enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Gallbladder - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gallbladder

    These abnormalities are not likely to affect function and are generally asymptomatic. [8] The location of the gallbladder in relation to the liver may also vary, with documented variants including gallbladders found within, [9] above, on the left side of, behind, and detached or suspended from the liver. Such variants are very rare: from 1886 ...

  3. Portal vein - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Portal_vein

    The blood leaves the liver to the heart in the hepatic veins. The portal vein is not a true vein , because it conducts blood to capillary beds in the liver and not directly to the heart. It is a major component of the hepatic portal system , one of three portal venous systems in the human body; the others being the hypophyseal and renal portal ...

  4. Biliary tract - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Biliary_tract

    The function of the common bile duct is to allow bile to travel from the gallbladder to the small intestine, mixing with pancreatic digestive enzymes along the way. [4] One possible complication of choledocholithiasis is an infection of the bile ducts between the liver and the gallstone lodged in the common bile duct.

  5. Portal venous system - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Portal_venous_system

    The human hepatic portal system delivers about three-fourths of the blood going to the liver.The final common pathway for transport of venous blood from spleen, pancreas, gallbladder and the abdominal portion of the gastrointestinal tract [2] (with the exception of the inferior part of the anal canal and sigmoid colon) is through the hepatic portal vein.

  6. Abdominopelvic cavity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abdominopelvic_cavity

    It is primarily a processing and detoxifying organ, [7] filtering blood and extracting or breaking down waste and toxins from the bloodstream. [8] The gallbladder is located on the undersurface of the right lobe of the liver. [9] It produces bile, which is used to help process fats in the body. [9] Humans can live without the gallbladder. [10]

  7. Abdominal cavity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abdominal_cavity

    The kidneys are located behind the peritoneum, in the retroperitoneum, outside the abdominal cavity. The viscera are also covered by visceral peritoneum. Between the visceral and parietal peritoneum is the peritoneal cavity, which is a potential space. [1] It contains a serous fluid called peritoneal fluid that allows motion.

  8. Porta hepatis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Porta_hepatis

    The hepatic duct lies in front and to the right, the hepatic artery to the left, and the portal vein behind and between the duct and artery. It also transmits nerves and lymphatics. Sympathetic nerves - these provide afferent pain impulses from the liver and gall bladder to the brain. Pain may be referred to the lower pole of the right scapula ...

  9. Bile duct - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bile_duct

    The biliary tree (see below) is the whole network of various sized ducts branching through the liver.. The path is as follows: bile canaliculi → canals of Hering → interlobular bile ducts → intrahepatic bile ducts → left and right hepatic ducts merge to form → common hepatic duct exits liver and joins → cystic duct (from gall bladder) forming → common bile duct → joins with ...