Liver Toxicity
Liver Toxicity
What exactly is your liver?
- The second largest organ in your body (after the skin)
- A meaty structure that sits mainly behind the rib cage
- Weighs approximately 1.5kg
- Reddish brown in colour and has a rubbery texture
- Your body’s “purification factory”
- Normally you can’t feel it because it’s protected by the rib cage
Liver damage can occur before symptoms appear

Are you at risk?
- Certain medications
- Overdosing on medication, exceeding prescribed treatment dosage, or ignoring direction of use (pain killers such as paracetamol, ibuprofen, codeine)
- Use or experimentation with injectable drugs or illicit drugs
- Pre-existing medical conditions e.g. liver disease, HIV/AIDS, malnutrition, fasting or dieting
- Past blood transfusions
- Sexual activity
- Direct contact with infected persons (Hepatitis, TB)
- Smoking
- Alcohol consumption
- Occupational exposure to blood products (through accidental needle prick)
- Exposure to toxic chemicals (polluted industrial areas, poor sanitation, sewerage contamination, infection and disease outbreaks)
- Family history of liver disease
- Working in or travelling to places of high endemicity without immunization (malaria)
Why your liver is important
- Filters-out toxins
- Regulates and cleanses a litre and a half of blood per minute of virtually every foreign substance entering your system
- Makes new proteins needed to strengthen the immune system
- Helps the body to resist and fight infection
- Processes many of the drugs in your system
How drugs cause liver damage

Signs and symptoms 4, 5
Diagnosis and treatment
Medical References
Medical References
The information on this website is meant to give general knowledge only. It is not medical advice and should not replace advice, diagnosis, or treatment from a doctor. It also doesn’t set a specific way that care should be given.Always talk to your doctor or a qualified healthcare professional if you have any health questions or concerns. Don’t ignore or delay getting medical help because of something you read on this website.Medical information is always changing, so the details on this site—or any sites it links to—might not be fully accurate or up to date. You should not use this information to make medical decisions for yourself or others. If you do, you are doing so at your own risk.