11.3 THE KIDNEY Topic 11 Human Health & Physiology.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
BIOLOGY Topic 12.
Advertisements

Excretion and the Kidneys
12.2The human Kidney Mrs. Jackie. Intro Human possess two kidneys Human possess two kidneys Situated at the back of the abdominal cavity Situated at the.
Excretion of Nitrogenous Waste
F214: Communication, Homeostasis and Energy 4. 2
I. Urinary System A.Humans excrete nitrogenous waste (from amino acids) as urea and uric acid. B.Kidneys remove waste and water from blood.
The Kidney.
The nephron and kidney function
3 functions of the urinary system Excrete nitrogenous wastes – Urea produced from the metabolism of proteins and nucleic acids Other animals produce ammonia.
The Kidney.
Presentation title slide
Chapter 37: The human urinary system
Urinary System.
KIDNEY FUNCTIONS URINE FORMATION
The Nephron HSC Biology: Maintaining a Balance Syllabus link: explain how the processes of filtration and reabsorption in the mammalian nephron regulate.
The kidney Topic 11.3.
Human Health & Physiology
The Kidney.
Topic 11: Human Health and Physiology
Urinary System and the Excretion System
Objectives of lesson 1. Outline the structure & associated blood supply & draw a diagram of the nephron. 2. Explain urine formation, including: Bowman's.
Formation of Urine.
Unit O: Urinary System.
11.3 The kidney Objectives Define excretion.
Excretory System.
11.3 Excretion: The Kidney Define Excretion Metabolic reactions generate waste products. Waste products need to be mitigated and eliminated. This.
Excretory. Function Remove metabolic waste from the blood- Excretion Regulate H2O in blood Organs of excretion- Skin-water, salts and urea Lungs-CO2 Kidneys.
Define Excretion Excretion refers to the removal of the waste products of metabolic pathways from the body. This can occur in a number of ways but.
F214: Communication, Homeostasis and Energy The Kidney
Urinary System. Urinary System Function The function of the urinary system is to help maintain the appropriate balance of water and solutes in the bodies.
Excretion. Syllabus links Plant Excretion The role of leaves as excretory organsof plants The Excretory System in the Human Role of the excretory.
Homeostasis and Excretion: Focus on the Kidney & Nephrons Christen, Deanna, & Stephanie.
Genitourinary System. Functions of the Kidney Excretion – Removal from the body of the waste products of metabolic pathways Osmoregulation – Is the control.
7.5 Formation of Urine Formation depends on three functions:
IB Biology Topic 11 Human Health 11.3 The Kidney.
Excretion and the Kidney HL (Paper 1 and 2). Excretion What is excretion? – Elimination of waste from the metabolic processes, to maintain homeostasis.
Reabsorption In the Kidney. Objectives 1)Describe the general structure of the kidney, the nephron, and associated blood vessels 2)Explain the functioning.
Do Now: Trace the flow of blood through the pulmonary circuit in 6 steps.
A Journey Through the Nephron Jowie Papa. Kidneys and Homeostasis Functions of the loop of Henle Osmoregulation – Controls balance of water in blood and.
Objectives – What you will need to know from this section  Outline the structure & associated blood supply & draw a diagram.  Explain urine formation,
Dr Alice Roberts is lovely tomy-and-physiology-of-the- kidneys/5370.html
Module 11: Human Health and Physiology II 11.3 The Kidney.
11.3 The kidney and osmoregulation Understanding: -Animals are either osmoregulators or osmoconformers -The Malpighian tubule system in insects and the.
11.3.1, , Kidney and Excretion. Draw the kidney A- Renal Vein B- Renal Artery C- Ureter D- Medulla E- Pelvis F- Cortex.
Biology HL Mrs. Ragsdale.  Excretion – removal of waste products from the body leftover from metabolic pathways  Produce urine  Osmoregulation – control.
Topic 11 Animal Physiology 11.3 The Kidney and Osmoregulation.
Excretion The removal from the body of the waste products of metabolism Includes removal through the lungs, skin, urinary system and kidney Done through.
The function of kidney. The kidneys main functions are to filter the blood of toxins and control the water balance of the body. To do this the kidneys.
Nitrogenous Wastes Ammonia- fish Urea- mammals Uric acid- birds.
The Kidney. The Structure of the Kidney There are three distinct regions based on the distribution of the different sections of the nephron. The human.
Osmolarity Osmolarity is the solute concentration of a solution Animals are either: Osmoregulators: maintain a constant internal solute concentration.
16.2 Anatomy of the kidney Anatomy of a nephron
URINARY SYSTEM  To identify and describe the main organs of the urinary system  To describe the structure of a nephron.  To describe the 3 steps of.
Topic 11.3 The Kidney & Osmoregulation
Human Health & Physiology
Chapter 10 – Excretion.
The Kidney.
Only need 50% function of kidneys
The nephron.
11.3 – The Kidney & Osmoregulation
11.3 The Kidney and Excretion Excretion. The Kidney
11.3 Excretory System.
11.3 – The Kidney & Osmoregulation
The Kidney – structure and function
Topic 11.3 The Kidney & Osmoregulation
PREPARATION: RENAL SYSTEM
The Kidney.
H The Nephron as a Unit of Kidney Function
11.3 – The Kidney & Osmoregulation
The Excretory System Aorta Renal Artery Right Kidney Renal Vein
Presentation transcript:

11.3 THE KIDNEY Topic 11 Human Health & Physiology

The Kidney Define excretion. Excretion is the removal from the body of the waste products of metabolic pathways Draw and label a diagram of the kidney. (Include the cortex, medulla, pelvis, ureter and renal blood vessels) Annotate a diagram of a glomerulus and associated nephron to show the function of each part Explain the process of ultrafiltration, including blood pressure, fenestrated blood capillaries and basement membrane Define osmoregulation. Osmoregulation is the control of the water balance of the blood, tissue or cytoplasm of a living organism Explain the reabsorption of glucose, water and salts in the proximal convoluted tubule, including the roles of microvilli, osmosis and active transport Explain the roles of the loop of Henle, medulla, collecting duct and ADH in maintaining the water balance of blood Explain the differences in the concentration of proteins, glucose and urea between blood plasma, glomerular filtrate and urine Explain the presence of glucose in the urine of untreated diabetic patients. Aim 7: Data logging using colorimeters to measure the response of blood cells to changing salt concentrations is possible.

Excretion Excretion is the removal of waste products of metabolism This is distinct from defecation, since in defecation the waste is not products of metabolism What word did we use to describe defecation?

Kidney Structure The main parts of a kidney you need to know are: Cortex Medulla Pelvis Ureter Renal Artery Renal Vein

Kidney Structure Ref: IB Biology, Allott

A comprehensive animation

Processes of the Kidney There are two main process that occur in the Kidney: Ultrafiltration Filtering out of the waste products from the blood Reabsorption Taking back into the blood of substances still needed by the body.

The Nephron The Nephron is the functional unit of the kidney. The parts of a nephron include: The afferent and efferent blood vessels. The glomerulus. The Bowman's capsule. Proximal and distal convoluted tubules. Loop of Henle – descending and ascending limbs. The collecting duct.

The Nephron

The Glomerulus The function of the glomerulus is to produce a filtrate from the blood. This process is called Ultrafiltration. It is passive. It is unselective. In the glomerulus, about 20% of the blood plasma escaped through the walls of the capillaries into the bowman’s capsule. This is because of two reasons: The blood pressure is very high in the glomerulus. Efferent blood vessel has a much smaller diameter than the afferent. The capillaries in the glomerulus are fenestrated. They have many pores in them.

Ultrafiltration Ultrafiltration of solutes occurs through the fenestrations (gaps) in the blood capillaries. Large molecules in the blood are able to pass through the gaps in the capillary cells, but are unable to pass through the basement membrane. The capillaries are surrounded by podocyte cells, the cells of the inner wall of the bowman’s capsule. These cells wrap around the capillaries and have gaps between them to allow the filtrate to pass through quickly.

Reabsorption in the Convoluted Tubule As well as waste products, the glomerular filtrate contains substances the body still needs. Most of this selective reabsorption occurs in the proximal convoluted tubule. The inside of the PCT has microvilli, to increase the surface area for re-absorption. Glucose and salts are reabsorbed by active transport. Water is reabsorbed by osmosis. All glucose is reabsorbed (under normal conditions) About 80% of water is reabsorbed leaving only about 20% to pass onto the loop of henle.

Osmoregulation Osmoregulation is the control of water (and hence solute) levels in the blood, tissues or cytoplasm of a living organism. Osmoregulation is performed by the kidney. The kidney controls the amount of water passed out of the body in the urine.

The collecting duct balances the water concentration of the blood, through hormonal control.

ADH and the Collecting Duct Ref: IB Biology OSC

Comparing Glomerular Filtrate and Urine Glomerular Filtrate: High in glucose Low in urea Urine: No glucose (it has been reabsorbed) High in urea (it has been concentrated)

Diabetes The urine of non-diabetic patients should contain no glucose as it is selectively reabsorbed from the filtrate in the proximal convoluted tubule Diabetics have higher levels of blood glucose due to either a lack of insulin secretion (type I) or insensitivity to insulin secretions (type II) Because of this, not all of the glucose in diabetics is reabsorbed into the blood (protein pumps in tubule wall become saturated) This results in the presence of glucose in the urine of untreated diabetics, which can be detected using test strips