14 Liver Gall Bladder Pancreas

  1. What is the largest gland of the body?
    the Liver

    Metabolic funcs: uptake, storage, metabolism & distribution of important nutrients & vitamins; degradation & conjugation of metabolites + potential toxins; iron recycling

    Exocrine funcs: production & secretion of bile through bile duct → duodenum

    Endocrine: maintaining blood component concentrations, aka synthesis & secretion into the blood of most plasma proteins (albumin, α- & β-globulins)
  2. Hepatocytes
    • liver is highly cellular
    • hepatocytes are arranged in plates
    • are polygonal & often binucleate
    • there's very little CT; only seen around ducts & CT capsule that surrounds the entire organ
  3. Hepatic Lobules
    • functional unit of the liver, are hexagonal in shape
    • corners have portal traids: contain 3 main structures, portal vein, hepatic artery, bile duct
    • center of classic lobules is a central vein, which receives processed blood that drains into hepatic veins
  4. Liver Stroma
    • V = central vein
    • PT = portal triad
  5. Portal Triad
    • upper left: bile duct (stains darkest blue/purple)
    • bile is produced/works its way from the center of a lobule OUT toward the bile duct (opposite flow as blood)

    middle: portal vein - carries nutrient rich, O2 poor blood to liver

    lower right: hepatic artery - carries nutrient poor, O2 rich blood to liver

    all blood mixes, works its way through a sinusoid on its way to the central vein (not pictured) during which its acted on by surrounding hepatocytes
    • white space in between hepatocytes: Sinusoids, through which blood flows on its way to the central vein
    • endothelial cells lining the Sinusoids are DISCONTINUOUS, allowing hepatocytes access to nutrients/toxic substances present in blood
  6. Central Vein
    will go on to join larger veins - called Hepatic Veins - that will eventually go on to join the Inferior Vena Cava
  7. Perisinusoidal Space (Space of Disse)
    • important space between the sinusoid endothelial cell & Hepatocyte (D in picture)
    • reticular fibers are present in this space that slows blood flow so hepatocytes can act on materials in blood

  8. What important cell is in the sinusoids that can wander around?
    • Macrophages, aka Kupffer cells
    • are luminal compared to to sinusoidal endothelium (exist in the sinusoids) & scavenge whatever they need to
    • stain darkly
  9. Ito / Stellate Cell
    • where Vitamin A is stored in the liver
    • are abundant 
    • get activated with liver damage → secrete collagen
    • cirrhosis is caused by collagen occlusion of sinusoids (by Ito cells)
  10. What is the exocrine product of the liver?
    • BILE
    • is made by hepatocytes & transported between then via a Bile Canaliculus 
    • needs to eventually collect @ peripheral portal triad area where it can get dumped into bile duct
  11. What are the 3 types of liver lobules that can be described?
    • 1. Classic
    • 2. Portal
    • 3. Acinus
  12. Classic Lobule
    • center: central vein
    • hexagonal corners: portal tracts
    • has metabolic & endocrine functions
  13. Portal Lobule
    • center: bile duct (portal tract)
    • triangular corners: central veins
    • has exocrine/excretory (waste removal) functions
    • exocrine b/c product (bile) secreted toward a 'central' duct
  14. Liver Acinus
    • metabolic unit
    • center: incoming blood-signals
    • edges: central vein
    • by the time blood gets near the CV, it's been depleted of both nutrients & oxygen
    • hepatocytes in this region (around CV) are most susceptible to ischemic injury
  15. Which cells are most likely to die if a toxic substance enters the liver?
    zone 1, closest to their entry point (cells around the canal between 2 portal tracts)



  16. How Bile Gets to the Gall Bladder
    • storage organ for bile made by hepatocytes
    • bile is transported through hepatocytes via canaliculi until it reaches a bile duct
    • L & R hepatic ducts converge to form the common hepatic duct
    • if the common bile duct opening into the duodenum is closed, bile goes through the cystic duct into the gall bladder for storage
  17. What are some distinct features of the Gall Bladder?
    no muscularis mucosa or submucosa

    it has a simple columnar epithelium (sans goblet cells*) with a lamina propria underneath & a muscularis externa (that contracts to expels bile into duodenum when signaled)
  18. False Glands
    • individual to Gall Bladder that can help with identification
    • really just the lumen but looks like 'glands' due to sectional cuts
  19. Rokitansky-Aschoff Sinuses
    • lumen diverticula that penetrate into muscularis externa area
    • sacs with fluid in them; a lot is associated with gall stone development
  20. CCK (Cholecystokinin)
    compound made in the duodenum & jejunum that stimulates muscle contraction (muscularis externa) of the gallbladder
  21. Secretin
    • stimulates bicarbonate secretion from bile duct cells themselves
    • (helps neutralize chyme in the SI)
  22. What concentrates the bile when its stored in the gall bladder
    • the gall bladder epithelium
    • when there are white space between the basolateral spaces of the epithelium, its actively concentrating the bile
    • does so by pumping Na+ into spaces, causing water from lumen to enter the spaces (dilating them)
  23. Cholelithiasis (Gall Stones)
    • formation of concretions (calculi/stones) in gallbladder or bile ducts
    • major component cholesterol
    • factors: female, obesity, Western diet, family history
    • are the most common cause of pancreatitis, cholesystitis (when stone blocks duct, any time there's a solution in stasis, can lead to inflammation)
  24. Pancreas
    • large, lobulated gland with exocrine & endocrine function
    • exocrine secretions are transported through ducts
    • endocrine secretions are secreted through fenestrated capillaries directly into the blood stream
  25. Acini → Ducts
    • grape-like functional units whose ~45 secretory cells synthesize pancreatic enzymes
    • each acinar cell has zymogens made in the basal RER, glycosylated & packaged in the Golgi, stored in the apical cytoplasm until hormones signal for their release via exocytosis into intralobular ducts
  26. What are a few enzymes/zymogens that originate from the pancreas acini?
    • 1. protein degrading enzymes (trypsinogen, carboxypeptidases,
    • elastase)
    • 2. carbohydrate degrading enzymes (amylase)
    • 3. nucleic acid degrading enzymes (ribonuclease, deoxyribonuclease)
    • zymogens are activated by trypsinogen, which itself is activated by enterokinase in the small intestine
  27. Intra v. Interlobular Ducts
    • LEFT = intra/intercalated: diluting the concentrated enzymes (clear in H&E); exist within lobules
    • are much smaller

    • RIGHT = inter ducts: transporting diluted enzymes through a system of ducts; exist embedded in CT between lobules
    • interlobular ducts have simple cuboidal epithelium
  28. Cholecystokinin
    • peptide hormone released from enteroendocrine cells in duodenum that:
    • causes the release of zymogen granules from the acinar cells (pancreas)
    • causes emptying of the gall bladder
  29. Secretin
    • peptide hormone released from enteroendocrine cells in duodenum that:
    • causes the intralobular ducts to secrete a bicarbonate-rich solution that dilutes released zymogens (pancreas)
    • stimulates the cells of the bile duct to release an aqueous solution that dilutes the concentrated bile
  30. Islets → Capillaries
    compact clusters of epithelial cells richly vascularized with fenestrated capillaries (into which the cells secrete their hormones)
  31. What are the 3 main cells in a pancreas islet?
    • 1. beta cells: most, secrete insulin (cellular uptake of glucose from blood)
    • 2. alpha cells: secrete glucagon (cellular release of glucose into the blood)
    • 3. delta cells: produce somatostatin (modulates secretion of insulin & glucagon)
  32. Locate the Acini & Islets
    • magenta cells = acini: zymogens secreted through ducts via exocrine mechanism
    • light pink clumps = islets: hormones secreted through capillaries via endocrine mechanism
  33. Centroacinar Cell
    • Intralobular duct cell located in the middle of an acinus
    • looks lighter than the surrounding acinus cells
  34. Cystic Fibrosis CFTR (cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator) Channel
    • in addition to transborting Cl-, CFTR also moves bicarbonate
    • with a mutated channel ductal bicarbonate secretion is reduced
    • the enzyme solution produced = too viscous
    • this causes a backup of enzymes release from pancreas → inflammation, scarring
    • ducts fill & form cysts (disease name)
    • glycocalyx in SI is inefficient due to reduced enzyme adsorption -malabsorption results
Author
mse263
ID
324641
Card Set
14 Liver Gall Bladder Pancreas
Description
Histology Exam 3
Updated