Gallbladder
Introduction
Gall bladder, also known as
the cholecyst is a small
hollow organ where bile is stored and concentrated before it is released into
the small intestine. In humans, the pear-shaped gallbladder lies beneath
the liver, although the structure and position of the gallbladder can
vary significantly among animal species. It receives and stores bile produced
by the liver, via the common hepatic duct, and releases it via the common
bile duct into the duodenum where the bile helps in the digestion of fats.
Structure
The
gallbladder is a hollow organ that sits in a shallow depression below the right lobe of the liver which is
grey-blue in life. In adults, the gallbladder measures approximately 7 to
10 centimeters (2.8 to 3.9 inches) in length and 4 centimeters (1.6 in) in
diameter when fully distended. The gallbladder has a capacity of about 50 milliliters.
The
gallbladder is shaped like a pear, with its tip opening into the cystic duct. The gallbladder is divided into three sections:
the fundus, body, and neck. The fundus is the rounded base,
angled so that it faces the abdominal wall. The body lies
in a depression in the surface of the lower liver. The neck tapers and is continuous
with the cystic duct, part of the biliary tree.
The
gallbladder fossa, against which the fundus and body of the gallbladder lie, is
found beneath the junction of hepatic segments IVB and V. The cystic duct unites with the common hepatic duct to become the common bile duct. At the junction of the neck of the gallbladder and the
cystic duct, there is an out-pouching of the gallbladder wall forming a mucosal
fold known as Hartmann's pouch.
Lymphatic
drainage of the gallbladder follows the cystic node, which is located between
the cystic duct and the common hepatic duct. Lymphatics from the lower part of
the organ drain into lower hepatic lymph nodes. All the lymph finally drains
into celiac lymph nodes.
Histology
The
gallbladder wall is composed of a number of layers. The innermost surface of
the gallbladder wall is lined by a single layer of columnar cells with a brush border of microvilli, very similar to intestinal absorptive cells. Underneath
the epithelium is an underlying lamina propria, a muscular layer, an outer perimuscular layer and serosa. Unlike elsewhere in the intestinal tract, the gallbladder does not have muscularis mucosae, and the muscular fibres are not
arranged in distinct layers.
The mucosa, the inner portion of the gallbladder wall, consists of a lining of a single layer of
columnar cells,
with cells possessing small hair-like attachments called microvilli. This sits on a thin layer of connective tissue,
the lamina propria. The mucosa is curved and
collected into tiny out pouchings called rugae.
A muscular
layer sits beneath the mucosa. This is formed by smooth muscle, with fibres that lie in longitudinal, oblique and
transverse directions, and are not arranged in separate layers. The muscle
fibres here contract to expel bile from the gallbladder.
A distinctive
feature of the gallbladder is the presence of Rokitansky–Aschoff sinuses, deep out pouchings of the mucosa
that can extend through the muscular layer, and which indicate adenomyomatosis. The muscular layer is surrounded by a layer of
connective and fat tissue.
The outer
layer of the fundus of gallbladder, and the surfaces not in contact with the
liver, are covered by a thick serosa, which is exposed to the peritoneum. The serosa contains blood vessels and
lymphatics. The surfaces in contact with the liver are covered in connective tissue.
Functions
The main
function of the gallbladder is to store bile, also
called gall, needed for the digestion of fats in food. Produced by the liver,
bile flows through small vessels into the larger hepatic ducts and ultimately through the cystic duct (parts of the biliary tree) into the gallbladder, where it is stored. At any one time,
30 to 60 milliliters of bile is stored within the gallbladder.
When food
containing fat enters the digestive tract, it stimulates the secretion of cholecystokinin (CCK) from I cells of the duodenum and jejunum. In response to
cholecystokinin, the gallbladder rhythmically contracts and releases its
contents into the common bile duct, eventually draining into the duodenum. The bile emulsifies fats in partly digested food, thereby assisting their
absorption. Bile consists primarily of water and bile salts, and also acts as a means of eliminating bilirubin, a product of hemoglobin metabolism, from the body.
The bile that
is secreted by the liver and stored in the gallbladder is not the same as the
bile that is secreted by the gallbladder. During gallbladder storage of bile,
it is concentrated 3-10 fold by removal of some water and electrolytes.
This is through the active transport of sodium and chloride ions across the epithelium
of the gallbladder, which creates an osmotic pressure that also causes water and other electrolytes to be
reabsorbed.
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