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Function of the Urinary System
- Filter blood
- Regulate volume and composition of the blood
- Gluconeogenesis during fasting
- Produce hormones
–Renin (helps regulate blood pressure)
- –Erythropoietin (stimulates RBC production)
- Metabolizes vitamin D from inactive form to active
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Is the kidney retroperitoneal?
Yes
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Kidney slightly lower to the ____.
Left
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Kidney is about the size of a . . .
large bar of soap
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Renal hilum
–_vertical cleft
–Leads to ____
–Ureter, renal blood vessels, lymphatics and nerves enter here
Concave
internal renal sinus
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Renal fascia-_____tissue and Anchors kidney and adrenal gland
_____- Surrounds the kidney and cushions it
_____ -Transparent, prevents infections from spreading to the kidney
- Dense fibrous connective
- Perirenal fat capsule
- Fibrous capsule
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Renal artery to _____, to interlobar, to _____, to cortical radiate, to _____, to _____>
- segmental
- arcute
- afferent arteriole
- Glomerulus
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Is there a segmental vien?
No
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Nephron
Parts
–glomerulus
A ball of capillaries
– renal tubule
glomerular capsule (Bowman’s capsule)
–Cup shaped end of the renal tubule
–Has fenestrated endothelium
–renal corpuscle
Glomerulus + Bowman’s capsule
Filtrate
–Solute rich fluid from the blood (no protein)
–Urine made from this
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Bowman’s Capsule Structure
Parietal layer
–____ epithelium
–Not involved in forming ____
Visceral layer
–Clings to the _____
–Podicytes
- Simple squamous
- filtrate
- glomerular capillaries
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Podicytes
Highly branched modified epithelial cells
Foot processes intertwine and cling to the _____
Filtrations slits
–Spaces between the _____
–Allow filtrate to enter the capsular space
- basement membrane of the glomerulus
- foot processes
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The rest of the renal tubule…
Single layer of polar epithelial cells with basement membrane
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The rest of the renal tubule empties . . .
Empty into the collecting ducts
–Run through the medullary pyramids and make them look striped
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The rest of the renal tubule
three parts ?
–Proximal convoluted tubule (PCT)
- –Loop of Henle
- U-shaped
- Descending
- Ascending
–Distal convoluted tubule
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Cortical nephrons
–85%
–Almost entirely in the ___.
–Part of ____ dips into the outer medulla
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Juxtamedullary nephrons
–Concentrate ____
–Entire _____ is in the medulla
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Two capillary beds
–Glomerulus
Specialized for ____
Afferent arteriole and efferent arteriole
–Peritubular Arise from the efferent arteiole Specialized for reabsorption . . .
- filtration
- Vasa recta for juxtamedullary nephrons
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Juxtamedullary Apparatus
Most distal part of the loop of Henle lies along the _____ (sometimes efferent too)
afferent arteriole
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Juxtamedullary Apparatus
Two important cells types in the JMA
–____ cells
Aka juxtamedullary cells
Sense blood pressure and secrete ____
In the arteriole
–Macula densa
Chemoreceptors that sense NaCl in the filtrate
Granular
renin
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3 step urine production
- Glomerular filtration
- Tubular reabsorption
- Tubular secretions
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Glomerular Filtration
Passive or Active jQuery11010013946590766312106_1493813961379??
Due to ____ pressure
Fluids and small solutes forced out of the glomerulus
Amazing filtration membrane
Filtration rate=120-125 ml/min
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Glomerular Filtrate
Water
Ions–Sodium, potassium, chloride
Nitrogenous waste–Urea, uric acid, creatine
Organic molecules–Glucose, amino acids
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Tubular Reabsorption
Most of the filtrate is quickly reabsorpted
Must cross the barrier formed by ______.
the tubular cells
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Tubular Reabsorption
Two reabsorption pathways
–Transcellular (through cells)
Through the ___ and/or ____
Most solutes are reabsorbed through this pathway by _____.
–Paracellular (between cells)
Through _____.
–Water and some ions use both
- luminal and basolateral membranes
- diffusion or active transport
- tight junctions
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Blood Pressure is the driving force of glomerular filtration…what drives reabsorption?
Water reabsorption osmosiss
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Osmolarity of interstitium is increased
How-transport sodium into the interstitium?
Sodium enables the reabsorption of most everything else
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____ is total concentration of all solute particles in a solution
Osmomolarity
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Counter current mechanisms maintain osmotic gradient
Ascending and descending limbs of Loop of Henle interact to maintain _____.
Needed for urine _____.
- interstitial osmolarity gradient
- concentration
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Counter current mechanisms maintain osmotic gradient
Ascending limb
–Creates the conditions need for the descending to function
–Actively transports NaCl into interstitium
–Highest solute concentration near the bottom
–Impermeable to ____
water
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Tubular secretetion
1. in reverse
2. Disposes of substances
–Certain drugs
3. Eliminates undesirable end products that were reabsorped passively
–i.e. urea
4. Rids excess ___
5. Controls ____
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Descending limb
–Concentrates ___for ascending limb
–Filtrate concentrates to ___normal body fluid
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Vasa Recta
How does the kidney retain the solutes?
–They would be absorbed by normal capillaries but are, why?
–They function as ____ exchangers
–Loops ____ nutrients and oxygen
–Then form ____ to go from increasing osmolarity back to decreasing.
- circulatory counter current
- deliver
- hairpin loops
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Urine color and transparency
–Clear, pale to deep yellow
–Yellow due to urochrome: Pigment by product of _____
–Pink, brown may be due to eating certain foods; may be due to presence of bile pigments or blood; Certain meds or vitamins
–Cloudy may indicate _____
hemoglobin destruction
urinary tract infection
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Odor
–Fresh usually has little smell
–Develops an ammonia odor due to _____.
–Some drugs and foods alter odor
i.e. asparagus, brocholi
–Some diseases affect odor
i.e. diabetes mellitus fruity smell
bacteria
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pH
–Usually about 6
–Health and diet can affect pH
–Range____ normal
–Acidic- due to ____
–Alkaline- due to vegitarian
4.5-8
high protein
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Compostion
95% water
Next is urea
other nitrogenous waste
–Uric acid, creatine
Solutes (in order of normal concentration most to least)
–Na+, K+, PO43-, SO42-, creatine, uric acid, Ca2+, Mg2+, HCO3-
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Ureters- describe
Slender tubes that carry urine from the kidneys to the urinary bladder
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Urinary Bladder
Collapsible muscular sac
Temporarily stores urine
Retroperitoneal
Trigone–Outlined by the three openings, area where infections “sit”–Ureters enter inferiorly--So a full bladder closes them off, prevents back flow–Urethra exits inferiorly
Detrusor muscle
Rugae
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Bladder
Holds about ___ml of urine when moderately full
–Can hold about twice that much (800-1000 ml)
–Can burst if over extended
Due to blockage, you cannot hold it long enough to burst your bladder, your body won’t let you
500
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Thin walled muscular tube Drains urine from the bladder
urethra
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Urethra
Internal urethral sphincter
–At bladder-urethral junction
–Involuntary or voluntary?
–Prevents leaking when not ___
–Contracts open and relaxes closed (weird right?)
External urethral sphincter
–Surrounds the ____ as it passes through the urogenital diaphram
–Voluntary or involuntary?
–Works with the levator ani
- Involuntary
- voiding
- urethra
- Voluntary
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Female
–Bound to ____ vaginal wall
–External urethral orifice
Anterior to vaginal opening
___ to the clitoris
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AKA urination, voiding
The act of emptying the urinary bladder
Micturition
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Micturition
3 thing must happen to allow micturition
–The ___ muscle must contract (open)
Involuntary
–The ___urethral sphincter must open
Involuntary
–The ____ urethral sphincter must open (relax)
Voluntary
- detrusor
- internal
- external
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