Search
SectionsIndexFirst Aid
  • Blood Disorders
  • Bone, Joint, and Muscle Disorders
  • Brain, Spinal Cord, and Nerve Disorders
  • Cancer
  • Children's Health Issues
  • Digestive Disorders
  • Disorders of Nutrition
  • Drugs
  • Ear, Nose, and Throat Disorders
  • Eye Disorders
  • Fundamentals
  • Heart and Blood Vessel Disorders
  • Hormonal and Metabolic Disorders
  • Immune Disorders
  • Infections
  • Injuries and Poisoning
  • Kidney and Urinary Tract Disorders
  • Liver and Gallbladder Disorders
  • Lung and Airway Disorders
  • Men's Health Issues
  • Mental Health Disorders
  • Mouth and Dental Disorders
  • Older People's Health Issues
  • Skin Disorders
  • Special Subjects
  • Women's Health Issues
ABCDEFGHI
JKLMNOPQR
STUVWXYZ
  • Emergencies
  • Cardiac Arrest
  • Choking
  • Drowning
  • Injuries
  • Altitude Illness
  • Bee Stings
  • Bites, Animal
  • Bites, Human
  • Bites, Snake
  • Burns
  • Electrical Injuries
  • Eye, Blunt Injury to
  • Eye, Chemical Burns of
  • Fractures
  • Frostbite
  • Head Injury
  • Heatstroke
  • Hypoithermia
  • Lightning Injuries
  • Shock
  • Sprains and Strains
  • Wounds
In This Topic
Liver and Gallbladder Disorders
Blood Vessel Disorders of the Liver
Overview of Blood Vessel Disorders of the Liver
Back to Top
Resources
  • About The Merck Manual Home Health Handbook Online Version
  • Anatomical Drawings
  • The One-Page Merck Manual of Health
  • Multimedia
  • Pronunciations
  • Selected Links
  • Weights and Measures
  • Common Medical Tests
  • Drug Names: Generic and Trade
  • Resources for Help and Information
Manuals available online
'/professional/index.html' + bookPageLink
 
'/home/index.html'
These and other Manuals available
in print, online, and as mobile applications.

See more at MerckManuals.com
Sections in Patients & Caregivers
  • Blood Disorders
  • Bone, Joint, and Muscle Disorders
  • Brain, Spinal Cord, and Nerve Disorders
  • Cancer
  • Children's Health Issues
  • Digestive Disorders
  • Disorders of Nutrition
  • Drugs
  • Ear, Nose, and Throat Disorders
  • Eye Disorders
  • Fundamentals
  • Heart and Blood Vessel Disorders
  • Hormonal and Metabolic Disorders
  • Immune Disorders
  • Infections
  • Injuries and Poisoning
  • Kidney and Urinary Tract Disorders
  • Liver and Gallbladder Disorders
  • Lung and Airway Disorders
  • Men's Health Issues
  • Mental Health Disorders
  • Mouth and Dental Disorders
  • Older People's Health Issues
  • Skin Disorders
  • Special Subjects
  • Women's Health Issues
Chapters in Liver and Gallbladder Disorders
  • Biology of the Liver and Gallbladder
  • Diagnosis of Liver, Gallbladder, and Biliary Disorders
  • Manifestations of Liver Disease
  • Drugs and the Liver
  • Cirrhosis and Related Disorders
  • Hepatitis
  • Blood Vessel Disorders of the Liver
  • Tumors of the Liver
  • Gallbladder and Bile Duct Disorders
    Topics in Blood Vessel Disorders of the Liver
    • Overview of Blood Vessel Disorders of the Liver
    • Ischemic Hepatitis
    • Ischemic Cholangiopathy
    • Budd-Chiari Syndrome
    • Veno-Occlusive Disease of the Liver
    • Portal Vein Thrombosis
    • Congestive Hepatomegaly
     
    • Merck Manual
    • >
    • Patients & Caregivers
    • >
    • Liver and Gallbladder Disorders
    • >
    • Blood Vessel Disorders of the Liver
    • 4
     
    Overview of Blood Vessel Disorders of the Liver

    Share This

    The liver receives the oxygen and nutrients it needs in blood that comes from two large blood vessels. The portal vein, provides about two thirds of the blood. This blood contains oxygen and many nutrients brought to the liver from the intestine for processing. The other, the hepatic artery, provides the remaining one third of blood. This oxygen-rich blood comes from the heart and provides the liver with about half of its oxygen supply. Receiving blood from two blood vessels helps protect the liver: If one of these blood vessels is damaged, the liver can often continue to function because it receives oxygen and nutrients from the other blood supply.

    Did You Know...
    • Unlike the rest of the body, the liver is the only organ in the body that gets most of its oxygen supply from a vein.

    Blood Supply of the Liver

    Blood leaves the liver through the hepatic veins. This blood is a mixture of blood from the hepatic artery and from the portal vein. The hepatic veins carry blood to the inferior vena cava—the largest vein in the body—which then carries blood from the abdomen and lower extremities to the right side of the heart.

    Blood vessel (vascular) disorders of the liver usually result from inadequate blood flow.

    • If blood flow (and thus oxygen supply) to the liver is inadequate, ischemia results.
    • If blood flow out of the liver is inadequate, blood backs up in the liver, causing congestion.

    For example, in heart failure, blood flow to (pump failure) and from the liver (congestion) is inadequate. Both can result in ischemia. In people with blood clotting disorders, blood flow to the liver through the obstructed portal vein or from the liver through the hepatic veins may be slowed or blocked.

    Last full review/revision December 2007 by Eldon A. Shaffer, MD

    Buy the Book

    Mobile Versions

    Pronunciations

    ischemia

    vena cava

    Back to Top

    Previous: Overview of Hepatitis

    Next: Ischemic Hepatitis

    Audio
    Figures
    Photographs
    Pronunciations
    Sidebar
    Tables
    Videos

    Copyright     © 2010-2013 Merck Sharp & Dohme Corp., a subsidiary of Merck & Co., Inc., Whitehouse Station, N.J., U.S.A.    Privacy    Terms of Use