2015年12月15日火曜日

What does the liver do?

There's a factory Inside you that weighs about 1.4 kilograms and runs for 24 hours a day.
This is your liver, the heaviest organ in your body, and one of the most crucial.
This industrious structure simultaneously acts as a storehouse, a manufacturing hub, and a processing plant.
And each of these functions involve so many important subtasks that without the liver, our bodies would simply stop working.
One of the liver's main functionality is to filter the body's blood, which it receives in regular shipments from two sources: the hepatic artery delivers blood from the heart, while the hepatic portal vein brings it from the intestine.
This double delivery fills the liver with nutrients, that it then sorts, processes and stores with the help of thousands of tiny internal processing plants, known as lobules.
Both blood flows also deliver the oxygen that the liver needs to function.
The blood that is received from the intestine contains carbohydrates, fats, and vitamins and other nutrients dissolved in it from the food you've consumed.
These must be processed in different ways.
In the case of carbohydrates, the liver breaks them down and converts them into sugars for the body to use as energy when the filtered blood is sent back out.
Sometimes the body has leftovers of nutrients that it doesn't immediately require.
When that happens, the liver holds some back, and stacks them in its storage facility.
This facility works like a pantry for future cases when the body might be need of nutrients.
But the blood flowing into the liver isn't always full of good things.
It also contains toxins and byproducts that the body can't use.
And the liver monitors these strictly.
When it spots a useless or toxic substance, it either converts it into a product that can't hurt the body or isolates it and whisks it away, channeling it through the kidneys and intestine to be excreted.
Of course, we wouldn't consider the liver a factory if it didn't also manufacture things.
This organ makes everything from various blood plasma proteins that transport fatty acids and help form blood clots, to the cholesterol that helps the body create hormones.
It also makes vitamin D and substances that help digestion.
But one of its most vital products is bile.
Like an eco-friendly treatment plant, the liver uses cells called hepatocytes to convert toxic waste products into this bitter greenish liquid.
As it's produced, bile is funneled into a small container below the liver, called the gallbladder, before being trickled into the intestine to help break down fats, destroy microbes, and neutralize extra stomach acid.
Bile also helps carry other toxins and byproducts from the liver out of the body.
So as you can see, the liver is an extremely efficient industrial site, performing multiple tasks that support each other.
But such a completed system needs to be kept running smoothly by keeping it healthy and not overloading it with more toxins than it can handle.
This is one factory we simply can't afford to shut down.

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