5 19 Excretory System PDF
5 19 Excretory System PDF
5 19 Excretory System PDF
Karen L. Lancour
National Rules Committee Chairman – Life Science
Excretion - Excretion is the removal of the metabolic wastes of an organism. Wastes that are removed
include carbon dioxide, water, salt, urea and uric acid. All excreted wastes travel at some time in the
blood.
Importance:
· Humans produce waste products that must be removed from their body.
· Most animals have a system that deals with nitrogen-rich wastes from the breakdown of proteins and
nucleic acids.
· Ammonia (NH3) is toxic.
· It helps maintain homeostasis – balancing osmotic action and pH.
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Organs of the Urinary System
Kidney – filters blood and forms urine- receives 20-25 % of arterial blood
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Functions of the kidney
· filtration – fluid pressure forces water and dissolved substances out of blood
· reabsorption – returns useful items as blood cells, plasma protein, glucose, amino acids, some salts
and some water to the blood Some urea and other salts are also reabsorbed.
· secretion – involves active transport - removes residues from toxins drugs, more urea and uric acid
into urine, excess potassium ions, and regulates pH of blood
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Nephron Function:
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STAGES OF URINE FORMATION IN THE NEPHRON
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Glomerular Filtration
A. Filtration Membrane
1. hydrostatic pressure – forces 1/5 of blood fluid through capillary walls into glomerular
capsule
2. filtration membrane – has three parts
a. fenestrated capillare endothelium (prevents passage of blood cells)
b. basal membrane (allows most solutes but larger proteins)
c. visceral membrane of glomerular capsule
3. solutes that can pass into glomerular capsule
< 3 nm easily pass (water, sugar, amino acids, nitogenous waste molecules)
Ø 9 nm larger proteins cannot pass through
B. Net Filtration Pressure
NFP = force OUT of blood – force to remain IN blood
NFP = glomerular – (glomerular + capsular )
hydrostatic osmotic hydrostatic
pressure pressure pressure
NFP = 55 mm Hg – ( 30 mm Hg + 15 mm Hg )
NFP = 55 mm Hg – ( 45 mm Hg )
NFP = net filtration pressure = 10 mm Hg
[This is the NET forces pushing fluid/solutes OUT of blood]
A. Overview of Reabsorption
1. filtrate - all fluid and its solutes pushed into the capsule
2. urine - filtrate minus reabsorbed substances
3. route of reabsorption (transepithelial process)
luminal surface of tubule cells >>
basolateral membrane of tubule cells >>
interstitial fluid between tubule cells and capillaries >>
endothelium of the peritubular capillary
4. most sugars and amino acids are reabsorbed
5. water and ion reabsorption depends on hormonal control
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B. Active Tubular Reabsorption
1. glucose, amino acids, lactate, vitamins, ions
a. move across luminal surface by diffusion
b. actively transported across basolateral membrane
i. contransported with Na+
c. diffuse into capillary by diffusion
2. transport maximum (T m) - when “ carrier proteins” for specific solute becomes saturated and
cannot carry the substance across the membrane
a. diabetes mellitus – lower Tm (glucose lost)
C. Passive Tubular Resorption
1. Na+ driven into interstitial space actively (above)
2. HCO3- and Cl- follow Na+ into the space
3. obligatory water resoprtion – water follows ions into the interstitial space between tubule &
capillary
4. solvent drag – solutes will begin to move into tubule from filtrate, following water (especially
some urea and lipid-soluble molecules
D. Nonreabsorbed Substances
1. urea, creatinine, uric acid – most is not reabsorbed because of the following reasons
a. no carrier molecules for active transport
b. not lipid-soluble
c. too large (as with most proteins)
E. Absorption in Different Regions of Renal Tubule
1. proximal tubule – closest to the glomerular capsule
a. almost all glucose & amino acids
b. 75-80% of water and Na+
c. most active transport of ions
2. Loop of Henle – connects proximal & distal tubules
Regulates Total water retained or lost:
a. descending limb – water can return
b. ascending limb – water can be reabsorbed
3. distal tuble & collecting duct – final passageway
a. antidiuretic hormone (ADH) – causes increased permeability to Na+ and water, allow
resorption
b. aldosterone – stimulated be renin-angiotensin, enhances Na+ reabsorption (water
follows)
i. lower blood pressure
ii. low Na+ concentration (hyponatremia)
c. atrial natriuretic factor (ANF) – reduces Na+ permeability, less water (in response to
high B.P.)
Tubular Secretion
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Regulation of Urine Concentration & Volume
4. Vasa recta (capillaries around Loop of Henle) have no Net Effect on water/salt balance
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C. Formation of Dilute Urine
1. When water removal is needed, no ADH is released, so that the Distal and Collecting
Tubules will not actively transport Na+ out; no water moves out
2. Urine may be as low as 50 mosm
D. Formation of Concentrated Urine (Water Conservation)
1. antidiuretic hormone (ADH) – stimulates reabsorption of water in the Distal and Collecting
Tubules
E. Diuretics (Stimulate Water Loss)
1. alcohol – inhibits action of ADH
2. caffeine – causes renal vasodilation; increases GFR
3. Na+ resorption blockers – block Na+ movement
Renal Clearance
A. Renal Clearance (RC) – the rate at which the kidney can remove a substance from the blood
RC = U/P X V
concentration of substance in urine (mg/ml)
U/P = --------------------------------------
concentration of substance in plasma (mg/ml)
V = rate of the formation of urine (ml/minute)
(normal = 1 ml/minute)
B. Glomerular Filtration Rate = 125 ml/minute; (determined by challenge with “Insulin”)
1. RC < 125 – reabsorption is occurring
2. RC > 125 – tubule cells secrete into the urine
A. Physical Characteristics
1. color – clear to yellowish; influenced by diet, drugs, and health state
2. odor – slightly aromatic; influenced by diet, drugs, and health state
3. pH (H+ conc.) – usually about 6; changes in diet can affect the pH
4. specific gravity – compared density to distilled water; urine slightly heavier (with solutes)
B. Chemical Composition
1. 95% water
2. 5% solutes – urea (breakdown of amino acids); uric acid; creatinine
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Composition of Urine
GFR– amount of filtrate formed per minute in all nephrons of both kidneys
• The amount of fluid filtered from the glomeruli into Bowman's space per unit of time.
• Renal capillaries are much more permeable than others.
• The flow rate is 180 L/day (125 ml/min) compared to 4 L/day in the other capillaries.
• The entire plasma volume is filtered about 60 times a day! Most is reabsorbed!
Note: Cranberry juice acidifies the urine which can help prevent bacterial growth and some types of kidney
stones. It also reduces the adherence of bacteria onto the walls of the urinary tract reducing the risk of urinary
tract infections.
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HYDRATION
· Obstructive Disorders – flow of urine is blocked causing it to back up and injure one or both
kidneys
· Kidney Stones - hard, crystalline mineral material formed within the kidney or urinary tract. Kidney
stones are a common cause of blood in the urine (hematuria) and often severe pain in the abdomen,
flank, or groin.
· UTI’s (Urinary Tract Infections) – infections of the urinary tract – can be in kidneys, ureters,
bladder or urethra
· Glomerular Disorders – disorders that affect kidney function by attacking the glomeruli
· Glomerulonephritis – a group of diseases that injure the part of the kidney that filters blood (called
glomeruli).
· Glomerulosclerosis - a disorder that scars the tiny blood vessels that filter urine from the blood in
the kidney’s glomeruli
· Renal failure – partial or complete failure of kidneys to function
· Incontinence – loss of bladder control
· Prostatitis – swelling and inflammation of the prostate gland
· BPH (Benign Prostyatic Hyperplasia)– enlarged prostate gland The prostate enlargement in
benign prostatic hyperplasia is not malignant (not cancer). BPH can impede the flow of urine.
Symptoms include frequent urge to urinate, getting up at night to urinate, difficulty urinating and
dribbling of urine.
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