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Liver Disease Risk Factors
Liver Toxicity and Weakness (warning
signs)
Liver Functions
The liver as we know has well over 500 functions and is known as the
laboratory of the human body. Many scientist believe the liver is connected or
at leasts aware of every disease or dysfunction going on inside the body. Below
are some functions of this amazing organ.
- Metabolizes proteins, fats, and carbohydrates, thus providing energy
and nutrients
- Stores vitamins, minerals, and sugars
- Filters the blood and helps remove harmful chemicals and bacteria
- Creates bile which breaks down fats
- Helps to assimilate and store fat soluble vitamins (A, E, D, K)
- Stores extra blood which can be quickly released when needed
- Creates serum proteins which maintain fluid balance and act as
carriers
- Helps maintain electrolyte and water balance
- Creates immune substances such as gamma globulin
- Breaks down and eliminates excess hormones
- Vascular (blood management)
- Provides blood clotting factors
- Breaks down ammonia (and other toxins) created in the colon by
bacteria; thus preventing death
- Helps to maintain blood pressure
- Constructs cholesterol and estrogen, reconstructs hormones
- Humanizes nutrients, metabolizes protein, carbohydrates, fat for
energy
- Synthesizes urea, constructs blood protein, interconverts amino acids
- Constructs 50,000 systems of enzymes to govern metabolic activity
throughout the body
- Removes damaged red blood cells
- Converts the thyroid hormone thyroxine (T4) into it more active form
triiodothyronine (T3). Inadequate conversion may lead to hypothyroidism,
chronic fatigue, weight gain, poor memory and other debilitating
conditions.
- Creates GTF (Glucose Tolerance Factor) from chromium, niacin and
possibly glutathione. GTF is needed for the hormone insulin to properly
regulate blood-sugar levels. Manufactures bile salts which emulsify fats and
the fat-soluble vitamins A, D, E, and K for proper absorption. The liver also
removes some fat-soluble toxins from the body.
- Activates B vitamins into their biologically active coenzyme forms.
Virtually every nutrient must be biotransformed by the liver into its proper
biochemical form before the nutrient can be stored, transported or used in
cellular metabolism.
- Stores various nutrients, especially A, D, B-12 and iron for release
as needed.
- Manufactures carnitine from lysine and other nutrients. Carnitine is
the only known bionutrient which can escort fats into the mitochondria where
they are used to generate ATP energy. The mitochondria generate 90% of the ATP
energy at the cellular level.
- Converts lactic acid from a toxic waste to an important storage fuel.
Lactic acid is produced when glucose is metabolized through the energy
production cycle. When excessive levels accumulate, you experience sore
muscles. A healthy liver will extract lactic acid from the bloodstream and
convert it into the reserve endurance fuel, glycogen.
- Serves as the main glucose buffer, preventing high or low extremes
of blood sugar. The liver is the key regulator of blood sugar between meals due
to its manufacture, storage, and release of glycogen, the starch form of
glucose. When blood sugar is low, a healthy liver converts stored glycogen into
glucose, releasing it into the bloodstream to raise blood sugar levels. When
blood sugar is high, a healthy liver will convert the excess into stored
glycogen or fat.
- Chief regulator of protein metabolism. The liver converts different
amino acids into each other as needed.
- Produces cholesterol and converts it into the various forms needed
for blood transport.
- Converts essential fatty acids such as GLA, EPA, and DHA into the
lipoprotein forms necessary to allow transport via the bloodstream to the 50
trillion cells requiring fatty acids.
- Main poison-detoxifying organ in the body. The liver must break down
every substance toxic to the body including metabolic wastes, insecticide and
pesticide residues, drugs, alcohol, etc. Failure of this function will usually
cause death in 12 to 24 hours.
- Removes ammonia, a toxic by-product of animal protein metabolism,
from the body.
- Breaks down hormones after they have served their function. i.e., if
the liver does not break down insulin fast enough, hypoglycemia results because
the circulating insulin continues to lower blood sugar.
- The liver is vital to a host of other metabolic functions, but this
brief overview should serve to illustrate the central role the liver plays in
maintaining good health and the importance of implementing life-style change if
necessary.
This is just the start of an extremely long list of liver functions.
There are many others functions that we will be discussing in our
News Letter.
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