Liver




 Anatomy and Physiology of the liver  Human liver development begins during the third week of gestation and does not acheive mature architecture until about 15 years of age. It reaches its largest relative size, 10% of fetal weight, around the ninth week. It is about 5% of body weight in the healthy neonate. The liver is about 2% of body weight in the adult. It weighs around 1400gm in an adult female and about 1800gm in the male.  The liver is located in the right upper quadrant of the abdomen, just below the diaphragm. It is almost completely behind the rib cage but the lower edge may be palpated along the right costal margin during inspiration. A connective tissue layer called Glisson's capsule covers the surface of the liver. The capsule extends to invest all but the smallest the vessels within the liver.  The falciform ligament attaches the liver to the abdominal wall and diaphragm and divides the liver into a larger right lobe and a smaller left lobe.  In 1957, the French surgeon Claude Couinaud described 8 liver segments. Since then, radiographic studies describe an average of twenty segments based on distribution of blood supply. Each segment has its own independent vascular and biliary branches. Surgeons utilize these independent segments when performing liver resection for tumor or transplantation. There are at least three reasons why segmental resection is superior to simple wedge resection. First, segmental resection minimizes blood loss because vascular density is reduced at the borders between segments. Second, it results in improved tumor removal for those cancers which are disseminated via intrasegmental branches of the portal vein. Third, segmental resection spares normal liver allowing for repeat partial hepatectomy.  Each segment of the liver is further divided into lobules. Lobules are usually represented as discrete hexagonal aggregations of hepatocytes. The hepatocytes assemble as plates which radiate from a central vein. Lobules are served by arterial, venous and biliary vessels at their periphery. This model is useful for teaching purposes but more closely resembles the adult pig lobule than the human. Human lobules have little connective tissue separating one lobule from another. The paucity of connective tissue makes it more difficult to identify the portal triads and the boundaries of individual lobules. Central veins are easier to identify due to their large lumen and because they lack connective tissue that invests the portal triad vessels.  Lobules consist of hepatocytes and the spaces between them. Sinusoids are the spaces between the plates of hepatocytes. Sinusoids receive blood from the portal triads. About 25% of total cardiac output enters the sinusoids via terminal portal and arterial vessels. Seventy-five percent of the blood flowing into the liver comes through the portal vein; the remaining 25% is oxygenated blood that is carried by the hepatic artery. The blood mixes, passes through the sinusoids, bathes the hepatocytes and drains into the central vein. About 1.5 liters of blood exit the liver every minute.  The liver is central to a multitude of physiologic functions, including: • Clearance of damaged red blood cells & bacteria by phagocytosis • Nutrient management • Synthesis of plasma proteins such as albumin, globulin, protein C, insulin-like growth factor, clotting factors etc. • Biotransformation of toxins, hormones, and drugs • Vitamin & mineral storage  Phagocytosis Red blood cell (RBC) lifespan is about 120 days. Reticuloendothelial (macrophage) cells in the spleen, liver and bone marrow are primarily responsible for clearing pathogens and debris. Kupffer cells are reticuloendothelial cells resident in the liver sinusoids that scavange damaged RBCs and bacteria as they pass through. Hundreds of millions of RBCs are removed by the reticuloendothelial system every minute. Kupffer cells, like other reticuloendothelial macrophages, lyse RBCs into heme and globin. Globin is further catabolized into polypeptide components for reuse. Heme is broken into biliverdin and iron. Biliverdin is converted to bilirubin. Iron is transported by transferrin to the liver and spleen for storage and to the bone for hematopoiesis.  About 85% of bilirubin is derived from lysis of RBCs, the rest comes from the breakdown of other hemoproteins like myoglobin, cytochromes and peroxidases. Kupffer cells like other reticuloendothelial macrophages release bilirubin into the blood. In the blood, bilirubin binds to albumin. The albumin/bilirubin compound is small enough to pass through the endothelial fenestrae and into the space of Disse where it contacts the hepatocyte.  Hepatocytes cleave bilirubin from albumin and absorb the bilirubin. In the hepatocyte cytoplasm, bilirubin is conjugated to glucouronic acid. Bilirubin uridine diphosphate glucuronyl transferase (UDPGT) catalyzes the bonding of glucuronic acid and bilirubin to produce water-soluble bilirubin. Water soluble conjugated bilirubin is secreted into canaliculi along with water, electrolytes, bicarbonate, bile acids, salts, cholesterol and phospholipids. This combination is called bile and serves as a detergent to keep bile soluble in the biliary tract. Bile drains from the canaliculi>canal of Hering>bile ducts>common hepatic duct>gallbladder>common bile duct>ampulla of  vater>duodenum.  In the duodenum, bile salts attach to fat globules forming smaller micelles that collect fatty acids and glycerol. The micelles travel to the jejunum where they deliver their cargo to the intestinal epithelium. Inside the epithelial cells glycerol and fatty acids are rejoined to form triglycerides. Finally triglycerides are joined to cholesterol and proteins are added to the surface; creating a chylomicron.  Lipid management The liver receives a variety of lipid forms including: chylomicrons remnants, very low density lipoproteins (VLDL), low density lipoproteins (LDL), high density lipoproteins (HDL) and fatty acids. Large lipoprotein molecules are broken into smaller units by the lytic action of lipoprotein lipase (LPL) expressed on endothelium of vessels. Circulating lipoproteins small enough to enter the space of Disse attach to receptors on the hepatocyte. These lipoprotein remnants are held near the heptocyte surface and exposed to hepatic lipase compounds. Low Density Lipoprotein receptors transfer the lipoprotein fragments into the hepatocyte by the process of endocytosis.  • Chylomicrons are the product of intestinal packaging of dietary fats. Chylomicrons are produced in the duodenal villi and secreted into the lymph lacteals for delivery to the thoracic duct > subclavian vein > superior vena cava > right ventricle > lungs > Left ventricle > aorta > hepatic artery>sinusoid.Chylomicrons range from 75-1200nm in diameter. They contain 98% lipids and 2% protein. Chylomicrons are degraded in the blood by contact with LPL. Chylomicrons become smaller and more dense as fatty acids are stripped off. Loss of fatty acids results in chylomicron remnants of various sizes and density when they finally reach the liver. Hepatic lipase expressed by the hepatic sinusoidal endothelium and hepatocytes continues the remnant degradation. • Very low density lipoproteins (VLDL) are synthesized primarily in the hepatocyte. VLDLs range from 30-80nm. They contain 90% lipids and 10% protein. Their purpose is to transport triglycerides made in the liver into plasma for use or storage outside the liver. • Low density lipoprotein (LDL) is formed from VLDLs in the plasma by the action of lipase. LDL diameter is about 20nm. They contain 70% lipids and 30% protein. LDLs distribute cholesterol throughout the body. Cholesterol is an important constituent of: VLDL, cell membranes, hormones, bile etc. • High density lipoprotein (HDL) is small lipoprotein particles (5-15nm) formed in the liver and intestine. They range from 5-15nm in diameter. They contain 50% lipids and 50% protein. HDLs collect cholesterol & lipoprotein fragments from the blood and blood vessel plaques and return them to the liver for repurposing. • Fatty acids are linear hydrocarbon chains that are the major constituents of dietary lipoproteins (triglycerides). The liver degrades lipoproteins with hepatic lipase or synthesizes fatty acids from carbohydrate sources. When carbohydrate energy sources are low fatty acids are oxidized for energy.  Carbohydrate management: When energy intake exceeds energy output the body stores the surplus glucose as glycogen or triglyceride. When energy output exceeds energy intake the body reacts by releasing stored energy as glucose and fatty acids.  Glucose is the preferred energy source for most tissues but the body maintains very limited supplies of free circulating glucose. Certain tissues like the brain, RBCs, lens and cornea use glucose almost exclusively. To supply these tissues when blood glucose drops the liver lyses glycogen. Glycogen is a complex molecule composed of thousands of glucose units. Hepatocytes and myocytes store glucose as intracellular glycogen granules. The liver is central to blood glucose management because the liver is the only organ that can store and release glucose into the blood for use by other organs. After a meal the liver removes excess blood glucose and stores up to 8% of its weight as glycogen. Myocytes can store about 1-2% of total muscle mass as glycogen but once glucose enters a myocyte it must be used or stored by that myocyte. Myocytes lack the enzyme necessary to release glucose into the circulation.  The liver uses three metabolic processes to manage carbohydrates and insure adequate blood glucose: • Glycogenesis - excess glucose, fructose, and galactose are converted to glycogen and stored in the liver. • Glycogenolysis - when blood glucose falls, the liver breaks down stored glycogen to raise blood glucose levels • Gluconeogenesis - the liver can synthesize glucose from lactic acid, some amino acids and glycerol. When glucose is low the liver can derive energy from the metabolism of fatty acids which can conserve available glucose.  Protein management: Dietary protein is denatured by stomach acids and digested into amino acids in the small intestine. Amino acids are absorbed by the small intestine and delivered to the liver via the portal circulation. Up to 50% of the livers' energy requirements can be supplied by amino acid oxidation. Oxidative deamination breaks amino acids into keto acid and an ammonia molecule. The keto acid is used in the Kreb's cycle to produce ATP. The liver combines ammonia with CO2 to form urea and H2O.  The liver also uses dietary amino acids and those released during normal tissue breakdown to produce its own proteins and enzymes as well as plasma proteins. Plasma proteins produced by hepatocytes include: albumin, fibrinogen, prothrombin, a-fetoprotein, a2-macroglobin, hemopexin, transferrin, complenent components C3,C6 andC1, a1-antitrypsin, caeruloplasmin.  • Albumin is only produced by the liver and equals about 50% its total protein synthesis. About 12 grams of albumin are synthesized by the normal liver daily. Patients with decompensated cirrhosis produce only about 4 g per day. About 40% of total albumin is intrascular. • a-fetoprotein peaks about 16 weeks gestation and disappears a few weeks after birth. It may reappear in association with chronic hepatitis and a number of carcinomas • a1-antitrypsin deficiency is inherited • a2-macroglobin functions as a protease inhibitor. It is active in the inhibition of thrombin and plasmin. • Hemopexin transports heme in the plasma protecting tissues from the actions of heme. • Transferrin is globulin that transports heme to bone marrow for incorporation into erythroid precursors. • Complement components assist the immune system to raise an immune response. • Caeruloplasmin is the major copper carrying plasma protein. • Biotransformation.  Hepatocytes protect the body from injury by biotransforming toxins and drugs and by deactivating hormones. The liver employs enzymes to make substances more water soluble, so they can be excreted from the body in the urine and feces. In Phase 1 biotransformations the cytochrome P450 enzymes alter the target molecule by adding or exposing functional groups such as -OH or -COOH. Phase 2 biotransformation enzymes add sugars, amino acids, sulfates or acetyl groups to the functional group which makes them more water soluble.  Vitamins The liver also plays an important role in vitamin and mineral (iron & copper) storage. About 80% of the body's vitamin A stores are concentrated in fat droplets within the stellate cells of the liver. In pathological conditions like hepatic fibrosis or liver cirrhosis the stellate cells lose vitamin A, transform into fibroblasts or myofibroblasts and begin producing large amounts of collagen and adhesive glycoproteins. Normal vitamin A reserves are enough to prevent a deficiency for about 10 months. The liver also contains about a year supply of B12. Vitamin D stores equal about 3-4 months. Small amounts of Vitamins E and K and Vitamin C are stored in the liver to facilitate liver functions.




Anatomy and Physiology of the liver

Human liver development begins during the third week of gestation and does not acheive mature architecture until about 15 years of age. It reaches its largest relative size, 10% of fetal weight, around the ninth week. It is about 5% of body weight in the healthy neonate. The liver is about 2% of body weight in the adult. It weighs around 1400gm in an adult female and about 1800gm in the male.

The liver is located in the right upper quadrant of the abdomen, just below the diaphragm. It is almost completely behind the rib cage but the lower edge may be palpated along the right costal margin during inspiration. A connective tissue layer called Glisson's capsule covers the surface of the liver. The capsule extends to invest all but the smallest the vessels within the liver.  The falciform ligament attaches the liver to the abdominal wall and diaphragm and divides the liver into a larger right lobe and a smaller left lobe.

In 1957, the French surgeon Claude Couinaud described 8 liver segments. Since then, radiographic studies describe an average of twenty segments based on distribution of blood supply. Each segment has its own independent vascular and biliary branches. Surgeons utilize these independent segments when performing liver resection for tumor or transplantation. There are at least three reasons why segmental resection is superior to simple wedge resection. First, segmental resection minimizes blood loss because vascular density is reduced at the borders between segments. Second, it results in improved tumor removal for those cancers which are disseminated via intrasegmental branches of the portal vein. Third, segmental resection spares normal liver allowing for repeat partial hepatectomy.

Each segment of the liver is further divided into lobules. Lobules are usually represented as discrete hexagonal aggregations of hepatocytes. The hepatocytes assemble as plates which radiate from a central vein. Lobules are served by arterial, venous and biliary vessels at their periphery. This model is useful for teaching purposes but more closely resembles the adult pig lobule than the human. Human lobules have little connective tissue separating one lobule from another. The paucity of connective tissue makes it more difficult to identify the portal triads and the boundaries of individual lobules. Central veins are easier to identify due to their large lumen and because they lack connective tissue that invests the portal triad vessels.

Lobules consist of hepatocytes and the spaces between them. Sinusoids are the spaces between the plates of hepatocytes. Sinusoids receive blood from the portal triads. About 25% of total cardiac output enters the sinusoids via terminal portal and arterial vessels. Seventy-five percent of the blood flowing into the liver comes through the portal vein; the remaining 25% is oxygenated blood that is carried by the hepatic artery. The blood mixes, passes through the sinusoids, bathes the hepatocytes and drains into the central vein. About 1.5 liters of blood exit the liver every minute.

The liver is central to a multitude of physiologic functions, including:
  • Clearance of damaged red blood cells & bacteria by phagocytosis
  • Nutrient management
  • Synthesis of plasma proteins such as albumin, globulin, protein C, insulin-like growth factor, clotting factors etc.
  • Biotransformation of toxins, hormones, and drugs
  • Vitamin & mineral storage

Phagocytosis
Red blood cell (RBC) lifespan is about 120 days. Reticuloendothelial (macrophage) cells in the spleen, liver and bone marrow are primarily responsible for clearing pathogens and debris. Kupffer cells are reticuloendothelial cells resident in the liver sinusoids that scavange damaged RBCs and bacteria as they pass through. Hundreds of millions of RBCs are removed by the reticuloendothelial system every minute. Kupffer cells, like other reticuloendothelial macrophages, lyse RBCs into heme and globin. Globin is further catabolized into polypeptide components for reuse. Heme is broken into biliverdin and iron. Biliverdin is converted to bilirubin. Iron is transported by transferrin to the liver and spleen for storage and to the bone for hematopoiesis.

About 85% of bilirubin is derived from lysis of RBCs, the rest comes from the breakdown of other hemoproteins like myoglobin, cytochromes and peroxidases. Kupffer cells like other reticuloendothelial macrophages release bilirubin into the blood. In the blood, bilirubin binds to albumin. The albumin/bilirubin compound is small enough to pass through the endothelial fenestrae and into the space of Disse where it contacts the hepatocyte.

Hepatocytes cleave bilirubin from albumin and absorb the bilirubin. In the hepatocyte cytoplasm, bilirubin is conjugated to glucouronic acid. Bilirubin uridine diphosphate glucuronyl transferase (UDPGT) catalyzes the bonding of glucuronic acid and bilirubin to produce water-soluble bilirubin. Water soluble conjugated bilirubin is secreted into canaliculi along with water, electrolytes, bicarbonate, bile acids, salts, cholesterol and phospholipids. This combination is called bile and serves as a detergent to keep bile soluble in the biliary tract. Bile drains from the canaliculi>canal of Hering>bile ducts>common hepatic duct>gallbladder>common bile duct>ampulla of  vater>duodenum.

In the duodenum, bile salts attach to fat globules forming smaller micelles that collect fatty acids and glycerol. The micelles travel to the jejunum where they deliver their cargo to the intestinal epithelium. Inside the epithelial cells glycerol and fatty acids are rejoined to form triglycerides. Finally triglycerides are joined to cholesterol and proteins are added to the surface; creating a chylomicron.

Lipid management
The liver receives a variety of lipid forms including: chylomicrons remnants, very low density lipoproteins (VLDL), low density lipoproteins (LDL), high density lipoproteins (HDL) and fatty acids. Large lipoprotein molecules are broken into smaller units by the lytic action of lipoprotein lipase (LPL) expressed on endothelium of vessels. Circulating lipoproteins small enough to enter the space of Disse attach to receptors on the hepatocyte. These lipoprotein remnants are held near the heptocyte surface and exposed to hepatic lipase compounds. Low Density Lipoprotein receptors transfer the lipoprotein fragments into the hepatocyte by the process of endocytosis.

  • Chylomicrons are the product of intestinal packaging of dietary fats. Chylomicrons are produced in the duodenal villi and secreted into the lymph lacteals for delivery to the thoracic duct > subclavian vein > superior vena cava > right ventricle > lungs > Left ventricle > aorta > hepatic artery>sinusoid.Chylomicrons range from 75-1200nm in diameter. They contain 98% lipids and 2% protein. Chylomicrons are degraded in the blood by contact with LPL. Chylomicrons become smaller and more dense as fatty acids are stripped off. Loss of fatty acids results in chylomicron remnants of various sizes and density when they finally reach the liver. Hepatic lipase expressed by the hepatic sinusoidal endothelium and hepatocytes continues the remnant degradation.
  • Very low density lipoproteins (VLDL) are synthesized primarily in the hepatocyte. VLDLs range from 30-80nm. They contain 90% lipids and 10% protein. Their purpose is to transport triglycerides made in the liver into plasma for use or storage outside the liver.
  • Low density lipoprotein (LDL) is formed from VLDLs in the plasma by the action of lipase. LDL diameter is about 20nm. They contain 70% lipids and 30% protein. LDLs distribute cholesterol throughout the body. Cholesterol is an important constituent of: VLDL, cell membranes, hormones, bile etc.
  • High density lipoprotein (HDL) is small lipoprotein particles (5-15nm) formed in the liver and intestine. They range from 5-15nm in diameter. They contain 50% lipids and 50% protein. HDLs collect cholesterol & lipoprotein fragments from the blood and blood vessel plaques and return them to the liver for repurposing.
  • Fatty acids are linear hydrocarbon chains that are the major constituents of dietary lipoproteins (triglycerides). The liver degrades lipoproteins with hepatic lipase or synthesizes fatty acids from carbohydrate sources. When carbohydrate energy sources are low fatty acids are oxidized for energy.

Carbohydrate management:
When energy intake exceeds energy output the body stores the surplus glucose as glycogen or triglyceride. When energy output exceeds energy intake the body reacts by releasing stored energy as glucose and fatty acids.

Glucose is the preferred energy source for most tissues but the body maintains very limited supplies of free circulating glucose. Certain tissues like the brain, RBCs, lens and cornea use glucose almost exclusively. To supply these tissues when blood glucose drops the liver lyses glycogen. Glycogen is a complex molecule composed of thousands of glucose units. Hepatocytes and myocytes store glucose as intracellular glycogen granules.
The liver is central to blood glucose management because the liver is the only organ that can store and release glucose into the blood for use by other organs. After a meal the liver removes excess blood glucose and stores up to 8% of its weight as glycogen. Myocytes can store about 1-2% of total muscle mass as glycogen but once glucose enters a myocyte it must be used or stored by that myocyte. Myocytes lack the enzyme necessary to release glucose into the circulation.

The liver uses three metabolic processes to manage carbohydrates and insure adequate blood glucose:
  • Glycogenesis - excess glucose, fructose, and galactose are converted to glycogen and stored in the liver.
  • Glycogenolysis - when blood glucose falls, the liver breaks down stored glycogen to raise blood glucose levels
  • Gluconeogenesis - the liver can synthesize glucose from lactic acid, some amino acids and glycerol. When glucose is low the liver can derive energy from the metabolism of fatty acids which can conserve available glucose.

Protein management:
Dietary protein is denatured by stomach acids and digested into amino acids in the small intestine. Amino acids are absorbed by the small intestine and delivered to the liver via the portal circulation. Up to 50% of the livers' energy requirements can be supplied by amino acid oxidation. Oxidative deamination breaks amino acids into keto acid and an ammonia molecule. The keto acid is used in the Kreb's cycle to produce ATP. The liver combines ammonia with CO2 to form urea and H2O.

The liver also uses dietary amino acids and those released during normal tissue breakdown to produce its own proteins and enzymes as well as plasma proteins. Plasma proteins produced by hepatocytes include: albumin, fibrinogen, prothrombin, a-fetoprotein, a2-macroglobin, hemopexin, transferrin, complenent components C3,C6 andC1, a1-antitrypsin, caeruloplasmin.

  • Albumin is only produced by the liver and equals about 50% its total protein synthesis. About 12 grams of albumin are synthesized by the normal liver daily. Patients with decompensated cirrhosis produce only about 4 g per day. About 40% of total albumin is intrascular.
  • a-fetoprotein peaks about 16 weeks gestation and disappears a few weeks after birth. It may reappear in association with chronic hepatitis and a number of carcinomas
  • a1-antitrypsin deficiency is inherited
  • a2-macroglobin functions as a protease inhibitor. It is active in the inhibition of thrombin and plasmin.
  • Hemopexin transports heme in the plasma protecting tissues from the actions of heme.
  • Transferrin is globulin that transports heme to bone marrow for incorporation into erythroid precursors.
  • Complement components assist the immune system to raise an immune response.
  • Caeruloplasmin is the major copper carrying plasma protein.
  • Biotransformation.

Hepatocytes protect the body from injury by biotransforming toxins and drugs and by deactivating hormones. The liver employs enzymes to make substances more water soluble, so they can be excreted from the body in the urine and feces. In Phase 1 biotransformations the cytochrome P450 enzymes alter the target molecule by adding or exposing functional groups such as -OH or -COOH. Phase 2 biotransformation enzymes add sugars, amino acids, sulfates or acetyl groups to the functional group which makes them more water soluble.

Vitamins
The liver also plays an important role in vitamin and mineral (iron & copper) storage. About 80% of the body's vitamin A stores are concentrated in fat droplets within the stellate cells of the liver. In pathological conditions like hepatic fibrosis or liver cirrhosis the stellate cells lose vitamin A, transform into fibroblasts or myofibroblasts and begin producing large amounts of collagen and adhesive glycoproteins. Normal vitamin A reserves are enough to prevent a deficiency for about 10 months. The liver also contains about a year supply of B12. Vitamin D stores equal about 3-4 months. Small amounts of Vitamins E and K and Vitamin C are stored in the liver to facilitate liver functions.








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HEPATITIS



HEPATITIS

Did you know you can get hepatitis through close personal contact with a person who has the infection?


What is hepatitis?

Hepatitis is a liver disease that makes your liver swell and keeps it from working correctly. Several viruses cause hepatitis. The most common types are the hepatitis A, B, and C viruses.


How could I get hepatitis?

Hepatitis A is spread through food or water contaminated by feces from a person who has the virus. You can get hepatitis A by eating food prepared by someone with the virus. You can also get it by drinking water in parts of the world with poor sanitary conditions.


Hepatitis B is spread through contact with an infected person’s blood, semen, or other body fluid. You can get hepatitis B by having sex with an infected person without a condom, sharing drug needles, or sharing a toothbrush or razor with an infected person. A woman with hepatitis B can give the virus to her baby at birth.


Hepatitis C is spread through contact with an infected person’s blood. You can get hepatitis C by sharing drug needles or getting pricked with a needle that has infected blood on it.


How will I know if I have hepatitis?

· Hepatitis can make you feel like you have the flu. You might

· Feel tired

· Feel sick to your stomach

· Have a fever

· Lose your appetite

· Have stomach pain

· Have diarrhoea

· Some people who have hepatitis have

· Dark yellow urine,

· Light-colour stools,

· Yellowish eyes and skin.


Some people don’t have any symptoms.

If you think you might have hepatitis, go to your doctor for a blood test.


How is hepatitis treated?

Most people who have hepatitis A get well on their own, after a few weeks. If you have hepatitis B or C, your doctor will give you shots of medicine. Over time, hepatitis B or C can cause your liver to stop working.


How can I protect myself from hepatitis?

You can get vaccines to protect yourself from hepatitis A and B.

You can also protect yourself and others from hepatitis A by washing your hands after using the toilet and before fixing food or eating.

*You can protect yourself from hepatitis B by using a condom when you have sex,

*Not sharing drug needles with anyone,

*Not sharing a toothbrush or razor with anyone who might be

infected.

*No vaccine for hepatitis C exists.

*You can protect yourself from hepatitis C by wearing gloves if you have to touch someone’s blood,

*Not sharing drug needles.

*Sharing a toothbrush or razor with anyone who might be infected.


Treatment

Homoeopathic medicines have excellent medicines for hepatitis. With out producing any side effect.

For treatment

Please click the following link


http://treatmentt.blogspot.com/2009/11/hepatitis-acute-and-chronic-treatment.html


Cirrhosis of the Liver

The liver, the largest organ in the body, is essential in keeping the body functioning properly. It removes or neutralizes poisons from the blood, produces immune agents to control infection, and removes germs and bacteria from the blood. It makes proteins that regulate blood clotting and produces bile to help absorb fats and fat-soluble vitamins. You cannot live without a functioning liver.

In cirrhosis of the liver, scar tissue replaces normal, healthy tissue, blocking the flow of blood through the organ and preventing it from working as it should. Cirrhosis is the twelfth leading cause of death by disease, killing about 26,000 people each year. Also, the cost of cirrhosis in terms of human suffering, hospital costs, and lost productivity is high.


Causes

Cirrhosis has many causes. In the United States, chronic alcoholism and hepatitis C are the most common ones.


Alcoholic liver disease. Too many people, cirrhosis of the liver is synonymous with chronic alcoholism, but in fact, alcoholism is only one of the causes. Alcoholic cirrhosis usually develops after more than a decade of heavy drinking. The amount of alcohol that can injure the liver varies greatly from person to person. In women, as few as two to three drinks per day have been linked with cirrhosis and in men, as few as three to four drinks per day. Alcohol seems to injure the liver by blocking the normal metabolism of protein, fats, and carbohydrates.


Chronic hepatitis C. The hepatitis C virus ranks with alcohol as a major cause of chronic liver disease and cirrhosis in the United States. Infection with this virus causes inflammation of and low grade damage to the liver that over several decades can lead to cirrhosis.


Chronic hepatitis B and D. The hepatitis B virus is probably the most common cause of cirrhosis worldwide, but it is less common in the United States and the Western world. Hepatitis B, like hepatitis C, causes liver inflammation and injury that over several decades can lead to cirrhosis. Hepatitis D is another virus that infects the liver, but only in people who already have hepatitis B.


Autoimmune hepatitis. This disease appears to be caused by the immune system attacking the liver and causing inflammation, damage, and eventually scarring and cirrhosis.


Inherited diseases. Alpha-1 antitrypsin deficiency, hemochromatosis, Wilson disease, galactosemia, and glycogen storage diseases are among the inherited diseases that interfere with the way the liver produces, processes, and stores enzymes, proteins, metals, and other substances the body needs to function properly.


Non-alcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH). In NASH, fat builds up in the liver and eventually causes scar tissue. This type of hepatitis appears to be associated with diabetes, protein malnutrition, obesity, coronary artery disease, and treatment with corticosteroid medications.


Blocked bile ducts. When the ducts that carry bile out of the liver are blocked, bile backs up and damages liver tissue. In babies, blocked bile ducts are most commonly caused by biliary atresia, a disease in which the bile ducts are absent or injured. In adults, the most common cause is primary Biliary cirrhosis, a disease in which the ducts become inflamed, blocked, and scarred. Secondary Biliary cirrhosis can happen after gallbladder surgery if the ducts are inadvertently tied off or injured.


Drugs, toxins, and infections. Severe reactions to prescription drugs, prolonged exposure to environmental toxins, the parasitic infection schistosomiasis, and repeated bouts of heart failure with liver congestion can all lead to cirrhosis.


Symptoms

Many people with cirrhosis have no symptoms in the early stages of the disease. However, as scar tissue replaces healthy cells, liver function starts to fail and a person may experience the following symptoms:

· Exhaustion

· Fatigue

· Loss of appetite

· Nausea

· Weakness

· Weight loss

· Abdominal pain

· Spider-like blood vessels (spider angiomas) that develop on the skin

As the disease progresses, complications may develop. In some people, these may be the first signs of the disease.


Treatment

Homoeopathic medicines have excellent medicines for hepatitis. With out producing any side effect. Liver damage from cirrhosis cannot be reversed, but treatment can stop or delay further progression and reduce complications. Treatment depends on the cause of cirrhosis and any complications a person is experiencing. For example, cirrhosis caused by alcohol abuse is treated by abstaining from alcohol. Treatment for hepatitis-related cirrhosis involves medications used to treat the different types of hepatitis, Helps to extent the Life of sufferer


For treatment

Please click the following link

To Take Treatment


http://treatmentt.blogspot.com/2009/11/hepatitis-acute-and-chronic-treatment.html




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