Normal Liver Anatomy
Normal Liver Anatomy
Normal Liver Anatomy
REVIEW
Normal liver anatomy
Lena Sibulesky, M.D.
The normal color of the liver is brown and the external
surface is smooth (Fig. 1). The liver is about 2% of body
weight in the adult, which amounts to approximately 1400 g
in females and 1800 g in males. The liver receives its blood
supply from two sources: 80% is delivered by the portal
vein, which drains the spleen and intestines; the remaining
20%, the oxygenated blood, is delivered by the hepatic ar-
tery. The portal vein is formed by the union of the splenic
and the superior mesenteric veins with the inferior mesen-
teric vein draining into the splenic vein (Fig. 2). In the ma-
jority of cases, the common hepatic artery is a branch of the
celiac artery along with the splenic and left gastric arteries
(Figs. 3 and 4). Occasionally, the hepatic artery has accessory
or replaced vessels supplying the liver. The accessory or
replaced right hepatic artery is a branch of the proximal
superior mesenteric artery, while the accessory or replaced
left hepatic artery is a branch of the left gastric artery (Fig.
3). Multiple anatomic variations, however, may also exist in
the anatomy of the hepatic artery.
1
Externally, the liver is divided by the falciform ligament
into a larger right lobe and a smaller left lobe (Fig. 5). The
falciform ligament attaches the liver to the anterior abdomi-
nal wall. Its base contains the ligamentum teres, which has a
remnant of the vestigial umbilical vein. In cirrhosis, this vein
recanalizes as a result of portal hypertension.
Based on Couinaud classification, the liver is divided into
eight independent functional segments (Figs. 6 and 7). Each
segment has its own portal pedicle consisting of the hepatic
arterial branch, portal branch, and the bile duct with a sepa-
rate hepatic venous branch that provides outflow (Fig. 8).
The numbering of segments is in a clockwise manner. Seg-
ments II and III, which are known as the anterior and poste-
rior segments of the left lobe, respectively, are also known
collectively as the left lateral segment of the liver and the
topographic left lobe. Segment IV is the medial segment of
the left lobe. Segments II, III, and IV collectively make up
the functional left lobe of the liver. The functional right lobe
of the liver is made up of segments V and VIII, the anterior
segments, and segments VI and VII, the posterior segments.
Segment I, the caudate lobe, is located posteriorly.
The outflow of the liver is provided by the three hepatic
veins. The right hepatic vein divides the right lobe of the
liver into anterior and posterior segments. The middle he-
patic vein divides the liver into the right and left lobes and
runs in the same plane with the inferior vena cava and the
gallbladder fossa. The left hepatic vein divides the left liver
into medial and lateral segments. The portal vein divides the
liver into the upper and lower segments (Fig. 8).
The segmental liver anatomy is important to radiologists
and surgeons, especially in view of the need for an accurate
preoperative localization of focal hepatic lesions.
2,3
Liver
resection depends on accurate localization of the hepatic
lesions and knowledge of liver anatomy. Liver resection is
now practiced widely with reduced morbidity and minimal
mortality. Nonanatomic resections encompass wedge
FIGURE 1. Normal liver.
From the Division of Transplant Surgery, Department of Transplantation, Mayo Clinic Florida, Jacksonville, FL
Potential conflict of interest: Nothing to report.
View this article online at wileyonlinelibrary.com
VC
2012 by the American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases
doi: 10.1002/cld.124
S1 Clinical Liver Disease, Vol. 2, No. S1, March 2013 An Official Learning Resource of AASLD
resections. Segmentectomies are anatomical resections of seg-
ments based on Couinaud classification. Bisegmentectomy
includes resection of segments II and III is known as a left
lateral segmentectomy. Resection of segment IV is known as
a left medial segmentectomy, resection of segments V and
VIII is known as a right anterior segmentectomy, and resec-
tion of segments VI and VII are known as a right posterior
segmentectomy. Resection of segments II, III, and IV is
known as the left lobe resection or left hepatectomy. Resec-
tion of segments V, VI, VII, VIII is known as right lobe
resection or right hepatectomy. Extended right hepatectomy
FIGURE 2. Portal venous drainage.
FIGURE 3. Arterial supply to liver and aberrant arterial anatomy.
FIGURE 4. Posterior view of the liver.
FIGURE 5. Morphological anatomy of the liver.
FIGURE 6. Functional anatomy of the liver.
R E V I E W Normal Liver Anatomy Sibulesky
S2 Clinical Liver Disease, Vol. 2, No. S1, March 2013 An Official Learning Resource of AASLD
includes segments IV to VIII, while extended left hepatec-
tomy includes segments II, III, IV, V, VIII (Table 1).
Cirrhosis is an end result of parenchymal degeneration,
regeneration, and scarring (Fig. 9). The cirrhotic liver varies
in color, size, and appearance, depending on etiology. It
might be large and green in diseases with biliary obstruction,
such as primary sclerosing cholangitis or yellow and small in
advanced alcoholic cirrhosis. It is firm and appears either
micro- or macronodular as a result of formation of regenera-
tive nodules with surrounding fibrosis in the parenchyma of
the liver. Portal hypertension develops because of liver stiff-
ness and increased resistance to flow. As a result, the blood
is shunted away from the liver, and new thin dilated vessels
form, shunting the blood away from the portal to the sys-
temic circulation. Examples include esophageal, gastric, and
rectal varices.
4
n
Acknowledgment
I thank Raouf E. Nakhleh for revising the paper and Mar-
garet A. McKinney and David T. Smyrk for creating the
figures.
CORRESPONDENCE
L. Sibulesky, Division of Transplant Surgery, Department of Transplantation,
Mayo Clinic Florida, Jacksonville, FL 32224. E-mail: sibulesky.lena@mayo.
edu
References
1. Hiatt JR, Gabbay J, Busuttil RW. Surgical anatomy of the hepatic arteries in
1000 cases. Ann Surg 1994;220:5052.
2. Soler L, Delingette H, Malandain G, Montagnat J, Ayache N, Koehl C, et al.
Fully automatic anatomical, pathological, and functional segmentation from CT
scans for hepatic surgery. Comp Aid Surg 2001;6:131142.
3. Liau KH, Blumgart LH, DeMatteo RP. Segment-oriented approach to liver resec-
tion. Surg Clin N Am 2004;84:543561.
4. Garcia-Tsao G, Bosch J. Management of varices and variceal hemorrhage in
cirrhosis. N Engl J Med 2010;362:823832.
TABLE 1: Hepatic Anatomy and Resection Nomenclature
Anatomical Resections Liver Segments
Left lateral segmentectomy II, III
Left medial segmentectomy IV
Right anterior segmentectomy V, VIII
Right posterior segmentectomy VI, VII
Left hepatectomy II, III, IV
Right hepatectomy V, VI, VII, VIII
Extended left hepatectomy II, III, IV, V, VIII
Extended right hepatectomy IV, V, VI, VII, VIII
FIGURE 9. Liver cirrhosis.
FIGURE 7. Posterior view of the liver.
FIGURE 8. Segmental anatomy of the liver.
R E V I E W Normal Liver Anatomy Sibulesky
S3 Clinical Liver Disease, Vol. 2, No. S1, March 2013 An Official Learning Resource of AASLD