When viewed under a microscope, the liver is seen as large network of units called hepatic lobules. The hepatic lobule is very small and looks like a six-sided
cylinder1.
The lobule itself is surrounded by connective tissue and has 5 to 7 clusters of
vessels2 around its edges. These vessels include a branch of the portal
vein3, a branch of the hepatic
artery4, and a bile duct.
A central vein runs through the middle of the
lobe5 and is surrounded by cords of liver cells that radiate out in all directions. Between these cords are wide thin walled blood vessels called sinusoids. All of the blood drains into a hepatic vein which then circulates throughout the body.