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- Bile: What It Is, Where It’s Made What It Does - Cleveland Clinic
Bile is a yellowish-green digestive fluid produced by your liver and stored by your gallbladder It helps your body break down fats in the foods you eat and makes it easier for digestive enzymes to do their job
- What Bile Is, Where Its Made, and What It Does - Verywell Health
Bile is a sticky, yellow-green digestive fluid made by the liver Its main job is to break down fats into fatty acids so that they can be absorbed by your body through the digestive tract Bile is stored in the gallbladder and is sometimes also called gall
- Bile | Digestive System, Gallbladder Liver | Britannica
Bile is continually secreted from the cells of the liver into the common bile duct and gallbladder; once in the gallbladder it is usually concentrated to about 5 times—and sometimes as high as 18 times—the strength of the original secretion
- Bile - Wikipedia
Bile (from Latin bilis), also known as gall, is a yellow-green fluid produced by the liver of most vertebrates that aids the digestion of lipids in the small intestine
- Secretion of Bile and the Role of Bile Acids In Digestion
Secretion into bile is a major route for eliminating cholesterol Free cholesterol is virtually insoluble in aqueous solutions, but in bile, it is made soluble by bile acids and lipids like lecithin
- Biliary System Anatomy and Functions - Johns Hopkins Medicine
The transportation of bile follows this sequence: When the liver cells secrete bile, it is collected by a system of ducts that flow from the liver through the right and left hepatic ducts
- Where Does Bile Go When Gallbladder Is Removed?
Without a gallbladder, bile flows directly from your liver into the small intestine Here’s how your body adapts and what it means for digestion
- Physiology, Bile Secretion - PubMed
Bile is a physiological aqueous solution produced and secreted by the liver It consists mainly of bile salts, phospholipids, cholesterol, conjugated bilirubin, electrolytes, and water Bile travels through the liver in a series of ducts, eventually exiting through the common hepatic duct
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