Gall bladder.
The duodenum
duodenum
the liver is connected to the bile duct. This is a common duct that collects excretions, from both, the liver and the pancreas and tranfers it to the duodenum.
The pancreas and the gallbladder are the associated glands connected to the duodenum. The pancreas secretes digestive enzymes into the duodenum to help with the breakdown of food, while the gallbladder stores and releases bile produced by the liver to aid in the digestion and absorption of fats in the duodenum.
The pancreas releases digestive enzymes and bicarbonate into the duodenum to aid in digestion. The gallbladder releases bile into the duodenum to help emulsify fats for absorption.
The secretions of the pancreas join with bile from the liver to enter the duodenum. These secretions contain enzymes that aid in the digestion of fats, carbohydrates, and proteins.
The duodenum (part of the small intestine) is where the hepatopancreatic duct (common duct from the liver and pancreas) empties both bile and enzymes from the pancreas for chemical digestion.The duodenum or small intestine.
They secrete their products into the duodenum of the small intestine.
juices from liver, pancreas, and gallbladder
The celiac artery serves the liver by providing oxygenated blood to the liver. The celiac artery supplies this same blood to the stomach, esophagus, spleen, the duodenum and pancreas.
The duodenum, or upper third of the small intestine, is the last part of digestive tract where actual digestion actually occurs. (Additional processing may occur in the liver.) Tubes from the liver and the pancreas go to the duodenum. They neutralize stomach acid and add enzymes which cause additional digestion. (Some of those enzymes are recovered from the large intestine.) At the end of the duodenum, digestion ends and digested food begins flowing through veins into the liver.