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Liver and gall bladder
Inferior view, posterior at top
Besides pancreatic juice, the other secretory product emptied into the duodenum is bile. The biliary system, which
Liver and Gallbladder
also develops as an embryonic outgrowth of the duodenum, includes the liver, the gallbladder, and
associated ducts. The rounded, wedge-shaped liver, the largest organ of the abdomen, occupies a
major portion of the upper right peritoneal cavity. The gallbladder is a pear-shaped, saccular organ situated in a depression on the inferior surface of the right lobe of the liver where it is a storage organ of the
bile that is produced in the liver. Connecting the gallbladder to the common hepatic bile duct is the cystic
bile duct. The junction of these ducts forms the main bile duct that drains into the duodenum. The liver
is the largest and most important metabolic organ in the body, which in addition to producing the important bile salts associated with digestion, performs a myriad of metabolic functions.
1 Right lobe of liver
2 Left lobe of liver
3 Caudate lobe of liver
4 Quadrate lobe of liver
5 Gallbladder
6 Cystic bile duct
7 Hepatic artery
8 Hepatic portal vein
9 Round ligament
10 Inferior vena cava
11 Hepatocytes
12 Central vein
13 Hepatic sinusoid
14 Branch of hepatic artery
15 Bile duct
16 Branch of hepatic portal vein
Photomicrograph of liver lobule
50x
Photomicrograph of portal triad
150x
Photomicrograph of central vein
100x
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1 Cecum
2 Vermiform appendix
3 Ascending colon
4 Right colic (hepatic) flexure
5 Transverse colon
6 Left colic (splenic) flexure
7 Descending colon
8 Sigmoid colon
The large intestine is much shorter than the small intestine,
averaging about 1.5 meters in length, but typically has a greater
diameter, therefore the name. The large intestine consists of
Large Intestine
9 Rectum
10 Omental or fatty appendices
11 Haustra
12 Taeniae coli
13 Absorptive cells
14 Goblet cells
15 Intestinal glands
16 Muscularis mucosae
the cecum, appendix, colon, and rectum. The cecum receives indigestible material from the small intestine and
then moves it through the subdivisions of the colon — the ascending colon, transverse colon, descending
colon, and sigmoid colon — before it enters the terminal portion of the gut tube, the rectum. The large intestine
is primarily a drying and storage organ of indigestible plant fi bers. Minimal absorption of fl uids occurs in the
large intestine as the fecal contents are stored prior to evacuation.
17 Lamina propria
18 Tela submucosa
19 Ileum (cut)
20 Duodenal-jejunal junction (cut)
21 Stomach
22 Root of the mesentery (cut)
Portion of descending colon
Anterior view
Dissection of abdominal cavity with jejunum and ileum removed
Anterior view
Photomicrograph of of large
intestine mucosa
100x
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Sagittal section of head and trunk
Medial view
Dissection of the mesentery with jejunum and ileum removed
Anterior view
1 Transverse mesocolon
2 The mesentery partially dissected to reveal vessels
3 Greater omentum
4 Superior mesenteric vein and tributaries
5 Branches of superior mesenteric artery
6 Cecum
7 Ascending colon
8 Transverse colon
9 Gallbladder
10 Cystic bile duct
11 Common hepatic bile duct
12 Common bile duct
13 Omental or fatty appendices
14 Stomach
15 Small intestine
16 Aorta
Mesenteries are refl ections of the serous peritoneal membrane from the parietal layer
lining the posterior abdominal wall to the visceral layer covering the peritoneal abdominal
organs. The mesenteries not only support the digestive organs and help anchor them in
Mesenteries
the abdominal cavity, but also are the pathways for the vessels and nerves that supply the peritoneal organs.
17 Heart
18 Vertebral column
19 Trachea
20 Aortic arch
21 Pulmonary trunk
22 Brain
23 Tongue
24 Sternum
25 Rectum
26 Bladder
27 Prostate
28 Testis
29 Penis
30 Pubic symphysis
31 Diaphragm
32 Esophagus
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312
Omenta are mesenteric structures that unite two digestive organs. These refl ections of the peritoneal membrane course from one abdominal digestive organ to another abdominal digestive organ,
rather than from organ to body wall. There are two omenta in the abdominal cavity. The greater
Omenta
Superfi cial dissection of abdominal cavity with liver elevated
Antero-inferior view
omentum is a peritoneal refl ection between the greater curvature of the stomach and the transverse colon. The lesser
omentum is a peritoneal refl ection between the lesser curvature of the stomach and the liver.
1 Greater omentum
2 Lesser omentum
3 Hepatogastric ligament of lesser omentum
4 Hepatoduodenal ligament of lesser omentum
5 Hepatorenal part of coronary ligament
6 Falciform ligament
7 Transverse mesocolon
8 Liver
9 Stomach
10 Duodenum
11 Transverse colon
12 Fossa for removed gallbladder
13 Gallbladder
14 Common hepatic bile duct
15 Common bile duct
16 Caudate lobe of liver
17 Lung
18 Heart
19 Breast
20 Diaphragm
21 Epiploic foramen
22 Spleen
Dissection of abdominal cavity with
anterior aspect of liver removed
Antero-inferior view
Dissection of abdominal cavity with
Anterior body wall removed exposing body cavity
Anterior view
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REAL ANATOMY
313
Like the respiratory and digestive systems, the urinary system is an environmental
exchange system. Like all the exchange systems of the body, the urinary system forms an immense interface with the cardiovascular system for the single purpose of regulating the homeostatic balance of the water environment (extracellular matrix)
that surrounds every cell in the body. To make this exchange possible a
large network of microscopic urinary tubes form an intimate
interface with an equally large network of cardiovascular
capillaries. Th e urinary system consists of two
blood processing centers called the kidneys, two
transport tubes called the ureters, a storage
organ called the bladder, and a drain called the
urethra. Th e kidneys continually produce
urine, which is then moved via the
ureters to the storage organ, the bladder.
When it is convenient to remove the
urine from the body, contractions in
the wall of the bladder expell the
urine through the urethra.
In order to survive, every
body cell requires a water environment that is similar to the composition of the oceans in which
cellular life fi rst arose. Th e kidneys
help maintain this intercellular
water environment by fi ltering the
blood and regulating its contents
so the blood can help maintain
the correct composition of the
extracellular fl uid that bathes every
cell. By adjusting the amount of
water in the plasma and the various
plasma constituents, which are
either conserved for the body or
eliminated in the urine, the kidneys
are able to maintain water and
electrolyte balance within the very
narrow range compatible with life,
despite wide variations in intake
and losses of these constituents
through other avenues.
Find more infomation
about the urinary
system in
19 Urinary System
314
retroperitoneal and subperitoneal spaces in the abdominopelvic cavity, where they are
surrounded by a large amount of adipose tissue and some areolar connective tissue. The
dissection images on this and the facing page depict the organs of the urinary system
and their relations to other organs in the abdominopelvic cavity.
The organs of the urinary system include
the paired kidneys, paired ureters, bladder,
and urethra. The urinary organs occupy the
Urinary Organs
1 Kidney
2 Renal pelvis
3 Ureter
4 Bladder
5 Renal vein
6 Renal artery
Dissection of the retroperitoneal space of the abdominal cavity
Anterior view
7 Adrenal gland
8 Aorta
9 Inferior vena cava
10 Diaphragm
11 Common iliac artery
12 Psoas major muscle
13 Liver
14 Lumbar vertebra
15 Hilum
16 Perirenal fat
17 Intestines
18 Mesenteric fat
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Transverse section of abdomen at level of fi rst lumbar vertebra
Inferior view
Dissection of abdomen showing perirenal fat
Anterior view
Level of section
Transverse section of abdomen through kidneys
Inferior view
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