The Functions and
Diseases of the Liver
The
liver, located behind the lower ribs on the right side of your abdomen, weighs
about 3 pounds and is roughly the size of a football. This vital organ performs
many complex functions.
Some of these are:
·
To convert food
into chemicals necessary for life and growth;
·
To manufacture
and export important substances used by the rest of the body;
·
To process drugs
absorbed from the digestive tract into forms that are easier for the body to
use; and
·
To detoxify and
excrete substances that otherwise would be poisonous.
Your liver plays
a key role in converting food into essential chemicals of life. All of the
blood that leaves the stomach and intestines must pass through the liver before
reaching the rest of the body. The liver is thus strategically placed to
process nutrients and drugs absorbed from the digestive tract into forms that
are easier for the rest of the body to use. In essence, the liver can be
thought of as the body's refinery.
Furthermore, your liver plays a principal role in removing from the blood
ingested and internally produced toxic substances. The liver converts them to
substances that can be easily eliminated from the body. It also makes bile, a
greenish-brown fluid which is essential for digestion. Bile is stored in the
gallbladder which, after eating, contracts and discharges bile into the
intestine, where it aids digestion.
Many drugs taken to treat diseases are also chemically modified by the liver.
These changes govern the drug's activity in the body. Your liver helps you by:
·
Producing quick
energy when it is needed;
·
Manufacturing
new body proteins;
·
Preventing
shortages in body fuel by storing certain vitamins, minerals, and sugars;
·
Regulating
transport of fat stores;
·
Regulating blood
clotting;
·
Aiding in the
digestive process by producing bile;
·
Controlling the
production and excretion of cholesterol;
·
Neutralizing and
destroying poisonous substances;
·
Metabolizing
alcohol;
·
Monitoring and
maintaining the proper level of many chemicals and drugs in the blood;
·
Cleansing the
blood and discharging waste products into the bile;
·
Maintaining
hormone balance;
·
Serving as the
main organ of blood formation before birth;
·
Helping the body
resist infection by producing immune factors and by removing bacteria from the
bloodstream;
·
Regenerating its
own damaged tissue; and
·
Storing iron.
There are many types of liver diseases, but among the most important are:
·
Viral hepatitis;
·
Cirrhosis;
·
Liver disorders
in children;
·
Gallstones;
·
Alcohol related
liver disorders; and
·
Cancer of the
liver
Liver diseases
appear to be on the increase. Part of this increase may be due to our frequent
contact with chemicals andenvironmental pollutants. Certain medications may
also be hazardous to the liver in some individuals.
The liver, the detoxifying factory in the body, has become an increasingly
overworked organ. The
present
investment inliver research is scant in relation to the magnitude, severity and
destructiveness of these diseases.
Liver diseases are poorly understood. An adequate investment in effective liver
research has the potential of saving billions of dollars and preventing untold
human suffering. Experts estimate that more than half of all liver diseases
could be prevented if people acted upon the knowledge we already have.
Each year more than 25 million Americans are afflicted with liver and
gallbladder diseases and more than 51,532 die of liver and gallbladder diseases
each year. There are few effective treatments for most life-threatening liver
diseases, except for liver transplants. Research has recently opened up
exciting new paths for investigation, but much more remains to be done to find
cures for more than 100 different liver diseases.
Meanwhile,
patients and their families must cope with medical, financial and emotional
problems.
There are several symptoms and signs of
liver disease, some of which are:
·
Abnormally
yellow discoloration of the skin and eyes. This is called jaundice, which is
often the first and sometimes the only sign of liver disease.
·
Dark urine.
·
Gray, yellow, or
light-colored stools.
·
Nausea, vomiting
and/or loss of appetite.
·
Vomiting of
blood, bloody or black stools. Intestinal bleeding can occur when liver diseases
obstruct blood flow through the liver. The bleeding may result in vomiting of
blood or bloody stools.
·
Abdominal
swelling. Liver disease may cause ascites, an accumulation of fluid in the
abdominal cavity.
·
Prolonged,
generalized itching.
·
Unusual change
of weight. An increase or decrease of more than 5% within two months.
·
Abdominal pain.
·
Sleep
disturbances, mental confusion, and coma are present in severe liver disease.
These result from an accumulation of toxic substances in the body which impair
brain function.
·
Fatigue or loss
of stamina.
·
Loss of sexual
drive or performance.
If any of these signs or symptoms appear, consult
your physician immediately.
SOURCE: American Liver Foundation

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