Inside the body you can - "spilt livers" (pieces of liver from adults) are regularly used for child's liver transplants, if a suitable size donor is not available. The piece of liver grows as the child grows, reaching a normal size. (But I don't know if the lobes appear in the same way that you would expect on a standard liver).
Yes, it is possible for living humans to donate a portion of their liver. The liver has the ability to regenerate, so the portion removed from the donor should grow back in both the donor and the recipient. This type of donation is often done for liver transplants to save the life of someone with liver failure.
Yes, part of a living human liver can be transplanted unto another living human - the liver part will grow into a fully functioning liver withing weeks/months.
no.
Yes they can eat human being liver
Reduced-size liver transplantation is the replacement of a whole diseased liver with a portion of a healthy donor liver.
The gallbladder is connected to the liver in the human body.
The structure of the human liver is different from that of a cat. A human liver has only four lobes whereas a cat's liver has five lobes.
the frogs liver is way biger
Assuming American Football the liver is roughly the same size.
The liver cells will undergo regeneration to grow back and repair the area where the cyst was removed. Liver cells have a high capacity to regenerate, allowing them to restore normal function to the liver after injury or surgery.
There is only one liver in the human body.
If the liver is broken or damaged, it will cause a risk to human health. If the liver is badly damaged, it can lead to death.