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Published byAlyssa Lyons Modified over 11 years ago
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Can you hold it long enough for me to get through this lecture?
Urinary System Can you hold it long enough for me to get through this lecture?
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QUICK REVIEW OF ELIMINATION
Lungs eliminate CO2 Sweat glands eliminate excess heat, salt Digestive tract- indigestible solids, bacteria Urinary tract is the main system of elimination
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A little vocab Uria or Ur- urine Cyst- bladder Nephr or Ren- kidney
Dys- painful
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Anuria Cystitis Dysuria Hematuria Hydronephrosis Renal Without urine
Inflammation of the bladder Dysuria Painful urination Hematuria Blood I urine Hydronephrosis > water in kidney Renal Pertaining to kidney
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The Urinary Tract Urinary tract consists of 2 kidneys, 2 ureters, one bladder and one urethra. Kidney location: Retroperitoneal Dorsal wall of abdominal cavity 12th thoracic and 3rd lumbar vertebrae Urethra 1.5 inches in women, 8 inches in men
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Outer layer- Cortex Inner layer- Medulla Calyx- collects urine as it is formed, join together to form the ureter
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Kidneys filter blood- 2, 000 L/day (500 gal)
remove waste products and reabsorb water, other valuable substances. 1.5 L of urine/day Metabolism produces toxic substances- esp nitrogen containing waste as a by-product of protein breakdown We eliminate nitrogen as urea- water soluble
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The main functional unit of the kidney is called the NEPHRON.
1 million per kidney Most of nephron located in renal cortex Loop of Henle is located in the renal medulla
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Capillaries in glomerulus filter blood- Bowman’ capsule collects ultra filtrate
Through passive and active diffusion, 95% of water is reabsorbed, along with K, Na, Ca Other things are actively excreted, like drugs. Excretion is controlled by hormones such as ADH from hypothalamus
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Urine is made in 4 steps Filtration Reabsorption Secretion Excretion A urinalysis is the most common non-invasive medical test ordered
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Diseases of the Kidney Acute Kidney failure- sudden loss of function
Causes: nephritis, shock, injury, heart failure or poisoning Symptoms: anuria or oliguria. Uremia, nausea, coma, death Chronic Kidney failure- gradual loss of function due to hypertension (high blood pressure) or endocrine disease Cystitis- inflammation of the urinary bladder
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Dialysis, Kidney transplant
Hemodialysis- serves as an “artificial kidney” 2-3x/week for 2-4 hours Peritoneal dialysis- uses patient’s own peritoneal lining to filter blood Kidney transplant- need suitable donor. Only need one, but must take anti-rejection drugs for the life of the patient
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