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A 69-year-old alcoholic presents to a GP for a range of complaints including dyspepsia (feeling full after eating, poor digestion), fatigue, weakness, exhaustion, lack of appetite, weight loss, abdominal distension, swelling, arthralgia, and spinal pain. Even a physical examination revealing hepatomegaly (enlarged liver), spider angioma, and ascites (presence of fluid in the abdominal cavity) suggests that the patient is suffering from cirrhosis. This is confirmed by laboratory, sonography, and biopsy. Liver cirrhosis is the remodelling of the lobular structure of the liver into a nodular structure due to the disappearance of hepatocytes, replacement by connective tissue and nodule formation as a result of chronic liver disease. Ito cells play an important role in this remodelling process. Where would we find most of these cells?