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The bare area of the liver is found on the posterosuperior surface of the right lobe of the liver. [1] This lies close to the thoracic diaphragm. It is the only part of the liver that has no peritoneal covering. [1] [2] It lies between the two layers of the coronary ligament, as well as the right triangular ligament. [1]
The convex diaphragmatic surface of the liver (anterior, superior and a little posterior) is connected to the concavity of the inferior surface of the diaphragm by reflections of peritoneum. The coronary ligament is the largest of these, having an anterior (frontal) and posterior (back) layers.
Normal human liver at autopsy. On the diaphragmatic surface, apart from a triangular bare area where it connects to the diaphragm, the liver is covered by a thin, double-layered membrane, the peritoneum, that helps to reduce friction against other organs. [20]
In human anatomy, the liver is divided grossly into four parts or lobes: the right lobe, the left lobe, the caudate lobe, and the quadrate lobe.Seen from the front – the diaphragmatic surface – the liver is divided into two lobes: the right lobe and the left lobe.
The left triangular ligament connects the posterior part of the upper surface of the left lobe of the liver to the thoracic diaphragm. [1] Its anterior layer is continuous with the left layer of the falciform ligament .
Diaphragmatic surface of liver; Diaphragmatic surface of lung; Diaphragmatic surface of spleen This page was last edited on 14 March 2015, at 13:11 (UTC). Text is ...
Facies diaphragmatica or diaphragmatic surface can refer to: Diaphragmatic surface of heart (facies diaphragmatica cordis) Diaphragmatic surface of lung (facies diaphragmatica pulmonis) Diaphragmatic surface of liver (facies diaphragmatica hepatis) Diaphragmatic surface of spleen (facies diaphragmatica splenica)
The ligament stretches from the underside of the diaphragm to the posterior surface of the sheath of the right rectus abdominis muscle, as low down as the umbilicus; by its right margin it extends from the notch on the anterior margin of the liver, as far back as the posterior surface.