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Maintaining Water Balance The Kidneys. Homeostasis Regulation of a stable internal environment no matter where we are or what we do… We put our bodies.

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Presentation on theme: "Maintaining Water Balance The Kidneys. Homeostasis Regulation of a stable internal environment no matter where we are or what we do… We put our bodies."— Presentation transcript:

1 Maintaining Water Balance The Kidneys

2 Homeostasis Regulation of a stable internal environment no matter where we are or what we do… We put our bodies through A LOT on a daily basis – Adding food, liquid, chemicals – Changing temperature & activity levels BUT…. Our bodies roll with it! How (examples)???

3 Excretory System Star QB of maintaining homeostasis in our bodies – Responsible for maintaining the right amount of water and dissolved substances in your body (osmoregulation) Includes: – Kidneys – Bladder – Ureter – Urethra

4 Osmoregulation How our bodies get rid of the “stuff” we don’t need such as… – Byproducts of metabolized food Makes sure we don’t get dehydrated Your body’s GREATEST balancing act

5 The Excretory System Not all animals excrete waste in the same way… Main byproduct of metabolizing food (mainly protein) is ammonia (NH 3 )  TOXIC – Converted into either urea or uric acid depending on the amount of water available to the animal

6 Urea: Compound made from combining ammonia with carbon dioxide (in the liver) Low toxicity: can hang out in circulatory system for a while with no ill effects BUT…. You have to have extra water around to dissolve it and get rid of it (you pee)

7 Uric Acid: Have to be light enough to fly and don’t have a lot of spare water Excreted as paste (not a lot of water is needed) Have you ever seen bird poop? ** The white part of it is actually the uric acid

8 How do humans excrete urea? Starts with the kidney – Maintains levels of water and dissolved materials – Controls blood pressure Very Inefficient Process – Filter the water and dissolved material out of blood 99% is reabsorbed back 1% is sent on to make urine Avg day: kidneys filter out 180L of fluid from your blood, BUT only 1.5L gets peed out

9 How do your kidney’s do this? Use nephrons – Fun Fact: If you were to unravel all of your nephrons, they would stretch ~180 km Must follow blood flow to understand how they work… – Heart – Kidney (enters via renal arteries) – Glomerulus – Bowman’s Capsule – Proximal Convoluted Tubule – Loop of Henle – Distal Tubule – Collecting Duct

10 Glomerulus & Bowmans Capsule Start point for single nephron Pressure is high enough that 20% of the fluid is squeezed out and enters the Bowmans Capsule – Cup like sac (fluid is no longer blood, but filtrate: water, urea, small ions)

11 Promimal Convoluted Tubule Site of osmoregulation – Reabsorb water and other materials to create whatever balance your body needs – Mainly reabsorbs organic solutes (ie: glucose); recaptures Na, K and water

12 Loop of Henle Site where most of the reabsorption happens – Extracts most of the water that we need – Pumps salts – Creates a concentration gradient to cause more water to be extracted ***By the time the filtrate gets to the bottom of the loop it is HIGHLY concentrated

13 Distal Tubule Regulates Na, K, Ca levels – Controlled by pumps and hormones that control the reabsorption process By the time its done, we have taken everything we want OUT of the filtrate – Filtrate is now mainly excess water, urea and excess waste

14 Collecting Duct  reabsorbed  H 2 O  excretion  urea passed through to bladder

15 Descending limb Ascending limb


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