Medical Surgical Nursing

(Tina Sui) #1
 Fatty acids and their metabolic products are also used for the synthesis of
cholesterol, lecithin, lipoproteins, and other complex lipids.


  1. Vitamin and Iron Storage


 Vitamins A, B, and D and several of the B-complex vitamins are stored in large
amounts in the liver.

 Iron and copper, are also stored in the liver.

 Because the liver is rich in these substances, liver extracts have been used for
therapy for a wide range of nutritional disorders.


  1. Drug Metabolism


 The liver metabolizes many medications

 Metabolism generally results in loss of activity of the medication, although in
some cases activation of the medication may occur.

 One of the important pathways for medication metabolism involves conjugation
(binding) of the medication with a variety of compounds, such as glucuronic or
acetic acid, to form more soluble substances.

 The conjugated products may be excreted in the feces or urine, similar to
bilirubin excretion.


  1. Bile Formation


 Bile is continuously formed by the hepatocytes and collected in the canaliculi
and bile ducts.

 It is composed mainly of water and electrolytes such as sodium, potassium,
calcium, chloride, and bicarbonate, and significant amounts of lecithin, fatty
acids, cholesterol, bilirubin, and bile salts.

 Bile is collected and stored in the gallbladder and is emptied into the intestine
when needed for digestion.

 Bile also serves as an aid to digestion through the emulsification of fats by bile
salts.

 Bile salts are synthesized by the hepatocytes from cholesterol. After conjugation
or binding with amino acids, they are excreted into the bile.

 The bile salts, together with cholesterol and lecithin, are required for
emulsification of fats in the intestine, which is necessary for efficient digestion
and absorption.
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