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Excretory System V. Excretory System = Urinary System A. Overall functions 1. Water homeostasis 2. Cleanses body of waste such as urea (urea is waste from protein metabolism) 3. pH homeostasis of blood B. Anatomy 1. Kidney (renal, "nephr-" both roots mean kidney) - Your two kidneys are located against your lower back region. 2. Ureters - These are the tubes that take the urine made by the kidneys to the urinary bladder for storage. 3. Urinary bladder - Located within your pelvic cavity, the urinary bladder stores the urine until it is time to urinate. It can hold 600-800 mls of urine. 4. Urethra - The urethra is the tube carrying urine from the bladder to the outside opening of the body. It travels through the penis in the male, but is short and empties in the vulva region, near the vaginal opening in the female. C. Urine formation - Occurs in the kidneys at the microscopic level. a. Nephron - The nephron is the functional unit of the kidney. These millions of microscopic structures make urine by filtering blood. 1. Glomerulus - The first part of the nephron starts with a clump of blood capillaries. This should make sense, since urine is filtered blood. At this level, anything that is small enough to fit through the wall of the glomerulus capillaries is filtered. The process is based on size, not on need. For example, RBCs are too large and are not filtered. Glucose, water and amino acids are small and are filtered. 2. Glomerular or Bowman's Capsule - The material filtered out of the glomerulus passes into a cup-like structure, called the glomerular capsule. It "catches" what is being filtered. 3. Renal Tubules - Next, the filtered material passes through a series of tubules, or little tubes, in which substances NEEDED by the body, that should not be urinated out, can be reabsorbed out of the tubules and back into the bloodstream. For example, you do not want to urinate your favorite energy source, glucose, so it is selectively reabsorbed back into the bloodstream. Water, nutrients and salt are also reabsorbed. This process turns the filtered material into waste. [Substances can also be secreted directly from the blood to the tubules as well, to allow for getting rid of larger molecules that cannot be filtered.] 4. Collecting ducts - After the selective reabsorption, many nephrons dump their contents into collecting ducts. Here, some more water can be reabsorbed, and then urine is in its final form and ready to exit the kidney. b. Controls 1. Blood pressure - As blood pressure increases, more blood moves through the glomerulus, and filtration & urine production increases. 2. Aldosterone - This is a hormone made by the adrenal gland. It causes sodium (salt) to be reabsorbed back into the bloodstream from the renal tubules. Since water loves to follow the salt, it indirectly results in water being reabsorbed as well. As more water goes into your bloodstream, it as though someone turned up the faucet on a hose, and the blood pressure rises. 3. Antidiuretic hormone (ADH) - This hormone is made by a part of the brain called the hypothalamus. It results in water reabsorption from the renal tubules. This causes you to conserve water in your bloodstream, and urinate dark and concentrated urine. Drinking alcohol directly blocks the release of ADH, and thus you cannot conserve your water, and you urinate a lot of dilute urine. It can result in dehydration. D. Urinary Pathology 1. Cystitis - "Cyst" means bladder. This is a bladder infection. It is usually the result of an ascending infection - bacteria migrating from the outside of the body, up the urethra, to the bladder. It is more common in women, due to the shorter urethra. Increasing urination, through increases fluid consumption, can help "rinse" bacteria out of the bladder and urethra. It can be diagnosed through a urinalysis which is an analysis of the urine in which bacteria and white blood cells would be numerous. 2. Renal failure - You have many nephrons, so have some leeway in losing nephrons through time. However, you reach a critical level if more than 2/3 of your nephrons are destroyed. Then, there are not enough nephrons to rid you body of waste. This is renal failure. Can you live without ONE kidney if the other one is functioning properly? This would cause a loss of 1/2 of your nephrons. The answer is yes. a. Uremia - This is the build up of toxic waste products, such as urea, in the bloodstream as a result of the kidneys not working. b. Treatment 1. Dialysis - This process filters your blood for you, since your failing kidney cannot do it. 2. Transplant - Kidney transplants are an option for people with renal failure. The procedure is one of the more successful transplants performed.