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The Urinary System By the end of this class you should understand: • The major functions of the urinary system • The major parts of the nephron and the function of each • The purpose of reabsorption and what materials are always or sometimes reabsorbed • The major components of urine and how this reflects the state of the body • How major defects of the urinary system put the body at risk The Urinary System • Also known as the renal system and excretory system • Consists primarily of the kidneys which remove waste from the blood • The waste becomes urine which collects in the bladder and is excreted by urination (peeing) Three Components of Urine • Water – If the body is dehydrated, a minimal amount of water is still excreted • Excess salts and any nutrients that are way above normal levels – Diabetes was originally diagnosed by testing urine for sweetness • Anything in the blood that the body does not recognize as useful (including drug metabolites) Urine Drug Test • Why must we pee in a cup for a job? • Drugs are not recognized by the body as being nutrients and so are not reabsorbed back into the blood when they are filtered • The urine essentially reflects the state of the blood, including drugs and metabolites (brokendown drugs after processing by the liver) Kidneys • The kidneys are wrapped in layers of connective tissue – Up to a quarter of all blood flow can pass through kidneys, so bruising and laceration can be lethal • The outer layer is the cortex • The inner core is the medulla – The medulla is very salty Kidneys • The kidneys produce filtrate when they filter blood plasma • The filtrate is then processed – The end result is urine • A huge amount of blood flows through the kidneys every day (up to ¼ of all blood flow) – The kidneys can excrete excess water at an impressive rate if hyperhydrated Nephron • The kidney is composed mostly of a set of tubules, called a nephron – The kidney may have up to a million nephrons • The nephron is mostly a tube of epithelial tissue called a tubule – The tubule contains filtrate, which becomes urine Nephron Diagram Filtration • Blood enters a special leaky artery called the glomerulus – Plasma leaks out of the glomerulus into the glomerular capsule (AKA Bowman’s capsule) • RBCs and proteins are too large to enter the capsule • Plasma, including salts, nutrients, and wastes, pass through the glomerulus – Referred to as glomerular filtration Renal Circulation • The blood flow through the kidneys is called renal circulation • After blood enters the renal artery, it becomes tiny afferent arterioles • These become the glomeruli (leaky arteries), which then become efferent arterioles • The efferent arterioles branch to become the capillaries Tubule Function • The tubule’s primary function is to reabsorb nutrients – Primarily glucose, amino acids and vitamins • This is performed by active transport and can only be performed at a certain rate – The concentration of nutrients also pulls water out via osmosis – Excess nutrients will end up in the urine • The nutrients are put back into the peritubular capillaries that follow the nephron Additional Reabsorption • In addition to reabsorbing nutrients and salts, certain nutrients are reabsorbed only if they are in demand • Primary example is calcium – Reabsorbed from the kidney only when PTH is in the blood, which is the signal for low calcium – What gland releases PTH? • Additional example is sodium – Reabsorbed more strongly when aldosterone is in the blood, which is the signal for low sodium – What gland releases aldosterone? Tubular Secretion • Some waste products and drugs are also actively transported into filtrate by tubular secretion – Also requires active transport • Creatinine (waste product from anaerobic cell activity) is reliably filtered and secreted by the kidney – Blood tests in the hospital for creatinine levels test kidney function Loop of Henle • The loop of Henle is the middle part of the tubule – The loop of Henle takes advantage of the medulla’s saltiness • The descending limb allows water to leave the tubule through osmosis • The ascending limb is impermeable to water but has ion channels so that salts diffuse out of the tubule Loop of Henle function • The Loop of Henle is designed to reclaim almost all the water and salt from the filtrate • The capillaries of the medulla are called vasa recta, which reclaim water and salt for the blood – If the Loop of Henle did not reclaim the water and salt, we would pee as fast as we filtered – Instead, we can concentrate our urine, allowing us to not pee all day Collecting Duct • The tubules begin fusing to become collecting ducts – The collecting duct still contains dilute urine (with a lot of water) • There are pores that allow water to leave the collecting ducts and enter the medulla • These pores are only opened by the action of a hormone called ADH, to conserve water – Where is ADH secreted from? Release of Urine • When filtrate leaves the collecting duct, it goes through the ureter to the bladder, where it is now officially urine • The release of urine (urination, or micturition) is under parasympathetic control – Which is why for some people it’s hard to go when you’re being watched – There are sympathetic nerve fibers in the smooth muscle of the bladder, which is why panic can cause some to wet themselves Urination • The urethra is the tube that carries urine from the bladder to the outside of the body – In men the urethra meets with the vas deferens, so urine exits the same opening of the penis that semen exits – In women the urethra has a separate opening from the vagina • The urethra has sphincter muscles that can hold it closed, but the brain must be trained to control them (hence diapers for babies) Kidney Homeostasis • Kidney function is vital to life – Many nitrogenous wastes that are eliminated by the kidney are toxic to our cells – The body can survive with one kidney, but that kidney can become overworked and fail • Kidney injuries are very hard to survive – So much blood flow through the kidney that being stabbed in the kidney can result in death from loss of blood in seconds, similar to the heart Dialysis • If both kidneys fail through nonviolent means, the patient may require dialysis, which is essentially artificial kidney function – There are several options, all of which are inferior to having actual working kidneys but all of which are superior to death – The most effective is hemodialysis, where blood is pumped through a dialysis machine that cleanses the blood Other Kidney Problems • Kidney Stones – Crystals form in the kidney or bladder, caused by a combination of factors including high calcium, alkaline blood, and not drinking enough water • Urinary Tract Infection – Bacteria can invade the urethra and potentially damage the body – Infected bladder is worse, infected kidney can be fatal That’s the end of class! • For those of you disappointed in the lack of naughty bits, Wednesday’s lesson is all about naughty bits! • For those of you who thought this was too much naughty bits already, you may want to reconsider coming on Wednesday…