several roles in lipid metabolism:
- Cholesterol synthesis
- Lipogenesis, the production of triglycerides (fats).
- The liver produces coagulation factors I (fibrinogen), II (prothrombin), V, VII, IX, X and XI, as well as protein C, protein S and antithrombin.
- The liver breaks down haemoglobin, creating metabolites that are added to bile as pigment (bilirubin and biliverdin).
- The liver breaks down toxic substances and most medicinal products in a process called drug metabolism. This sometimes results in toxication, when the metabolite is more toxic than its precursor.
- The liver converts ammonia to urea.
- The liver stores a multitude of substances, including glucose (in the form of glycogen), vitamin B12, iron, and copper.
- In the first trimester fetus, the liver is the main site of red blood cell production. By the 32nd week of gestation, the bone marrow has almost completely taken over that task.
- The liver is responsible for immunological effects- the reticuloendothelial system of the liver contains many immunologically active cells, acting as a 'sieve' for antigens carried to it via the portal system.
- The liver produces albumin, the major osmolar component of blood serum.
Diseases of the liver
Many diseases of the liver are accompanied by jaundice caused by increased levels of bilirubin in the system. The bilirubin results from the breakup of the hemoglobin of dead red blood cells; normally, the liver removes bilirubin from the blood and excretes it through bile.There are also many pediatric liver disease,
including biliary
atresia,
alpha-1 antitrypsin deficiency, alagille
syndrome, and
progressive familial intrahepatic cholestasis, to name but a
few.
Herbal Treatments
The most commonly used herbs for liver problems
include Milk
Thistle, Dandelion Root,
Licorice
Root, and Chicory root.
Milk Thistle
is the best studied herb for hepatitis, and has shown to help
protect and regenerate liver cells.
Liver transplantation
Human liver transplant was first performed by Thomas Starzl in USA and Roy Calne in Cambridge, England in 1963 and 1965 respectively.Liver
transplantation is the only option for those with irreversible
liver failure. Most transplants are done for chronic liver diseases
leading to cirrhosis,
such as chronic hepatitis C, alcoholism, autoimmune hepatitis, and
many others. Less commonly, liver transplantation is done for
fulminant
hepatic failure, in which liver failure occurs over days to
weeks.
Liver allografts for transplant
usually come from non-living donors who have died from fatal brain
injury.
Living donor liver transplantation is a technique in which a
portion of a living person's liver is removed and used to replace
the entire liver of the recipient. This was first performed in
1989 for
pediatric liver transplantation. Only 20% of an adult's liver
(Couinaud segments 2 and 3) is needed to serve as a liver allograft
for an infant or small child.
More recently, adult-to-adult liver
transplantation has been done using the donor's right hepatic lobe
which amounts to 60% of the liver. Due to the ability of the liver
to regenerate,
both the donor and recipient end up with normal liver function if
all goes well. This procedure is more controversial as it entails
performing a much larger operation on the donor, and indeed there
have been at least 2 donor deaths out of the first several hundred
cases. A recent publication has addressed the problem of donor
mortality, and at least 14 cases have been found. The risk of
postoperative complications (and death) is far greater in right
sided hepatectomy than left sided operations.
With the recent advances of non-invasive imaging,
living liver donors usually have to undergo imaging examinations
for liver anatomy to decide if the anatomy is feasible for
donation. The evaluation is usually performed by multi-detector row
computed tomography (MDCT) and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI).
MDCT is good in vascular anatomy and volumetry. MRI is used for
biliary tree anatomy. Donors with very unusual vascular anatomy,
which makes them unsuitable for donation, could be screened out to
avoid unnecessary operation.
Development
Fetal blood supply
In the growing fetus, a major source of blood to the liver is the umbilical vein which supplies nutrients to the growing fetus. The umbilical vein enters the abdomen at the umbilicus, and passes upward along the free margin of the falciform ligament of the liver to the inferior surface of the liver. There it joins with the left branch of the portal vein. The ductus venosus carries blood from the left portal vein to the left hepatic vein and then to the inferior vena cava, allowing placental blood to bypass the liver.In the fetus, the liver develops throughout
normal gestation, and does not perform the normal filtration of the
infant liver. The liver does not perform digestive processes
because the fetus does not consume meals directly, but receives
nourishment from the mother via the placenta. The fetal liver
releases some blood stem cells that migrate to the fetal thymus, so initially the lymphocytes, called T-cells, are
created from fetal liver stem cells. Once the fetus is delivered,
the formation of blood stem cells in infants shifts to the red
bone
marrow.
After birth, the umbilical vein and ductus
venosus are completely obliterated two to five days postpartum; the
former becomes the ligamentum
teres and the latter becomes the ligamentum
venosum. In the disease state of cirrhosis and portal
hypertension, the umbilical vein can open up again.
Liver as food
Mammal and bird livers are commonly eaten as food by humans. Liver can be baked, broiled, or fried (often served as liver and onions) or eaten raw (liver sashimi), but is perhaps most commonly made into spreads (examples include liver pâté, foie gras, chopped liver, and leverpostej), or sausages such as Braunschweiger and liverwurst). Liver sausages may also be used as spreads.Animal livers are rich in iron and Vitamin A, and
cod
liver oil is commonly used as a dietary supplement. Very high
doses of Vitamin A can be toxic; in 1913, Antarctic
explorers Douglas
Mawson and Xavier Mertz
were both poisoned, the latter fatally, from eating husky liver. In
the US, the USDA specifies 3000 μg per day as a tolerable upper
limit, which amounts to about 50 g of raw pork liver, or 30-90g of
polar-bear liver. However, acute vitamin A poisoning is not likely
to result from liver consumption, since it is present in a less
toxic form than in many dietary supplements.
Cultural allusions
In Greek mythology, Prometheus was punished by the gods for revealing fire to humans by being chained to a rock where a vulture (or an eagle) would peck out his liver, which would regenerate overnight. Curiously, the liver is the only human internal organ that actually can regenerate itself to a significant extent; this characteristic may have already been known to the Greeks due to survived injuries in battle.The Talmud (tractate
Berakhot 61b) refers to the liver as the seat of anger, with the gallbladder counteracting
this.
In Arabic and Persian language, the liver is used
in figurative speech to refer to courage and strong feelings, or
"their best," e.g. "This Mecca has thrown to
you the pieces of its liver!"
The legend of Liver-Eating
Johnson says that he would cut out and eat the liver of each
man killed.
In the motion picture
The Message, Hind bint
Utbah is implied or portrayed eating the liver of
Hamza ibn ‘Abd al-Muttalib during the Battle of
Uhud.
Inuit will not eat
the liver of polar bears
(due to the fact a polar bear's liver contains so much Vitamin A as
to be poisonous to humans) or seals
Further reading
- The following are standard medical textbooks:
- Eugene R. Schiff, Michael F. Sorrell, Willis C. Maddrey, eds. Schiff's diseases of the liver, 9th ed. Philadelphia : Lippincott, Williams & Wilkins, 2003. ISBN 0-7817-3007-4
- Sheila Sherlock, James Dooley. Diseases of the liver and biliary system, 11th ed. Oxford, UK ; Malden, MA : Blackwell Science. 2002. ISBN 0-632-05582-0
- David Zakim, Thomas D. Boyer. eds. Hepatology: a textbook of liver disease, 4th ed. Philadelphia: Saunders. 2003. ISBN 0-7216-9051-3
- These are for the lay reader or patient:
- Sanjiv Chopra. The Liver Book: A Comprehensive Guide to Diagnosis, Treatment, and Recovery, Atria, 2002, ISBN 0-7434-0585-4
- Melissa Palmer. Dr. Melissa Palmer's Guide to Hepatitis and Liver Disease: What You Need to Know, Avery Publishing Group; Revised edition May 24, 2004, ISBN 1-58333-188-3. her webpage.
- Howard J. Worman. The Liver Disorders Sourcebook, McGraw-Hill, 1999, ISBN 0-7373-0090-6. his Columbia University web site, "Diseases of the liver"
References
Gallery
Image:Digestive system showing bile
duct.png|Accessory digestive system. Image:BauchOrgane
wn.png|Digestive organs. Image:Portal triad.JPG|Portal triad
"top") surface from Gray's
Anatomy (1918) "bottom") surface from Gray's
Anatomy (1918)
External links
- electron microscopic images of the liver (Dr. Jastrow's EM-atlas)
- Elevated liver enzymes information
- Canadian Liver Foundation Official Website
- Liver Info: Youth-Oriented Website. Created by Liver Info Students' Association (LISA), Official Chapter of Canadian Liver Foundation
- Children's Liver Association for Support Services, C.L.A.S.S. A large non-profit organization. An online Support Group full of resources, materials and stories; includes a Community Discussion Forum and Chat Room
- The American Liver Foundation
- American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases (AASLD)
- American Liver Society (ALS)
- WikiLiver — a wiki dedicated to the liver
- "It's Dangerous to Ignore Your Liver" — information provided by the American Liver Foundation
- "The Liver and its Diseases" — information at h2g2
- Liver Families — an online support group for families whose lives have been affected by pediatric liver disease and transplant issues
- Children's Liver Disease Foundation — an organisation dedicated to fighting childhood liver disease and supporting affected families
- Liver Specialists of Texas: a site designed for patients with liver disease, located in Houston, Texas USA
- Autoimmune immune liver disease
- British Liver Trust - includes patient info oriented to British situations.
liver in Arabic: كبد
liver in Aymara: K'iwcha
liver in Min Nan: Koaⁿ
liver in Bosnian: Jetra
liver in Bulgarian: Черен дроб
liver in Catalan: Fetge
liver in Chuvash: Пĕвер
liver in Czech: Játra
liver in Welsh: Afu
liver in Danish: Lever
liver in German: Leber
liver in Dhivehi: ފުރަމޭ
liver in Estonian: Maks
liver in Modern Greek (1453-): Ήπαρ
liver in Spanish: Hígado
liver in Esperanto: Hepato
liver in Basque: Gibel
liver in French: Foie
liver in Irish: Ae
liver in Scottish Gaelic: Àdha
liver in Galician: Fígado
liver in Korean: 간
liver in Hindi: कलेजा
liver in Croatian: Jetra
liver in Ido: Hepato
liver in Indonesian: Hati
liver in Icelandic: Lifur
liver in Italian: Fegato
liver in Hebrew: כבד
liver in Javanese: Ati
liver in Georgian: ღვიძლი
liver in Kurdish: Kezeb
liver in Latin: Iecur
liver in Latvian: Aknas
liver in Lithuanian: Kepenys
liver in Lingala: Libale
liver in Lombard: Fídech
liver in Hungarian: Máj
liver in Macedonian: Црн дроб
liver in Malayalam: കരള്
liver in Maltese: Fwied
liver in Malay (macrolanguage):
Hati
nah:Ēltapachtli
liver in Dutch: Lever
liver in Japanese: 肝臓
liver in Norwegian: Leveren
liver in Norwegian Nynorsk: Lever
liver in Occitan (post 1500): Fetge
liver in Pangasinan: Altey
liver in Polish: Wątroba
liver in Portuguese: Fígado
liver in Romanian: Ficat
liver in Quechua: Kukupin
liver in Russian: Печень
liver in Albanian: Mëlçia
liver in Sicilian: Fìcatu
liver in Simple English: Liver
liver in Slovak: Pečeň
liver in Slovenian: Jetra
liver in Serbian: Јетра
liver in Serbo-Croatian: Jetra
liver in Sundanese: Ati
liver in Finnish: Maksa
liver in Swedish: Lever
liver in Tamil: கல்லீரல்
liver in Telugu: కాలేయం
liver in Thai: ตับ
liver in Vietnamese: Gan
liver in Tajik: Ҷигар
liver in Turkish: Karaciğer
liver in Ukrainian: Печінка
liver in Yiddish: לעבער
liver in Dimli: Kezebe
liver in Chinese: 肝臟
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
abatis,
abdomen, absorption, anus, appendix, assimilation, bile, blind gut, bowels, brain, brains, cecum, chitterlings, cholangitis, cholecystitis, cirrhosis, cockscomb, colon, denizen, digestion, digestive system,
duodenum, dweller, endocardium, entrails, foregut, gastric juice,
gastrointestinal tract, giblets, gizzard, guts, haslet, heart, hepatitis, hepatoma, hindgut, icterus, infectious hepatitis,
ingestion, innards, inner mechanism,
insides, internals, intestinal juice,
intestine, inwards, jaundice, jejunum, kidney, kidneys, kishkes, large intestine, liver
and lights, lung, marrow, midgut, occupant, pancreas, pancreatic digestion,
pancreatic juice, perineum, predigestion, pump, pylorus, rectum, resident, resider, saliva, salivary digestion,
salivary glands, secondary digestion, serum hepatitis, small
intestine, spleen,
stomach, sweetbread, ticker, tongue, tripe, tripes, vermiform appendix,
viscera, vitals, works