functions of the liver
hepatic portal vein leads to the
digestive tract and major abdominal organs
hepatic veins are valveless veins that
empty into the inferior vena cava
physiologic and metabolic functions of the liver
metabolic functions:
sugars ->
stored as glycogen, converted to glucose, used to make fats
metabolic functions:
proteins ->
synthesized from amino acids; ammonia made into urea
metabolic functions:
fats ->
oxidized for energy, synthesized, packaged into lipoproteins
what is the major cause of prehepatic jaundice
excessive hemolysis of red blood cells
intrahepatic jaundice is caused by
disorders that directly affect the ability of the liver to remove bilirubin from the blood or conjugate it so it can eliminated in the bile
posthepatic occurs when
bile flow is obstructed between the liver and the intestine
what are the causes of jaundice?
liver disease causes:
alcohol-induced liver disease stages
1- fatty liver disease
2- alcoholic hepatitis (start to see symptoms)
3- alcoholic cirrhosis (blood flow impairment)
what are some things that increase drug elimination?
alcohol and barbituates and increased enzymes
a person has a poor diet and is consuming grapefruit juice… what could this lead to?
decreased drug elimination
autoimmune destruction of bile ducts
primary biliary cirrhosis
prolonged obstruction of extrabiliry tree
secondary biliary cirrhosis
liver disease to failure is
cirrhosis
in cirrhosis, nodular and fibrotic liver tissue replace
hepatic tissue
hematologic disorders are characterized by
anemia, thrombcytopenia, coagulation defects, leukopenia
endocrine disorders are characterized by
fluid retention, hypokalemia, disordered sexual functions
skin disorders are characterized by
jaundice, red palms, spider nevi
hepatorenal syndrome
azotemia, increased plasma creatinine, oliguria
hepatic encephalopathy
asterixis, confusion, coma, convulsion