Gall Bladder Liver Spleen Stomach Small Intestine 490gm unremarkable pleural surfaces are translucent‚ smooth and glistening 450gm the parenchyma is pink and normal 275mg Normal weight surfaces are glistening and unremarkable. pericardium intact 2 ounces pear shaped hollow organ‚ normal no gallstones appear to be forming 1385gm the liver is shriveled and under weight and also discolored kidney stone is forming in the liver 158gm brown flat
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this is probably why people developed diabetes during ice age (younger dryas) and people nowadays are more frequently diagnosed with diabetes from November to Freburary‚ when it is colder. Natural selection survival rule-LOSE THE FINGER‚ SPARE THE LIVER. (Frostbite) Brown fat stores glucose and produces by burning sugar Wood frog-protects its organs by freezing solid. Ice wine-frozen grapes-the shrunken nature of the grapes is due to water loss-the less water in grapes‚ the fewer ice crystals there
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homozygous H63D‚ homozygous C282Y‚ and compound H63D/C282Y heterozygous. The most common presence of iron overload is found in hepatocytes found in the liver. To estimate the degree of this disorder‚ a liver biopsy was performed on approximately two thousand patients in the bariatric surgery program. Of those two thousand patients‚ 84% had normal liver with no sign of overload and 16% exhibited some form of iron overload‚ either in hepatocytes‚ Kupffer cells‚ or both. DNA was obtained from these patients
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Hepatitis A”) The liver is a vital organ located in the upper right quadrant of the abdominal cavity. It has a wide range of functions‚ including detoxification‚ protein synthesis‚ produce hormones and enzymes‚ break down all the bad waste in your body‚ and does the production of biochemical necessary for digestion. It also plays a major role during metabolism. But‚ Hepatitis A is an inflammation (irritation and swelling) of the liver. (“Hepatitis A”) This is very bad because the liver does so many things
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alcohol-induced cellular injury in almost all organs and tissues of the organism (1)‚ especially liver by causing the development of alcoholic liver disease (1‚2). Additionally‚ it is well-established that excessive alcohol consumption has harmful effects on the kidney (3‚4)‚ with acute kidney injury (AKI) being one of the most common pathological complications (5). Furthermore‚ there is a tight link between alcoholic liver disease and AKI. For instance‚ Altamirano et al. (6) demonstrated that AKI is a frequent
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1. Our digestive system provides the body a means to transfer nutrition from the external environment into the cellular level in order to sustain life. Salivary glands‚ controlled by the autonomic nervous system‚ are located in the oral cavity. Its main role is to secrete saliva in the oral cavity. There are three pairs of salivary glands. Parotoid savary gland lies under the skin on each side of the mandible. These glands secrete amylase‚ an enzyme that breaks down starches. The parotoid duct implies
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Predicament NUR/426 April 26‚ 2011 Hepatitis: A Pandemic Predicament Viral hepatitis could be considered a disease of “antiquity” when Hippocrates described his infectious icterus findings 2400 years ago (Schmid‚ 2001). It is unclear what type of liver disease infiltrated the population at the time. However‚ by many historical accounts‚ the Middle Ages were inflicted by outbreaks commonly referred to as “campaign or epidemic jaundice” and were related to wars‚ famines‚ and natural disasters (Schmid
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BILIRUBIN FORMATION AND EXCRETION Bilirubin‚ the principal pigment in bile‚ is derived from the breakdown of hemoglobin when aged red blood cells are phagocytized by the reticuloendothelial system‚ primarily in the spleen‚ liver and bone marrow. About 80% of bilirubin formed daily comes from the degradation of hemoglobin. The remainder comes from destruction of heme-containing proteins and catabolism of heme. When hemoglobin is destroyed‚ the protein portion‚ globin is reused in the body. The
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the Digestive System . Digestive Tract (Alimentary Tract) 1. Oral cavity (mouth)5. Small intestine 2. Pharynx6. Large intestine 3. Esophagus7. Rectum 4. Stomach8. Anus (anal canal) . Accessory digestive organs 1. Salivary glands 2. Liver and gall bladder 3. Pancreas Layers or Tunics of the Digestive Tract 1. Mucosa • the innermost tunic consists of mucous epithelium‚ a loose connective tissue called the lamina propria‚ and a thin smooth muscle layer‚ the muscularis mucosae
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is plasma. After blood is collected from a patient it is divided into a number of fragments. By dividing blood into proteins like albumin‚ white blood cells and red blood cells clinics are assisted in curing patients. An example is a patient with liver failure being provided with blood plasma that contains the clotting factor. Whilst plasma has an anti-coagulant that prevents clotting‚ serum does not contain the plasma proteins which play a part in clotting such a fibrinogen which is converted to
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