CopyrightThe McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Urinary System. I. Introduction A. Organs/Structure 1.Kidneys 2.Ureter 3.Urinary Bladder 4.Urethra.
Advertisements

PowerPoint Lecture Outlines to accompany
Urinary System Chapter 17.
The Urinary System and Tract
Chapter 26 Urinary System.
Human Urogenital System
Urinary System Chapter 17 Bio 160.
Ch 17.  Main function: Filter blood and remove salts and nitrogenous waste.  Maintains normal water and electrolyte concentration.  Regulates pH and.
Renal (Urinary) System
URINARY SYSTEM. Introduction  Consists of the kidneys, ureters, urinary bladder, and urethra  Kidneys: high of the posterior wall of abdominal cavity.
The Urinary System. Functions of the Urinary System O Three Major Functions O Excretion: The removal of organic waste products from body fluid. O Elimination:
PowerPoint Lecture Outlines to accompany
Objectives: Identify structures and functions of the urinary system Tracing the filtration of blood from the kidneys to the urethra 3.
1 Copyright © 2015 McGraw-Hill Education. All rights reserved. No reproduction or distribution without the prior written consent of McGraw-Hill Education.
1 Copyright  The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. *See PowerPoint image slides for all figures and tables.
Chapter 17 Urinary System.
By: Taylor Currin, Jamie Steckler & Bailey Gibbons Period 4.
The Urinary System Figure 3. Urine formation takes place in the nephron. Figure 3. Urine formation takes place in the nephron.
Chapter 24 – The Urinary System $100 $200 $300 $400 $500 $100$100$100 $200 $300 $400 $500 The Glomerulus Kidney Tubules Urine “Kidneying” “Urine Town”
1 Hole’s Human Anatomy and Physiology Eleventh Edition Shier  Butler  Lewis Chapter 20 Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required.
Caroll Bai & Brianna Estrada Period: 4 Anatomy/ Physiology
Chapter 18 The Urinary System. Chapter 18 The Urinary System.
1 Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. CHAPTER 16 URINARY SYSTEM.
1 PowerPoint Lecture Outlines to accompany Hole’s Human Anatomy and Physiology Eleventh Edition Shier  Butler  Lewis Chapter 20 Copyright © The McGraw-Hill.
Urinary SystemUrinary System By: Blake Rossman, David Barin, & Gabe Watkins.
Anatomy of the Urinary System
The Urinary System. System Overview Consists of: –Kidneys –Ureters –Urinary bladder –Urethra.
The Urinary System Chapter 17. Introduction The urinary system consists of –two kidneys that filter the blood, –two ureters, –a urinary bladder, and –a.
The Urinary System ANATOMY & PHYSIOLOGY.  The Urinary System removes salts and nitrogenous wastes, helps maintain water concentration, electrolyte balance,
The Urinary System Organs: Kidneys (creates urine), ureters (transport), urinary bladder (stores), urethra (transport)
Chapter Fifteen The Urinary System.
Urinary System. Introduction A.The urinary system consists of two kidneys that filter the blood, two ureters, a urinary bladder, and a urethra to convey.
Functions Removes wastes Regulate normal concentrations of water and electrolytes Regulates pH and body fluid volume Helps regulate RBC production Helps.
JOVIE L. DIANA LU-LU THE MOO MOO VIRGINIA N. Queen of Toilets: The Urinary System.
17 -1 Chapter 18 The Urinary System. 18-1: The Urinary System Functions of the urinary system: Excretion Excretion—removal of waste products Elimination.
Urinary system Chapter 25. Excretory System The main organs of the excretory system are the bladder, kidneys, liver, lungs, and skin. The excretory system.
+ The Urinary System. + Organs of the Urinary System.
Urinary System Chapter 15. Kidney Functions The main functional organs of the urinary system are the kidneys. The kidneys dispose of wastes and excess.
Chapter 18 Lecture Slides
Do Now What do your kidneys do? What is excreted in urine?
Fundamentals of Anatomy & Physiology
Exam Four material Assignment due: Exam Four: Chapter 20 Urinary
The Urinary System Paired kidneys A ureter for each kidney
Chapter 21 The Urinary System
Chapter 21 The Urinary System
The Urinary System Organs: Kidneys (creates urine), ureters (transport), urinary bladder (stores), urethra (transport)
Chapter 10 – Excretion.
Urinary and Reproductive Systems
Unit 3.4 Water.
Urinary system Lab 8.
Structure and Function of the Kidneys
Chapter 17 *Lecture Outline
Chapter 25 The Urinary System.
Urinary System Biology 2402
A&P II URINARY SYSTEM.
15 The Urinary System.
Ch. 17 – Urinary System.
The Urinary System.
ANATOMY AND PHYSIOLOGY
Chapter 25 The Urinary System.
The Urinary System.
Renal Physiology.
The next 12 days.… January 2-4 Urinary System January 4 Urniary Quiz
NOTES UNIT 9 part 2: Urinary (Excretory) System Urinary Processes
Chapter 17 Lecture Outline
The Urinary System.
Urinary System Don’t break the seal….
Urinary System Cleaning up the system.
Presentation transcript:

CopyrightThe McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc CopyrightThe McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. Hole’s Essentials of Human Anatomy & Physiology David Shier Jackie Butler Ricki Lewis Created by Lu Anne Clark Professor of Science, Lansing Community College Chapter 17 Lecture Outlines* *See PowerPoint image slides for all figures and tables pre-inserted into PowerPoint without notes”.

Chapter 17 Urinary System

CopyrightThe McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc CopyrightThe McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.  Introduction A. The urinary system consists of two kidneys that filter the blood, two ureters, a urinary bladder, and a urethra to convey waste substances to the outside.

CopyrightThe McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc CopyrightThe McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.  Kidneys A. The kidney is a reddish brown, bean-shaped organ 12 centimeters long; it is enclosed in a tough, fibrous capsule.

B. Location of the Kidneys CopyrightThe McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. B. Location of the Kidneys 1. The kidneys are positioned retroperitoneally on either side of the vertebral column between the twelfth thoracic and third lumbar vertebrae, with the left kidney slightly higher than the right.

CopyrightThe McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc CopyrightThe McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. C. Kidney Structure 1. A medial depression in the kidney leads to a hollow renal sinus into which blood vessels, nerves, lymphatic vessels, and the ureter enter. 2. Inside the renal sinus lies a renal pelvis that is subdivided into major and minor calyces; small renal papillae project into each minor calyx.

a. The renal medulla houses tubes leading to the papillae. CopyrightThe McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. 3. Two distinct regions are found within the kidney: a renal medulla and a renal cortex. a. The renal medulla houses tubes leading to the papillae. b. The renal cortex contains the nephrons, the functional units of the kidney.

CopyrightThe McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc CopyrightThe McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. D. Kidney Functions 1. The kidneys function to regulate the volume, composition, and pH of body fluids and remove metabolic wastes from the blood in the process. 2. The kidneys also help control the rate of red blood cell formation by secreting erythropoietin, and regulate blood pressure by secreting renin.

CopyrightThe McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc CopyrightThe McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. E. Renal Blood Vessels 1. The abdominal aorta gives rise to renal arteries leading to the kidneys. 2. As renal arteries pass into the kidneys, they branch into successively smaller arteries: interlobar arteries, arcuate arteries, interlobular arteries, and afferent arterioles leading to the nephrons.

CopyrightThe McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc CopyrightThe McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. 3. Venous blood is returned through a series of vessels that generally correspond to the arterial pathways.

F. Nephrons 1. Nephron Structure CopyrightThe McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. F. Nephrons 1. Nephron Structure a. A kidney contains one million nephrons, each of which consists of a renal corpuscle and a renal tubule.

CopyrightThe McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc CopyrightThe McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. b. The renal corpuscle is the filtering portion of the nephron; it is made up of a ball of capillaries called the glomerulus and a glomerular capsule that receives the filtrate.

d. Several distal convoluted tubules join to become a collecting duct. CopyrightThe McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. c. The renal tubule leads away from the glomerular capsule and first becomes a highly coiled proximal convoluted tubule, then leads to the nephron loop, and finally to the distal convoluted tubule. d. Several distal convoluted tubules join to become a collecting duct.

CopyrightThe McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc CopyrightThe McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.

2. Blood Supply of a Nephron CopyrightThe McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. 2. Blood Supply of a Nephron a. The glomerulus receives blood from a fairly large afferent arteriole and passes it to a smaller efferent arteriole. b. The efferent arteriole gives rise to the peritubular capillary system, which surrounds the renal tubule.

3. Juxtaglomerular Apparatus CopyrightThe McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. 3. Juxtaglomerular Apparatus a. At the point of contact between the afferent and efferent arterioles and the distal convoluted tubule, the epithelial cells of the distal tubule form the macula densa.

CopyrightThe McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc CopyrightThe McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. b. Near the macula densa on the afferent arteriole are smooth muscle cells called juxtaglomerular cells. c. The macula densa together with the juxtaglomerular cells make up the juxtaglomerular apparatus.

CopyrightThe McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc CopyrightThe McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.

CopyrightThe McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc CopyrightThe McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. Urine Formation A. Urine formation involves glomerular filtration, tubular reabsorption, and tubular secretion. B. Glomerular Filtration 1. Urine formation begins when the fluid portion of the blood is filter by the glomerulus and enters the glomerular capsule as glomerular filtrate.

CopyrightThe McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc CopyrightThe McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. C. Filtration Pressure 1. The main force responsible for moving substances by filtration through the glomerular capillary wall is the hydrostatic pressure of the blood inside. 2. Due to plasma proteins, osmotic pressure of the blood resists filtration, as does hydrostatic pressure inside the glomerular capsule.

CopyrightThe McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc CopyrightThe McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. D. Filtration Rate 1. The factors that affect the filtration rate are filtration pressure, glomerular plasma osmotic pressure, and hydrostatic pressure in the glomerular capsule. 2. When the afferent arteriole constricts in response to sympathetic stimulation, filtration pressure, and thus filtration rate, declines.

CopyrightThe McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc CopyrightThe McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. 3. When the efferent arteriole constricts, filtration pressure increases, increasing the rate of filtration. 4. When osmotic pressure of the glomerular plasma is high, filtration rate decreases.

CopyrightThe McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc CopyrightThe McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. 5. When hydrostatic pressure inside the glomerular capsule is high, filtration rate declines. 6. On the average, filtration rate is 125 milliliters per minute or 180 liters in 24 hours, most of which is reabsorbed further down the nephron.

E. Regulation of Filtration Rate CopyrightThe McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. E. Regulation of Filtration Rate 1. Glomerular filtration rate is relatively constant, although sympathetic impulses may decrease the rate of filtration.

CopyrightThe McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc CopyrightThe McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. 2. Another control over filtration rate is the renin-angiotensin system, which regulates sodium excretion. a. When the sodium chloride concentration in the tubular fluid decreases, the macula densa senses these changes and causes the juxtaglomerular cells to secrete renin.

CopyrightThe McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc CopyrightThe McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. b. Secretion of renin triggers a series of reactions leading to the production of angiotensin II, which acts as a vasoconstrictor; this may, in turn, affect filtration rate.

CopyrightThe McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc CopyrightThe McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. c. Presence of angiotensin II also increases the secretion of aldosterone, which stimulates reabsorption of sodium. d. The heart can also increase filtration rate when blood volume is high.

F. Tubular Reabsorption CopyrightThe McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. F. Tubular Reabsorption 1. Changes in the fluid composition from the time glomerular filtrate is formed to when urine arrives at the collecting duct are largely the result of tubular reabsorption of selected substances. 2. Most of the reabsorption occurs in the proximal convoluted tubule, where cells possess microvilli with carrier proteins.

CopyrightThe McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc CopyrightThe McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. 3. Carrier proteins have a limited transport capacity, so excessive amounts of a substance will be excreted into the urine. 4. Glucose and amino acids are reabsorbed by active transport, water by osmosis, and proteins by pinocytosis.

G. Sodium and Water Reabsorption CopyrightThe McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. G. Sodium and Water Reabsorption 1. Sodium ions are reabsorbed by active transport, and negatively charged ions follow passively. 2. As sodium is reabsorbed, water follows by osmosis.

H. Regulation of Urine Concentration and Volume CopyrightThe McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. H. Regulation of Urine Concentration and Volume 1. Most of the sodium ions are reabsorbed before the urine is excreted, and sodium is concentrated in the renal medulla by the countercurrent mechanism. 2. Normally the distal convoluted tubule and collecting duct are impermeable to water unless the hormone ADH is present.

I. Urea and Uric Acid Excretion CopyrightThe McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. I. Urea and Uric Acid Excretion 1. Urea is a by-product of amino acid metabolism; uric acid is a by-product of nucleic acid metabolism. 2. Urea is passively reabsorbed by diffusion but about 50% of urea is excreted in the urine. 3. Most uric acid is reabsorbed by active transport and a small amount is secreted into the renal tubule.

CopyrightThe McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc CopyrightThe McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. J. Tubular Secretion 1. Tubular secretion transports certain substances from the plasma into the renal tubule. 2. Active transport mechanisms move excess hydrogen ions into the renal tubule along with various organic compounds.

CopyrightThe McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc CopyrightThe McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. 3. Potassium ions are secreted both actively and passively into the distal convoluted tubule and the collecting duct.

can fit through the smaller door. Out goes the CopyrightThe McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. Study Analogy  Pretend you are cleaning your garage but the big door is stuck. You can only move things through the smaller “people” door. So the cars & riding lawn mower have to stay in the garage. This is analogous to the pores in the glomerulus. They are larger than ordinary capillary pores but still not large enough to let everything out. So large things like proteins stay in the blood. You have decided to haul almost everything out that you can fit through the smaller door. Out goes the

hoses, garden implements, lawn chemicals, CopyrightThe McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. hoses, garden implements, lawn chemicals, recycling, etc, without any sorting. You do this until you run out of time. (Filtration = what fits goes through the pores and it is controlled by size and the pressures.) After a short rest, you realize that you need some of this stuff. So you exert some more energy (active transport!) and put some of the materials back into the garage. For example, 13 of the 27 hoses are still good so they go back (like tubular reabsorption!!)

The others are put out for the trash pickup CopyrightThe McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. The others are put out for the trash pickup (analogous to going to the bladder). After sorting, returning and discarding, you take one last look at what is now in the garage. Do you really need 13 hoses? Isn’t that one a little holey? So you take it back out of the garage and put it in the trash pile with the others. (just like tubular secretion, a last chance to excrete something we don’t need.) And Viola! The garage (and your blood!) is clean!

CopyrightThe McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc CopyrightThe McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. K. Urine Composition 1. Urine composition varies from time to time and reflects the amounts of water and solutes that the kidneys eliminate to maintain homeostasis. 2. Urine is 95% water, and also contains urea, uric acid, a trace of amino acids, and electrolytes.

CopyrightThe McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc CopyrightThe McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.  Urine Elimination A. After forming in the nephrons, urine passes from the collecting ducts to the renal papillae, then to the minor and major calyces, and out the renal pelvis to the ureters, urinary bladder, and finally to the urethra, which conveys urine to the outside.

CopyrightThe McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc CopyrightThe McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. B. Ureters 1. The ureters are muscular tubes extending from the kidneys to the base of the urinary bladder. 2. The wall of the ureter is composed of three layers: mucous coat, muscular coat, and outer fibrous coat.

CopyrightThe McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc CopyrightThe McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. 3. Muscular peristaltic waves convey urine to the urinary bladder where it passes through a flaplike valve in the mucous membrane of the urinary bladder.

CopyrightThe McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc CopyrightThe McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. C. Urinary Bladder 1. The urinary bladder is a hollow, distensible, muscular organ lying in the pelvic cavity. 2. The internal floor of the bladder includes the trigone, which is composed of the openings of the two ureters and the urethra.

CopyrightThe McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc CopyrightThe McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. 3. The wall of the urinary bladder is made up of four coats: inner mucous coat, submucous coat, muscular coat made up of detrusor muscle, and outer serous coat. a. The portion of the detrusor muscle that surrounds the neck of the bladder forms an internal sphincter muscle.

CopyrightThe McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc CopyrightThe McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.

1. Urine leaves the bladder by the micturation reflex. CopyrightThe McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. D. Micturition 1. Urine leaves the bladder by the micturation reflex. 2. The detrusor muscle contracts and the external urethral sphincter (in the urogenital diaphragm) must also relax.

CopyrightThe McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc CopyrightThe McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. 3. Stretching of the urinary bladder triggers the micturation reflex center located in the sacral portion of the spinal cord. 4. Return parasympathetic impulses cause the detrusor muscle to contract in waves, and an urge to urinate is sensed.

CopyrightThe McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc CopyrightThe McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. 5. When these contractions become strong enough, the internal urethral sphincter is forced open. 6. The external urethral sphincter is composed of skeletal muscle and is under conscious control.

CopyrightThe McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc CopyrightThe McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. E. Urethra 1. The urethra is a tube that conveys urine from the urinary bladder to the outside. 2. It is a muscular tube with urethral glands that secrete mucus into the urethral canal.