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The Urinary System. Functions of the Urinary System 1) Elimination of waste products a)Nitrogenous wastes b)Toxins c)Drugs.

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Presentation on theme: "The Urinary System. Functions of the Urinary System 1) Elimination of waste products a)Nitrogenous wastes b)Toxins c)Drugs."— Presentation transcript:

1 The Urinary System

2 Functions of the Urinary System 1) Elimination of waste products a)Nitrogenous wastes b)Toxins c)Drugs

3 Functions of the Urinary System 2) Regulation of homeostasis a)Water balance b)Acid-base balance in the blood c)Plasma concentrations of ions and other nutrients d)Blood volume and blood pressure

4 Organs of the Urinary System 1)Kidneys (2)  Renal = pertaining to the kidneys 2)Ureters (2) - tubes attaching the kidneys to the bladder 3)Urinary bladder - smooth, collapsible, muscular sac that temporarily stores urine muscular sac that temporarily stores urine 4)Urethra - thin-walled tube that carries urine from the bladder to the outside of the body by peristalsis

5 Organs of the Urinary System

6 Major Regions of the Kidney  Hilus – indentation that provides a passageway for blood vessels and the ureter  Renal cortex – outer region of the kidney

7 Major Regions of the Kidney

8  Renal medulla – inner region of kidney  Renal pelvis – inner collecting tube that drains into the ureter  Lobe of a kidney = medullary pyramid and its surrounding cortical tissue

9 Major Regions of the Kidney

10 Nephrons  Definition: the structural and functional units of the kidneys (~1 million per kidney)  Responsible for forming urine  Found mostly in cortex, some found at the border between the medulla and cortex  Main structures of the nephrons: 1)Glomerulus 2)Renal tubule

11 Nephrons

12 Glomerulus  Definition: specialized (contain small pores) capillary network  capillary = tiny, thin-walled blood vessel  Surrounded by Bowman’s capsule, the beginning of the renal tubule

13 Glomerulus

14 Renal Tubule Consists of four parts:  Bowman’s capsule (cup-shaped)  Proximal convoluted tubule (coiled)  Loop of Henle (U-shaped)  Distal convoluted tubule (coiled) – empties into the collecting duct

15 Renal Tubule

16 Steps in Urine Formation a)Filtration b)Reabsorption c)Secretion

17 a) Filtration  Nonselective passive process (aided by blood pressure) in the glomeruli  Water and solutes smaller than proteins are forced through capillary walls (glucose, amino acids, ions, nitrogen wastes)  Blood cells cannot pass through to the renal tubule  Filtrate is collected in Bowman’s capsule and leaves via the renal tubule

18 b) Reabsorption PPPPeritubular capillaries reabsorb several materials 1)S ome water 2)G lucose 3)A mino acids 4)I ons SSSSome reabsorption is passive (diffusion and osmosis), most is active (active transport) MMMMost reabsorption occurs in the proximal convoluted tubule LLLLoop of Henle reabsorbs water (D) and sodium and chloride ions (A)

19 b) Reabsorption: Materials Not Reabsorbed Reabsorbed 1)Nitrogenous waste products  Urea – from breakdown of amino acids  Uric acid – from breakdown of RNA  Creatinine – from breakdown of chemical involved in skeletal muscle contraction 2)Excess water

20 c) Secretion  Reabsorption in reverse  Mostly occurs in the distal convoluted tubule  Some materials move from the peritubular capillaries into the renal tubules  Hydrogen and potassium ions  Creatinine  Certain drugs  Materials left in the renal tubule move toward the ureter

21 Formation of Urine

22 Normal Urine  Produce 1.2 liters of urine per day  93-97% water  Colored somewhat yellow due to the pigment urochrome (from the destruction of hemoglobin) and solutes  Normal pH of around 6  Specific gravity (density as compared to pure water) of 1.001 to 1.035  Sterile (no bacteria)  Slightly aromatic

23 Micturition (Voiding Urine)  The internal urethral sphincter (involuntary) is relaxed after stretching of the bladder (~200 mL of urine)  Activation is from an impulse sent to the spinal cord and back to the bladder  The external urethral sphincter must then be voluntarily relaxed

24 Maintaining Water Balance  Water intake must equal water output  Sources for water intake: 1)Ingested foods and fluids 2)Water produced from metabolic processes  Sources for water output: 1)Vaporization out of the lungs 2)Perspiration 3)In the feces 4)Urine

25 Maintaining Water Balance  Regulation is primarily by hormones (acting on the distal convoluted tubule)  Antidiuretic hormone (ADH) prevents excessive water loss in urine  Aldosterone reabsorbs sodium ions (water follows) and excretes excess potassium ions  Cells in the kidneys and hypothalamus monitor the water and solute concentrations of blood

26 Maintaining Acid-Base Balance BBBBlood pH must remain between 7.35 and 7.45 to maintain homeostasis MMMMost acid-base balance is maintained by the kidneys EEEExcrete hydrogen and bicarbonate ions if needed OOOOther acid-base controlling systems: BBBBlood buffers RRRRespiration

27 Maintaining Blood Volume and Blood Pressure  Mostly regulated by ADH and aldosterone  In cases of prolonged decrease in blood pressure/blood volume, the kidneys release the enzyme renin  Renin sets off a series of reactions that activates the hormone angiotensin  Angiotensin constricts blood vessels, stimulates increased production of ADH and aldosterone, and triggers the sensation of thirst

28 Aging and the Urinary System  Progressive decline in the number of functional nephrons  Bladder shrinks with aging  Incontinence – leakage of urine due to weakened urethral sphincter muscles  Urinary retention is common in males (enlarged prostate)  Decrease in total body water content


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