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EXCRETION Excretion There are many chemical reactions taking place in the body – these produce by-products, some of which are able to be used by the body, while others are wastes. Most wastes are toxic and would be harmful if allowed to accumulate. The removal of metabolic wastes from the body is called Excretion Removing wastes also allows the body to maintain equilibrium within the body (this is called Homeostasis) Organs of Excretion • Kidneys – filter blood to maintain a constant concentration of materials in the body fluids, excrete/remove nitrogenous wastes like urea, uric acid & creatinine • Liver – deamination & synthesis of urea • Lungs – CO2 • Skin – sweat glands secrete sweat (contains salts, urea & lactic acid) The Liver & its role in excretion and other functions FUNCTIONS • • • • • • • • • Deamination Blood glucose regulation Fat conversion Bile formation Plasma protein production Production of blood-clotting factors Storage Toxin and hormone breakdown Heat production Deamination occurs in the liver Wellcome Foundation - Miles Kelly Art Library Deamination is the stripping of nitrogen from amino acids and nitrogen bases Some of the amino acids absorbed during digestion are taken in by cells and used to make proteins. Excess of amino acids cannot be stored, but is converted in the liver into carbohydrates The deamination process • The conversion first involves the removal of the amino group (-NH2) from the amino acid • The amino group is converted to Ammonia (NH3) • As ammonia is toxic to the body, so is quickly converted to urea • Urea is removed from the blood by the kidneys and excreted as urine. • Amino acid → ammonia + organic compounds (used for respiration) The amino group • Ammonia (very toxic) + CO2 → urea (H2NCONH2) Other Functions 2. Blood Glucose Regulation & 3. Fat Conversion – after a meal = hepatic portal vein contains a large quantity of absorbed glucose – Liver cells take in this glucose and may use for own energy requirements = convert it into glycogen, or convert it to fat – Glycogen, is the form in which the carbohydrate is stored – Liver stores as an energy reserve for the body – So between meals when blood glucose falls, the liver is able to recover glycogen to glucose and pass it into the blood - releasing glucose into the blood = regulating blood glucose 4. Bile Formation • Liver produces bile which is involved in the mechanical breakdown of fat 5. Plasma Protein Production • The liver produced most of the proteins found in the blood plasma 6. Production of Blood-clotting factors • Many of the substances required for blood clotting are produced here 7. Storage • Stores glycogen, but also stores iron, the fatsoluble vitamins A & D 8. Toxin & Hormone breakdown • Toxins and compounds that naturally occur in the body or are introduced with food or form of drugs = are broken down to harmless substances in the liver • Hormones that circulate in the blood are also inactivated by the liver 9. Heat production • A great deal of chemical reactions take place here = heat energy is released as a by-produced • Liver is important source of heat & assists in the maintaining a constant body temperature