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Title: By: Prof. Mohammad Qasim


1
Role of Anatomy in Understanding Health
  • By Prof. Mohammad Qasim
  • MD (Homoeo)
  • B-36, Hazrat Nizamuddin West,
  • New Delhi - 110013

2
Role of Anatomy in Understanding Health
  • Understand Homoeopathy, know anatomy, physiology,
    pathology.
  • M. M. arrangement are anatomy schema .
  • Repertory Mind Vertigo HeadGeneralities.
  • Some rubric are cough, choking sensation,
    fauces from to bifurcation of bronchi-Syph-783
  • Stomach-Hiccough/liver/biliary colic Chin
  • vomiting of bile after
    anger-Cham, NV
  • Abdomen-541, Cirrhrosis, liver Cupr, hep, hydras,
    phos

3
Human Anatomy
4
Human Body
  • Body type and composition is influenced by post
    natal factor e g Diet and Exercise
  • Human adulthood, the body consists of close to
    100 trillion (100,000,000,000,000) cells.
  • Each is part of an organ system designed to
    perform essential life functions.
  • The body's organ systems include the circulatory
    system, immune system, respiratory system,
    digestive system, excretory system, urinary
    system, musculoskeletal system, nervous system.

5
Human Body
  • The organs of the body include the brain, lungs,
    heart, liver, spleen, stomach, kidneys,
    gallbladder, bladder, pancreas, large intestine
    (colon), small intestine (ileum), male and female
    genitals, and skin.
  • The human body consists of tissues and cells.
    Combination of individual atoms, molecules,
    polypeptides, cells in human body.

6
Major organ systems
  • Circulatory system pumping and channelling blood
    to and from the body and lungs with heart, blood,
    and blood vessels.
  • Digestive system digestion and processing food
    with salivary glands, oesophagus, stomach, liver,
    gallbladder, pancreas, intestines, rectum, and
    anus.

7
Major Organs Systems
  • Endocrine system communication within the body
    using hormones made by endocrine glands such as
    the hypothalamus, pituitary or pituitary gland,
    pineal body or pineal gland, thyroid,
    parathyroid, and adrenals or adrenal glands
  • Immune system protecting against disease by
    identifying and killing pathogens and tumour
    cells.
  • Integumentary system skin, hair and nails

8
Liver
9
Liver
  • Largest glandular organ of the body. weighs
    about 3 lb (1.36 kg).
  • Reddish brown in color and is divided into four
    lobes of unequal size and shape.
  • Blood is carried to the liver via two large
    vessels called the hepatic artery and the portal
    vein.
  • The hepatic artery carries oxygen-rich blood from
    the aorta (a major vessel in the heart).

10
Liver
  • The portal vein carries blood containing digested
    food from the small intestine.
  • These blood vessels subdivide in the liver
    repeatedly, terminating in very small
    capillaries.
  • Each capillary leads to a lobule. Liver tissue is
    composed of thousands of lobules, and each lobule
    is made up of hepatic cells, the basic metabolic
    cells of the liver.

11
Functions of the liver
  • To produce substances that break down fats,
    convert glucose to glycogen,
  • To produce urea (the main substance of urine),
  • To make certain amino acids (the building blocks
    of proteins)
  • To filter harmful substances from the blood
    (such as alcohol)
  • Storage of vitamins and minerals (vitamins A, D,
    K and B12)

12
Functions of the liver
  • To maintain a proper level or glucose in the
    blood.
  • The liver is also responsible for producing
    cholesterol.
  • It produces about 80 of the cholesterol in our
    body.

13
Hepatic Cells
  • Make up about 60 percent of our liver tissue.
  • These specialized liver cells carry out more
    chemical processes than any other group of cells
    in our body.
  • Change most of the nutrients we consume into
    forms, our body cells can use.
  • Convert sugars, store and release them as needed
    thereby regulating blood sugar level,
  • Break down fats and produce cholesterol

14
Functions of hepatic cells
  • ,
  • Remove ammonia from our body and produce blood
    proteins, including blood clotting factors
  • Other functions of hepatic cells are
  • Detoxify drugs and alcohol
  • Produce bile, which breaks down fats in the food
    we eat

15
Security Guard
  • A second important group of liver cells are the
    Kupffer cells.
  • Remove damaged red blood cells
  • Destroy microbes and cell debris

16
Essential for life
  • Liver fulfils many vital functions, we would die
    within 24 hours if it stopped working.
  • A common sign of a damaged liver is jaundice, a
    yellowness of the eyes and skin. This happens
    when bilirubin, a yellow breakdown product of our
    red blood cells, builds up in the blood.

17
Diseases of the Liver
  • Several diseases can affect the liver.
  • Some of the diseases are
  • Wilson's Disease,
  • Hepatitis (an inflammation of the liver),
  • Liver cancer, and
  • Cirrhosis (a chronic inflammation that progresses
    ultimately to organ failure).
  • Alcohol alters the metabolism of the liver, which
    can have overall detrimental effects if alcohol
    is taken over long periods of time.

18
Medications that negatively effect the liver
  • Medications have side effects that harm liver.
  • Some of the medications that can damage the liver
    are
  • serzone,
  • anti-cancer drugs (tagfur, MTX, and cytoxan),
    and
  • medications used to treat diabetes.
  • Serzone is a drug manufactured by Bristol-Myers
    Squibb for the treatment of depression.

19
Side effects of Serzone
  • agitation, dizziness, clumsiness or unsteadiness,
    difficulty in concentrating, memory problems,
    confusion, severe nausea, gastroenteritis,
    abdominal pain, unusually dark urine, difficult
    or frequent urination, fainting, skin rash or
    hives, yellowing of the skin or whites of the
    eyes (jaundice) or a prolonged loss of weight or
    loss of appetite.

20
What is a liver disease?
  • It is categorized both by the cause and the
    effect it has on the liver.
  • Causes include infection, injury, exposure to
    drugs or toxic compounds, an autoimmune process,
    or a genetic defect (such as hemochromatosis).
  • These causes can lead to hepatitis, cirrhosis,
    stones that develop and form blockages, fatty
    liver, and in rare instances liver cancer.
  • Genetic defects can prevent vital liver functions
    and lead to the deposition and build-up of
    damaging substances, such as iron or copper.

21
Hepatitis
  • Two major forms of hepatitis
  • liver is inflamed quickly (called acute
    hepatitis) and
  • the liver is inflamed and damaged slowly, over a
    long period of time (called chronic hepatitis).
  • Caused by any of the means mentioned above, most
    commonly is due to infection by one of several
    viruses termed hepatitis viruses.
  • Viruses have been named in the order of their
    discovery as hepatitis A, B, C, D, and E.

22
Hepatitis A
  • Spread through infected water and food especially
    common in children.
  • Adults may experience symptoms such as jaundice,
    nausea, diarrhea, and fatigue

23
Hepatitis B
  • Found throughout the world
  • Common in Southeast Asia and Africa.
  • Most common cause of acute viral hepatitis in
    North America and Europe.
  • One out of every 20 people in the United States
    will get infected with the hepatitis B virus at
    some time during their lives.

24
Hepatitis B
  • Spread by exposure to blood, through sexual
    relations, and from mother to baby.
  • Symptoms of hepatitis B may be absent, mild and
    flu-like
  • Most people will get better without any
    intervention, but about 1-3 will become
    chronically infected, able to continue to infect
    others, and
  • often experience chronic progressive damage to
    the liver.

25
Hepatitis B
  • Those with weakened or compromised immune systems
    are at an increased risk to become chronically
    infected (about 10).
  • Newborns are especially vulnerable, with over 90
    becoming chronically infected.

26
Hepatitis C
  • spread mainly by exposure to contaminated blood,
  • Sharing of needles or other 'works' used in
    consuming drugs such as cocaine or heroin
  • Use of contaminated equipment for activities such
    as body piercing and tattooing
  • Occupational exposure of healthcare workers to
    used needles or other sharp objects
  • Through sexual activity that results in tissue
    tears
  • From mother to baby during childbirth or
  • Cuts sustained during athletic or other activity.

27
Hepatitis
  • Hepatitis C is less common than hepatitis B as a
    cause of acute hepatitis
  • Hepatitis D and E are rare in the U.S.

28
Liver Functions
  • Liver is responsible for the metabolism of
    alcohol, drugs, and envirohepatitis and/or
    cirrhosis.
  • Environmental toxins, prolonged exposure to any
    of these can also cause liver problems
  • Combinations of drugs (for instance,
    acetaminophen) and alcohol have the potential to
    cause life-threatening acute liver failure.


29
Fatty Liver
  • Fatty liver causes liver enlargement, tenderness,
    and abnormal liver function.
  • Fatty degeneration of liverK547
  • Most common cause
  • excessive alcohol
    consumption.
  • Usually a reversible condition, resolving with
    abstention from alcohol.

30
Fatty Liver
  • Another cause is nonalcoholic steatohepatitis
    (NASH), the most common chronic hepatitis not
    caused by viruses.
  • While symptoms are usually fairly mild, it may
    cause cirrhosis.
  • It is seen most commonly in overweight and
    diabetic individuals.

31
Cirrhosis
  • Causes severe ongoing injury to the liver
  • Can lead to cirrhosis cell death and scar
    formation progressive disease that creates
    irreversible damage.
  • Is treated by trying to limit further damage
  • If it is caused by a virus or another treatable
    cause of liver injury, treating the cause can
    stabilize the disease and prevent deterioration
    in liver function.

32
Cirrhosis
  • Cirrhosis has no signs or symptoms in its early
    stages, but as it progresses, it can cause
    ascites, muscle wasting, bleeding from the
    intestines, easy bruising, gynecomastia, and a
    number of other problems.
  • Liver function is monitored with such tests as
    albumin, prothrombin time, bilirubin, and a liver
    panel.
  • In extreme cases, liver transplantation may be
    needed.

33
Obstruction
  • Gallstones, tumors, trauma, and inflammation can
    cause blockages or obstructions in the ducts
    draining the liver (bile ducts).
  • Blood tests may show elevated levels of
    bilirubin, alkaline phosphatase (ALP), and other
    liver enzymes.

34
Liver Cancer
  • Hepatitis and cirrhosis may lead to liver cancer
    in some cases, but more frequently cancer starts
    in other parts of the body and then metastasizes
    to the liver.
  • When cancer does arise in the liver, it is called
    primary liver cancer.
  • The most common type is hepatocellular carcinoma,
    cancer that develops in the livers hepatocyte
    cells.
  • checked on a regular basis for cancer, often with
    an alpha-fetoprotein (AFP) test and/or an
    ultrasound.

35
Genetic Disorders
  • Hemochromatosis
  • the most common genetic liver disorder.
  • involves excess iron storage and is usually
    diagnosed in adults.
  • There are numerous genetic liver diseases that
    affect children.
  • The most common is alpha 1-antitrypsin
    deficiency.
  • Most of the genetic liver diseases involve a
  • missing enzyme or protein that leads to damaging
    deposits in the liver (such as Galactosemia, the
    absence of a milk sugar enzyme, which leads to
    milk sugar accumulation Wilsons disease, where
    copper builds up in the liver).

36
Testing
  • Laboratory Test
  • Three types of tests are often used to detect
    liver disease
  • These tests either measure the levels of specific
    enzymes, bilirubin, or protein present in the
    test sample (usually a blood sample). 

37
Testing
  • Alanine aminotransferase (ALT)
  • an enzyme found mainly in the liver the best
    test for detecting hepatitis
  • Alkaline phosphatase (ALP)
  • an enzyme related to the bile ducts
  • often increased when they are blocked
  • Aspartate aminotransferase (AST)
  • an enzyme found in the liver and a few other
    places,
  • particularly the heart and other muscles
  • Gamma-glutamyl transferase (GGT)
  • an enzyme found mainly in the liver
  • very sensitive to changes in liver function

38
Bilirubin
  • a waste product made from old or damaged blood
    cells,
  • is a yellow compound that causes jaundice and
    dark urine when present in increased amounts.
  • Two different tests of bilirubin are often used
    together
  • Total bilirubin - measures all the bilirubin in
    the blood
  • Direct bilirubin - measures a form conjugated
    (combined with another compound) in the liver
  • Protein One of the main functions of the liver
    is to make protein.

39
Two important liver tests include
  • Total Protein
  • measures albumin and all other proteins in
    blood,
  • Albumin
  • measures the main protein made by the liver
  • tells how well the liver is making this protein
    including antibodies made to help fight off
    infections
  • (antibodies are not made in the liver) 

40
Specific tests
  • Hepatitis A, Hepatitis B, Hepatitis C
  • to detect viral hepatitis
  • the patients white and red blood cells and
    platelets count
  • Prothrombin time (PT)
  • to evaluate Complete blood count (CBC)
  • to evaluate clotting function
  • Alfa-fetoprotein (AFP)
  • may be elevated with liver cancer
  • Tests for iron status
  • when hemochromatosis is suspected
  • Liver biopsy
  • a tiny sample of liver tissue is taken to
    evaluate the structure and cells of the liver

41
Non-Laboratory Tests
  • Computerized axial tomography (CAT) scan
  • Ultrasound

42
TEN TIPS FOR A HEALTHY LIVER
43
Drink alcohol in moderation
44
Maintain normal weight
45
Avoid cigarette smoking
46
Avoid sushi or  raw or partially cooked mollusks
(clams, oysters, mussels, and scallops)
47
Practice safe sex
48
Avoid recreational drug use
49
If ever experimented with intravenous drugs,
even just once, and even if it was many years
ago, or if have had a blood, blood product
transfusion or organ transplant prior to 1992 --
get tested for hepatitis C
50
If ever been told that something is wrong with
the liver, even if one feel fine - see a liver
specialist (hepatologist)
51
Do not share toothbrushes, razors or other
personal items with anyone
52
Anyone who intends to get a tattoo or have a body
part pierced should make sure that they deal only
with establishments that are clean and that
adhere to meticulous sterilization practices
53
What your mind doesnt know, your eye cannot
seeThank you
Maintain normal weight. It is estimated that
approximately one-third of Americans are obese,
and that approximately 75 percent of obese people
have a fatty liver - a liver disease that may
lead to cirrhosis, liver failure and liver
cancer.?Maintain normal weight. It is estimated
that approximately one-third of Americans are
obese, and that approximately 75 percent of obese
people have a fatty liver - a liver disease that
may lead to cirrhosis, liver failure and liver
cancer.?
Maintain normal weight. It is estimated that
approximately one-third of Americans are obese,
and that approximately 75 percent of obese people
have a fatty liver - a liver disease that may
lead to cirrhosis, liver failure and liver
cancer.?
Maintain normal weight. It is estimated that
approximately one-third of Americans are obese,
and that approximately 75 percent of obese people
have a fatty liver - a liver disease that may
lead to cirrhosis, liver failure and liver
cancer.?
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