OUR LIVER THE CHIEF CUSTOM OFFICER AT THE BORDER.
Customs officers are responsible for helping to prevent the importation of illegal and/or dangerous goods including firearms, drugs, alcohol, tobacco and endangered animals into any country so they are juris'' to guild their countries at the border.
This is how the LIVER works, its help to detoxify, reject, debunk, any harmful substance ingest into the body(country) before they are allow(absorb) into the cellular tissue through the blood stream. But the inability of this or affection to this might lead to
1.Skin and eyes that appear yellowish (jaundice)
2.Abdominal pain and swelling
3.Swelling in the legs and ankles
4.Itchy skin
5.Dark urine color
6.Pale stool color, or bloody or tar-colored stool
7.Chronic fatigue
8.Nausea or vomiting
9.Loss of appetite
10.Tendency to bruise easily.
WHAT IS THE LIVER.
The liver is a reddish-brown wedge-shaped organ with four lobes of unequal size and shape. A human liver normally weighs 1.44–1.66 kg (3.2–3.7 lb). It is both the heaviest internal organ and the largest gland in the human body. Located in the right upper quadrant of the abdominal cavity , it rests just below the diaphragm , to the right of the stomach and overlies the gallbladder
The liver is connected to two large blood vessels: the
hepatic artery and the portal vein . The hepatic artery carries oxygen-rich blood from the aorta, whereas the portal vein carries blood rich in digested nutrients from the entire gastrointestinal tract and also from the spleen and pancreas . These blood vessels subdivide into small capillaries known as liver sinusoids, which then lead to a lobule .
Lobules are the functional units of the liver. Each lobule is made up of millions of hepatic cells (hepatocytes) which are the basic metabolic cells. The lobules are held together by a fine dense irregular fibroelastic connective tissue layer which extends into the structure of the liver, by accompanying the vessels (veins and arteries) ducts and nerves through the hepatic portal, as a fibrous capsule called
Glisson's capsule . The whole surface of the liver is covered in a serous coat derived from peritoneum and this has an inner fibrous coat ( Glisson's capsule) to which it is firmly adhered. The fibrous coat is of areolar tissue and follows the vessels and ducts to support the them.
HOW THE LIVER WORKS.
The liver is responsible for cleaning toxins and wastes from your blood, and separating out the useful nutrients to synthesize hundreds of biochemicals that your body needs for daily functioning. Your liver also activates and regulates important hormones.
After your digestive system has broken down your food, the small particles enter your blood from the intestine and are routed to your liver for filtering. There your liver separates the nutrients needed for building blocks from the waste chemicals that need to be removed from circulation. The liver converts amino acids into proteins to build lean muscle mass and enzymes. It produces bile that squirts back out through your gall bladder into your intestinal tract to digest fatty foods. The liver also stores energy from sugar as glycogen for later release. Your liver works like a factory that receives, filters and then repackages substances for use in the body or for safe removal of any toxic wastes.
Out of the hundreds of functions your liver performs, ensuring toxins are safely removed from your blood is one of its most critical jobs. Toxins enter your body when you are exposed to harmful substances like pesticides, but they also result from normal digestion. For example, when your body digests protein, ammonia is released and your liver converts it into the less toxic substance called urea that is eliminated through your urine. Any wastes your liver cannot use are converted and either carried out by bile into your small intestine or carried by the blood to your kidneys.
Your liver detoxifies harmful substances in two steps. The first step uses enzymes and oxygen to burn toxins, especially fatty ones, so they are more water soluble, making them easier for the body to eliminate. The second detox step combines partially processed toxins with sulfur or amino acids so they can be removed through bile or urine.
Customs officers are responsible for helping to prevent the importation of illegal and/or dangerous goods including firearms, drugs, alcohol, tobacco and endangered animals into any country so they are juris'' to guild their countries at the border.
This is how the LIVER works, its help to detoxify, reject, debunk, any harmful substance ingest into the body(country) before they are allow(absorb) into the cellular tissue through the blood stream. But the inability of this or affection to this might lead to
1.Skin and eyes that appear yellowish (jaundice)
2.Abdominal pain and swelling
3.Swelling in the legs and ankles
4.Itchy skin
5.Dark urine color
6.Pale stool color, or bloody or tar-colored stool
7.Chronic fatigue
8.Nausea or vomiting
9.Loss of appetite
10.Tendency to bruise easily.
WHAT IS THE LIVER.
The liver is a reddish-brown wedge-shaped organ with four lobes of unequal size and shape. A human liver normally weighs 1.44–1.66 kg (3.2–3.7 lb). It is both the heaviest internal organ and the largest gland in the human body. Located in the right upper quadrant of the abdominal cavity , it rests just below the diaphragm , to the right of the stomach and overlies the gallbladder
The liver is connected to two large blood vessels: the
hepatic artery and the portal vein . The hepatic artery carries oxygen-rich blood from the aorta, whereas the portal vein carries blood rich in digested nutrients from the entire gastrointestinal tract and also from the spleen and pancreas . These blood vessels subdivide into small capillaries known as liver sinusoids, which then lead to a lobule .
Lobules are the functional units of the liver. Each lobule is made up of millions of hepatic cells (hepatocytes) which are the basic metabolic cells. The lobules are held together by a fine dense irregular fibroelastic connective tissue layer which extends into the structure of the liver, by accompanying the vessels (veins and arteries) ducts and nerves through the hepatic portal, as a fibrous capsule called
Glisson's capsule . The whole surface of the liver is covered in a serous coat derived from peritoneum and this has an inner fibrous coat ( Glisson's capsule) to which it is firmly adhered. The fibrous coat is of areolar tissue and follows the vessels and ducts to support the them.
HOW THE LIVER WORKS.
The liver is responsible for cleaning toxins and wastes from your blood, and separating out the useful nutrients to synthesize hundreds of biochemicals that your body needs for daily functioning. Your liver also activates and regulates important hormones.
After your digestive system has broken down your food, the small particles enter your blood from the intestine and are routed to your liver for filtering. There your liver separates the nutrients needed for building blocks from the waste chemicals that need to be removed from circulation. The liver converts amino acids into proteins to build lean muscle mass and enzymes. It produces bile that squirts back out through your gall bladder into your intestinal tract to digest fatty foods. The liver also stores energy from sugar as glycogen for later release. Your liver works like a factory that receives, filters and then repackages substances for use in the body or for safe removal of any toxic wastes.
Out of the hundreds of functions your liver performs, ensuring toxins are safely removed from your blood is one of its most critical jobs. Toxins enter your body when you are exposed to harmful substances like pesticides, but they also result from normal digestion. For example, when your body digests protein, ammonia is released and your liver converts it into the less toxic substance called urea that is eliminated through your urine. Any wastes your liver cannot use are converted and either carried out by bile into your small intestine or carried by the blood to your kidneys.
Your liver detoxifies harmful substances in two steps. The first step uses enzymes and oxygen to burn toxins, especially fatty ones, so they are more water soluble, making them easier for the body to eliminate. The second detox step combines partially processed toxins with sulfur or amino acids so they can be removed through bile or urine.

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