Bile Ducts, Common Bile Duct, Bile acids, Bile Acids and Salts, Bile
The channels that collect and transport the bile secretion from the bile canaliculi, the smallest branch of the biliary tract in the liver, through the bile ductules, the bile ducts out the liver, and to the gallbladder for storage.
Common Bile Duct and Pancreatic Duct Entering Duodenum
Image by TheVisualMD
Common Bile Duct
Gallbladder
Image by Cancer Research UK uploader
Gallbladder
Diagram showing the gallbladder, bile ducts in the pancreas.
Image by Cancer Research UK uploader
Common Bile Duct
Common bile duct is a structure formed by the union of the common hepatic duct and the gallbladder's cystic duct.
The Gallbladder
The gallbladder is 8-10 cm (~3-4 in) long and is nested in a shallow area on the posterior aspect of the right lobe of the liver. This muscular sac stores, concentrates, and, when stimulated, propels the bile into the duodenum via the common bile duct. It is divided into three regions. The fundus is the widest portion and tapers medially into the body, which in turn narrows to become the neck. The neck angles slightly superiorly as it approaches the hepatic duct. The cystic duct is 1-2 cm (less than 1 in) long and turns inferiorly as it bridges the neck and hepatic duct.
The simple columnar epithelium of the gallbladder mucosa is organized in rugae, similar to those of the stomach. There is no submucosa in the gallbladder wall. The wall's middle, muscular coat is made of smooth muscle fibers. When these fibers contract, the gallbladder's contents are ejected through the cystic duct and into the bile duct (Figure). Visceral peritoneum reflected from the liver capsule holds the gallbladder against the liver and forms the outer coat of the gallbladder. The gallbladder's mucosa absorbs water and ions from bile, concentrating it by up to 10-fold.
Gallbladder
The gallbladder stores and concentrates bile, and releases it into the two-way cystic duct when it is needed by the small intestine.
Exocrine and Endocrine Pancreas The pancreas has a head, a body, and a tail. It delivers pancreatic juice to the duodenum through the pancreatic duct.
Source: CNX OpenStax
Additional Materials (3)
The gallbladder and bile ducts | Cancer Research UK
Video by Cancer Research UK/YouTube
Biliary tree | Gastrointestinal system physiology | NCLEX-RN | Khan Academy
Video by khanacademymedicine/YouTube
What is the Pancreas?
Video by Rahul Azad/YouTube
1:27
The gallbladder and bile ducts | Cancer Research UK
Cancer Research UK/YouTube
6:00
Biliary tree | Gastrointestinal system physiology | NCLEX-RN | Khan Academy
khanacademymedicine/YouTube
1:45
What is the Pancreas?
Rahul Azad/YouTube
Bile
Diagram showing the position of the perihilar bile ducts
Image by Wikimedia/Cancer Research UK
Diagram showing the position of the perihilar bile ducts
Perihilar bile duct cancer develops just outside the liver. The stage of a cancer tells you its size and whether it has spread. Your doctor looks at your scans and x-rays to work out the stage. This helps them to decide what treatment you need.
Image by Wikimedia/Cancer Research UK
Bile
Lipids are hydrophobic, that is, they do not dissolve in water. Thus, before they can be digested in the watery environment of the small intestine, large lipid globules must be broken down into smaller lipid globules, a process called emulsification. Bile is a mixture secreted by the liver to accomplish the emulsification of lipids in the small intestine.
Hepatocytes secrete about one liter of bile each day. A yellow-brown or yellow-green alkaline solution (pH 7.6 to 8.6), bile is a mixture of water, bile salts, bile pigments, phospholipids (such as lecithin), electrolytes, cholesterol, and triglycerides. The components most critical to emulsification are bile salts and phospholipids, which have a nonpolar (hydrophobic) region as well as a polar (hydrophilic) region. The hydrophobic region interacts with the large lipid molecules, whereas the hydrophilic region interacts with the watery chyme in the intestine. This results in the large lipid globules being pulled apart into many tiny lipid fragments of about 1 µm in diameter. This change dramatically increases the surface area available for lipid-digesting enzyme activity. This is the same way dish soap works on fats mixed with water.
Bile salts act as emulsifying agents, so they are also important for the absorption of digested lipids. While most constituents of bile are eliminated in feces, bile salts are reclaimed by the enterohepatic circulation. Once bile salts reach the ileum, they are absorbed and returned to the liver in the hepatic portal blood. The hepatocytes then excrete the bile salts into newly formed bile. Thus, this precious resource is recycled.
Bilirubin, the main bile pigment, is a waste product produced when the spleen removes old or damaged red blood cells from the circulation. These breakdown products, including proteins, iron, and toxic bilirubin, are transported to the liver via the splenic vein of the hepatic portal system. In the liver, proteins and iron are recycled, whereas bilirubin is excreted in the bile. It accounts for the green color of bile. Bilirubin is eventually transformed by intestinal bacteria into stercobilin, a brown pigment that gives your stool its characteristic color! In some disease states, bile does not enter the intestine, resulting in white (‘acholic’) stool with a high fat content, since virtually no fats are broken down or absorbed.
Hepatocytes work non-stop, but bile production increases when fatty chyme enters the duodenum and stimulates the secretion of the gut hormone secretin. Between meals, bile is produced but conserved. The valve-like hepatopancreatic ampulla closes, allowing bile to divert to the gallbladder, where it is concentrated and stored until the next meal.
Source: CNX OpenStax
Additional Materials (5)
What is Bile? Components, Function, Storage
Video by 5MinuteSchool/YouTube
Bile Salts - Conjugated Bile Acids
Video by 5MinuteSchool/YouTube
Primary Bile Salts VS Secondary Bile Salts - Explained in 3 Minutes!!
Video by 5MinuteSchool/YouTube
The Enterohepatic Circulation of Bile Salts
Video by 5MinuteSchool/YouTube
Bile - What Is Bile?
Video by Whats Up Dude/YouTube
2:39
What is Bile? Components, Function, Storage
5MinuteSchool/YouTube
3:00
Bile Salts - Conjugated Bile Acids
5MinuteSchool/YouTube
2:46
Primary Bile Salts VS Secondary Bile Salts - Explained in 3 Minutes!!
5MinuteSchool/YouTube
1:44
The Enterohepatic Circulation of Bile Salts
5MinuteSchool/YouTube
1:53
Bile - What Is Bile?
Whats Up Dude/YouTube
More on Bile
Treatment for Constipation
Image by drameetnd
Treatment for Constipation
Liver, digestion, Bile and constipation
Image by drameetnd
Bile - Accessory Organs in Digestion: The Liver, Pancreas, and Gallbladder
Chemical digestion in the small intestine relies on the activities of three accessory digestive organs: the liver, pancreas, and gallbladder (Figure). The digestive role of the liver is to produce bile and export it to the duodenum. The gallbladder primarily stores, concentrates, and releases bile. The pancreas produces pancreatic juice, which contains digestive enzymes and bicarbonate ions, and delivers it to the duodenum.
The Liver
The liver is the largest gland in the body, weighing about three pounds in an adult. It is also one of the most important organs. In addition to being an accessory digestive organ, it plays a number of roles in metabolism and regulation. The liver lies inferior to the diaphragm in the abdominal cavity and receives protection from the surrounding ribs.
There are two major blood vessels that penetrate the liver. The hepatic artery delivers oxygenated blood from the heart to the liver. The hepatic portal vein delivers partially deoxygenated blood containing nutrients absorbed from the small intestine to the liver. In addition to nutrients, drugs and toxins are also absorbed. After processing the bloodborne nutrients and toxins, the liver releases nutrients needed by other cells back into the blood, which drains into the central vein and then through the hepatic vein to the inferior vena cava. With this hepatic portal circulation, all blood from the alimentary canal passes through the liver. This largely explains why the liver is the most common site for the metastasis of cancers that originate in the alimentary canal.
Histology
The liver has three main components: hepatocytes, bile canaliculi, and hepatic sinusoids(Figure). A hepatocyte is the liver’s main cell type, accounting for around 80 percent of the liver's volume. These cells play a role in a wide variety of secretory, metabolic, and endocrine functions. Plates of hepatocytes called hepatic laminae radiate outward from the portal vein in each hepatic lobule.
Between adjacent hepatocytes, grooves in the cell membranes provide room for each bile canaliculus (plural = canaliculi). These small ducts accumulate the bile produced by hepatocytes. From here, bile flows first into bile ductules and then into bile ducts. The bile ducts unite to form the larger right and left hepatic ducts, which themselves merge and exit the liver as the common hepatic duct. This duct then joins with the cystic duct from the gallbladder, forming the common bile duct through which bile flows into the small intestine.
A hepatic sinusoid is an open, porous blood space formed by fenestrated capillaries from nutrient-rich hepatic portal veins and oxygen-rich hepatic arteries. Hepatocytes are tightly packed around the fenestrated endothelium of these spaces, giving them easy access to the blood. From their central position, hepatocytes process the nutrients, toxins, and waste materials carried by the blood. Materials such as bilirubin are processed and excreted into the bile canaliculi. Other materials including proteins, lipids, and carbohydrates are processed and secreted into the sinusoids or just stored in the cells until called upon. The hepatic sinusoids combine and send blood to a central vein. Blood then flows through a hepatic vein into the inferior vena cava. This means that blood and bile flow in opposite directions. The hepatic sinusoids also contain star-shaped reticuloendothelial cells (Kupffer cells), phagocytes that remove dead red and white blood cells, bacteria, and other foreign material that enter the sinusoids. The portal triad is a distinctive arrangement around the perimeter of hepatic lobules, consisting of three basic structures: a bile duct, a hepatic artery branch, and a hepatic portal vein branch.
Bile
Recall that lipids are hydrophobic, that is, they do not dissolve in water. Thus, before they can be digested in the watery environment of the small intestine, large lipid globules must be broken down into smaller lipid globules, a process called emulsification. Bile is a mixture secreted by the liver to accomplish the emulsification of lipids in the small intestine.
Hepatocytes secrete about one liter of bile each day. A yellow-brown or yellow-green alkaline solution (pH 7.6 to 8.6), bile is a mixture of water, bile salts, bile pigments, phospholipids (such as lecithin), electrolytes, cholesterol, and triglycerides. The components most critical to emulsification are bile salts and phospholipids, which have a nonpolar (hydrophobic) region as well as a polar (hydrophilic) region. The hydrophobic region interacts with the large lipid molecules, whereas the hydrophilic region interacts with the watery chyme in the intestine. This results in the large lipid globules being pulled apart into many tiny lipid fragments of about 1 µm in diameter. This change dramatically increases the surface area available for lipid-digesting enzyme activity(Figure). This is the same way dish soap works on fats mixed with water.
Bile salts act as emulsifying agents, so they are also important for the absorption of digested lipids. While most constituents of bile are eliminated in feces, bile salts are reclaimed by the enterohepatic circulation (Figure). Once bile salts reach the ileum, they are absorbed and returned to the liver in the hepatic portal blood. The hepatocytes then excrete the bile salts into newly formed bile. Thus, this precious resource is recycled.
Hepatocytes work non-stop, but bile production increases when fatty chyme enters the duodenum and stimulates the secretion of the gut hormone secretin. Between meals, bile is produced but conserved. The valve-like ampulla of Vater closes, allowing bile to divert to the gallbladder, where it is concentrated and stored until the next meal.
In addition to the liver’s function as an accessory digestive organ, the liver is also important in metabolism and regulation. We will be discussing each of these functions in further detail at a later time. Additional functions of the liver include:
Removal of old red blood cells from the blood. Bilirubin, the main bile pigment, is a waste product produced when macrophages in the spleen removes old or damaged red blood cells from the circulation. These breakdown products, including proteins, iron, and toxic bilirubin, are transported to the liver via the splenic vein of the hepatic portal system. In the liver, proteins and iron are recycled, whereas bilirubin is excreted in the bile. It accounts for the green color of bile. Bilirubin is eventually transformed by intestinal bacteria into stercobilin, a brown pigment that gives your stool its characteristic color! In some disease states, bile does not enter the intestine, resulting in white (‘acholic’) stool with a high fat content, since virtually no fats are broken down or absorbed. We will return to this concept at a later time.
Metabolic processing of the major categories of nutrients after a meal. Following a meal, the liver will convert some of the absorbed glucose into a stored form of sugar called glycogen (a process called glycogenesis) and some absorbed amino acids will be converted to fatty acids. The liver will also synthesize triglycerides and cholesterol and use them to synthesize lipoproteins which are then secreted into the bloodstream.
Metabolic processing of the major categories of nutrients between meals. During periods in which nutrients are not being absorbed, the liver will breakdown glycogen into glucose (a process called glycogenolysis) and produce glucoses from a process called gluconeogenesis. The liver will also convert fatty acids to ketones and synthesizes urea from ammonia, which is a product of protein catabolism.
Synthesis and modification of hormones. The liver synthesizes hormones such as thrombopoietin which stimulates platelet production, and insulin-like growth factor. The liver also metabolizes hormones and eliminates them from the body.
Synthesis of plasma proteins. The liver synthesizes proteins needed for blood clotting, those that transport steroid, thyroid hormones, and cholesterol in the blood, and angiotensinogen which plays a role in the renin-angiotensin system.
Elimination of wastes from the body. Breakdown products of hemoglobin from destruction of red blood cells are eliminated by the body in the feces. Excess cholesterol, insulin, drugs and toxins are also eliminated from the body via the liver either via the feces or chemically transforming them so that they can be dissolved in the plasma and eliminated by the kidneys.
Storage of essential molecules. The liver can store glycogen, as well as vitamins (such as A, D, and B12) and metals (such as iron and copper).
The Gallbladder
The gallbladder is 8–10 cm (~3–4 in) long and is nested in a shallow area on the posterior aspect of the right lobe of the liver. This muscular sac stores, concentrates, and, when stimulated, propels the bile into the duodenum via the common bile duct.
The simple columnar epithelium of the gallbladder mucosa is organized in rugae, similar to those of the stomach. There is no submucosa in the gallbladder wall. The wall’s middle, muscular coat is made of smooth muscle fibers. When these fibers contract, the gallbladder’s contents are ejected through the cystic duct and into the common bile duct and into the duodenum via the Ampulla of Vater when the sphincter of Oddi is relaxed(Figure). The gallbladder's mucosa absorbs water and ions from bile, concentrating it by up to 10-fold.
The Pancreas
The soft, oblong, glandular pancreas lies transversely in the retroperitoneum behind the stomach. Its head is nestled into the “c-shaped” curvature of the duodenum with the body extending to the left about 15.2 cm (6 in) and ending as a tapering tail in the hilum of the spleen. It is a curious mix of exocrine (secreting digestive enzymes) and endocrine (releasing hormones into the blood) functions (Figure).
The exocrine part of the pancreas arises as little grape-like cell clusters, each called an acinus (plural = acini), located at the terminal ends of pancreatic ducts. These acinar cells secrete enzyme-rich pancreatic juice into tiny merging ducts that form two dominant ducts. The larger duct fuses with the common bile duct (carrying bile from the liver and gallbladder) just before entering the duodenum via a common opening (the Ampulla of Vater). The smooth muscle sphincter of the Ampulla of Vater controls the release of pancreatic juice and bile into the small intestine.
Scattered through the sea of exocrine acini are small islands of endocrine cells, the islets of Langerhans. These vital cells produce the hormones pancreatic polypeptide, insulin, glucagon, and somatostatin.
Source: CNX OpenStax
Additional Materials (1)
Biliary tree | Gastrointestinal system physiology | NCLEX-RN | Khan Academy
Video by khanacademymedicine/YouTube
6:00
Biliary tree | Gastrointestinal system physiology | NCLEX-RN | Khan Academy
khanacademymedicine/YouTube
Bile Acids and Salts
Bile Acids
Image by TheVisualMD
Bile Acids
Digestion of Fats : You need cholesterol in order to digest food. One of the other major uses of cholesterol is the production of bile acids (also known as bile salts) in the liver. Bile contains a number of ingredients, including water, cholesterol, and bile acids. Bile is necessary for the absorption of fats from fecal matter passing through the intestine.
Image by TheVisualMD
Bile Acids and Salts
Steroid acids and salts. The primary bile acids are derived from cholesterol in the liver and usually conjugated with glycine or taurine. The secondary bile acids are further modified by bacteria in the intestine. They play an important role in the digestion and absorption of fat. They have also been used pharmacologically, especially in the treatment of gallstones.
Source: National Center for Biotechnology Information (NCBI)
Additional Materials (6)
Gastrointestinal | Bile Synthesis
Video by Ninja Nerd/YouTube
Bile - What Is Bile?
Video by Whats Up Dude/YouTube
Primary Bile Salts VS Secondary Bile Salts - Explained in 3 Minutes!!
Video by 5MinuteSchool/YouTube
Bile Salts - Conjugated Bile Acids
Video by 5MinuteSchool/YouTube
The Enterohepatic Circulation of Bile Salts
Video by 5MinuteSchool/YouTube
Statins, Fibrates, and Bile Acid Sequestrants - Mechanism of Action, Indications, and Side Effects
Video by USMLE pass/YouTube
39:26
Gastrointestinal | Bile Synthesis
Ninja Nerd/YouTube
1:53
Bile - What Is Bile?
Whats Up Dude/YouTube
2:46
Primary Bile Salts VS Secondary Bile Salts - Explained in 3 Minutes!!
5MinuteSchool/YouTube
3:00
Bile Salts - Conjugated Bile Acids
5MinuteSchool/YouTube
1:44
The Enterohepatic Circulation of Bile Salts
5MinuteSchool/YouTube
4:24
Statins, Fibrates, and Bile Acid Sequestrants - Mechanism of Action, Indications, and Side Effects
USMLE pass/YouTube
Hepatopancreatic Ampulla
Bilirubin, Gallbladder
Image by TheVisualMD
Bilirubin, Gallbladder
When damaged or dying red blood cells are broken down, bilirubin, a yellow pigment and component of hemoglobin, is released into the bloodstream. Bilirubin is eliminated from the body by the liver as a component of bile, which is stored in the gallbladder and then released into the small intestine to aid digestion.
Image by TheVisualMD
Hepatopancreatic Ampulla
Of particular interest is the hepatopancreatic ampulla (ampulla of Vater). Located in the duodenal wall, the ampulla marks the transition from the anterior portion of the alimentary canal to the mid-region, and is where the bile duct (through which bile passes from the liver) and the main pancreatic duct (through which pancreatic juice passes from the pancreas) join. This ampulla opens into the duodenum at a tiny volcano-shaped structure called the major duodenal papilla. The hepatopancreatic sphincter (sphincter of Oddi) regulates the flow of both bile and pancreatic juice from the ampulla into the duodenum.
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Bile Duct
The channels that collect and transport the bile secretion from the bile canaliculi, the smallest branch of the biliary tract in the liver, through the bile ductules, the bile ducts out the liver, and to the gallbladder for storage.