Excretion

    Cards (17)

    • What is the primary role of the liver in metabolism?
      The liver plays a crucial role in metabolism by facilitating many chemical reactions.
    • Why is excretion important for cells?
      Excretion is essential for removing metabolic waste to maintain normal metabolism and homeostasis.
    • What waste products are generated during metabolism?
      CO₂ and nitrogenous substances are generated as waste products during metabolism.
    • How is CO₂ excreted from the body?
      CO₂ is excreted by cells following respiration and removed from the body by the lungs.
    • Where are many metabolic waste products like urea metabolized?
      Many metabolic waste products, like urea, are metabolized in and excreted from the liver cells.
    • What is the function of the liver in detoxification?
      • Breaks down toxic substances (alcohol, medications, hormones, excess amino acids)
      • Converts them into less harmful compounds for excretion
    • What happens to amino acids in the liver?
      Amino acids are broken down through deamination, producing toxic ammonia and keto acid
    • What is produced when ammonia combines with CO₂ in the liver?
      Urea is produced when ammonia combines with CO₂ via the ornithine cycle.
    • Where does the ornithine cycle occur in the liver?
      The ornithine cycle occurs partially in the mitochondria of liver cells.
    • How is urea excreted from the body?
      Urea is excreted from liver cells, enters the bloodstream, and is filtered out by the kidneys as part of urine.
    • What are some substances detoxified by the liver?
      • Alcohol: broken down by ethical dehydrogenase
      • Hydrogen peroxide: split by catalase into oxygen and water
      • Paracetamol: broken down to prevent toxicity
      • Insulin: metabolized to regulate blood glucose concentration
    • What are the functions of the liver in regulating blood glucose?
      • Converts excess glucose into glycogen
      • Stores glycogen granules
      • Releases glucose into the bloodstream by breaking down glycogen when levels fall
    • What happens to hemoglobin from old red blood cells in the liver?
      Hemoglobin is broken down into bile pigments in hepatocytes by kupffer cells
    • How are bile pigments transported after being excreted from liver cells?
      Bile pigments are transported by the bile duct to the gallbladder for storage.
    • What are the key large parts of the liver structure?
      1. Hepatic artery: supplies oxygenated blood
      2. Hepatic vein: carries away deoxygenated blood
      3. Hepatic portal vein: brings nutrient-rich blood from intestines
      4. Bile duct: transports bile to the gallbladder
    • What is the structure of liver lobules?
      • Composed of numerous lobules with hepatocytes
      • Hepatocytes have large nuclei, prominent Golgi apparatus, and several mitochondria
    • What are the key cells and tissues in each liver lobule?
      1. Hepatocytes arranged along sinusoids
      2. Sinusoids mix oxygen-rich blood and nutrient-rich blood
      3. Branch of hepatic vein removes deoxygenated blood
      4. Kupffer cells ingest pathogens
      5. Bile canaliculus links to a branch of the bile duct
    See similar decks