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Urinary System and Kidney Function How does waste leave the body?
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Facts about your Kidneys: The kidneys are bean-shaped each about the size of a fist They are located near the middle of the back, just below the rib cage, one on each side of the spine. Every day, a person’s kidneys process about 200 quarts of blood About 2 quarts of waste products and extra water are processed out of the blood Liquid wastes become urine
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Functions of the Kidney & Urinary System Elimination of waste products – Nitrogenous wastes – Toxins – Drugs
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How does the kidney work? Wastes in the blood come from the normal breakdown of active tissues and from food After the body has taken what it needs from food, wastes are sent to the blood Wastes would build up in the blood and damage the body if the kidneys did not remove them
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How does the kidney work?
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What do your kidneys do? Regulate electrolytes Maintain Water/Salt Balance Regulates Blood Pressure Maintains acid/base balance of blood and bodily fluids Diverts liquid wastes to the urinary bladder Help with Red Blood Cell production
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Circulation for the Kidney Renal Circulation flow of blood through the kidney Renal Artery Provides kidney with oxygenated blood Renal Vein Deoxygenated blood flows out of the kidney
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How is waste filtered? Removal of wastes occurs in tiny units inside the kidneys called nephrons Each kidney has about a million nephrons Glomerulus—a tiny blood vessel in the nephron The glomerulus acts as a filtering unit: keeps normal proteins in bloodstream keeps cells in the bloodstream allowing extra fluid and wastes to pass through Waste materials & Water leave the blood (to then enter the urinary system)
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How is waste filtered?
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Glomerulus Function
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Formation of Urine
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Solutes normally found in urine – Sodium and potassium ions – Urea, uric acid, creatinine – Ammonia – Bicarbonate ions
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Solutes NOT Normally Found in Urine – Glucose – Blood proteins – Red blood cells – Hemoglobin – White blood cells (pus) – Bile
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Flow of Urine Kidney Ureters Urinary Bladder Urethra
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Balance of minerals The kidney maintains important levels of: --Sodium --Potassium --Phosphorus --Erythropoeitin --Renin Hormone (for blood pressure) --Calcitrol (helps regulate Calcium usage)
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What is the “excretory system” Body’s ability to eliminate wastes Parts of this system are parts of other body systems “Waste” things the body can’t use and may harm the body if they are not moved out of the body
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Wastes that leave the body: Urine Urea from protein breakdown Uric Acid from nucleic acid breakdown Creatinine—associated with creatine breakdown Solid Wastes (defacation) Sweat Tears Carbon Dioxide
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