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11 UrinarySystem

The urinary system filters waste and excess ions from the bloodstream to produce urine. It is composed of the kidneys, ureters, urinary bladder, and urethra. The kidneys contain millions of nephrons, the functional units that filter the blood to form urine. Urine is produced through glomerular filtration, tubular reabsorption of needed substances, and tubular secretion of waste products. Hormones help regulate water and ion reabsorption to control urine concentration and volume.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
9 views

11 UrinarySystem

The urinary system filters waste and excess ions from the bloodstream to produce urine. It is composed of the kidneys, ureters, urinary bladder, and urethra. The kidneys contain millions of nephrons, the functional units that filter the blood to form urine. Urine is produced through glomerular filtration, tubular reabsorption of needed substances, and tubular secretion of waste products. Hormones help regulate water and ion reabsorption to control urine concentration and volume.

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ssandoval209
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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THE URINARY SYSTEM

THE URINARY SYSTEM FUNCTIONS


➤ Filter ~200L of uid from bloodstream
➤ Remove waste, toxins, excess ions via urine
➤ Return needed substances to blood
➤ Maintain body’s internal environment by:
➤ regulating body’s water volume and solute
concentration in that water
➤ regulating concentrations of various ions in
extracellular uids
➤ ensuring long-term acid-base balance
➤ excreting wastes
➤ producing erythropoietin and renin
➤ converting vitamin D to active form
➤ carrying out glucogenesis during fasting
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THE URINARY SYSTEM COMPONENTS
➤ Composed of:
➤ Kidneys
➤ Ureters
➤ Urinary bladder
➤ Urethra
KIDNEY EXTERNAL ANATOMY
➤ Located in superior lumbar region (T12-
L3)
➤ Right kidney slightly lower than left
➤ About the size of a large bar of soap
➤ Adrenal gland
➤ Hilum of kidney
KIDNEY INTERNAL GROSS ANATOMY
➤ Three distinct regions:
➤ Renal cortex
Colu
mn ➤ Renal medulla
➤ Renal pelvis
➤ Major and minor calyces
KIDNEY BLOOD SUPPLY
➤ Receive ¼ cardiac output (~1200 ml/min)

9
➤ Glomerulus + glomerular
capsule = renal corpuscle
➤ Renal corpuscle + renal
tubule = NEPHRON

Arcuate artery
➤ Glomerulus: fenestrated
capillary
➤ ltrate
➤ Glomerular capsule
➤ Parietal layer
➤ simple squamous
epithelium
➤ structural only
➤ Visceral layer
➤ clings to capillaries
➤ podocytes with ltration
slits
➤ ltrate enters capsular
space
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➤ Renal Tubule
➤ 3 major parts
➤ Proximal convoluted
tubule
➤ Nephron loop / Loop of
Henle
➤ Distal convoluted tubule
➤ Proximal convoluted tubule
(PCT)
➤ cuboidal epithelial cells
➤ lots of mitochondria
➤ dense microvilli on apical
surface
➤ Nephron Loop / Loop of Henle
➤ descending and ascending
limbs
➤ thin vs. thick segments
➤ thin = simple squamous
➤ thick = simple cuboidal,
or sometimes low
columnar
➤ Distal convoluted tubule (DCT)
➤ simple cuboidal
➤ almost no microvilli
➤ Collecting duct
➤ Two cell types
➤ principal cells with short,
sparse microvilli; maintain
water and sodium balance
➤ intercalated cells with lots
of microvilli; maintain
acid-base balance of blood
➤ Receives ltrate from many
nephrons
➤ Run through pyramids,
giving striped appearance
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NEPHRON
CLASSES OF NEPHRONS
➤ Cortical nephrons
➤ 85% of nephrons
➤ located entirely in cortex except for
short nephron loops
➤ Juxtamedullary nephrons
➤ originate close to cortex-medulla
junction
➤ long nephron loops
➤ help produce concentrated urine
NEPHRON CAPILLARY BEDS
➤ Two capillary beds for each nephron
➤ 1. Glomerulus
➤ 2. Peritubular capillary + vasa recta
GLOMERULUS
➤ Unique because fed AND drained by
arterioles
➤ Maintains high pressure in glomerulus,
needed for ltration
Cortical radiate artery

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GLOMERULUS
➤ Unique because fed AND drained by
arterioles
➤ Maintains high pressure in glomerulus,
needed for ltration
➤ Arterioles then feed into either
peritubular capillaries or vasa recta
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PERITUBULAR CAPILLARIES
➤ E erent arterioles split to form
meandering vessels of peritubular
capillaries
➤ Cling closely to adjacent renal tubules
➤ Empty into nearby venules
➤ Low pressure, porous structure can
readily reabsorb solutes and water from
tubule cells to reclaim them from ltrate
➤ Also absorb from several adjacent
nephrons
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VASA RECTA
➤ E erent arteriole doesn’t split up
➤ Instead forms bundles of long straight
vessels
➤ Extends deep into medulla around the
long nephron loop
➤ Supplies oxygen and nutrients to tissue
➤ Thin-walled for urine concentration
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JUXTAGLOMERULAR COMPLEX (JGC)
JUXTAGLOMERULAR COMPLEX (JGC)
➤ Macula densa cells
➤ chemoreceptors
➤ monitor NaCl content of
ltrate entering DCT
➤ Granular cells
➤ AKA juxtaglomerular (JG)
cells
➤ enlarged smooth muscle cells
➤ mechanoreceptors for sensing
blood pressure
➤ secrete renin
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FILTRATE VS. URINE
➤ Filtrate:
➤ everything in blood plasma except proteins

➤ Urine:
➤ contains unneeded substances such as excess salts and metabolic wastes

➤ Kidneys process ~47 gallons (180L) daily but less than 1% leaves as urine
URINE FORMATION — OVERVIEW
➤ 1. Glomerular ltration
➤ “dumping into waste container”
➤ occurs in renal corpuscle
➤ produces cell-free and protein-free
ltrate
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URINE FORMATION — OVERVIEW
➤ 2. Tubular reabsorption
➤ “reclaiming what body needs to keep”
➤ occurs in renal tubules and collecting
ducts
➤ reclaims almost everything
URINE FORMATION — OVERVIEW
➤ 3. Tubular secretion
➤ “selectively adding to waste container”
➤ occurs in renal tubules and collecting
ducts
➤ moves substances from blood back into
ltrate
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URINE FORMATION — 1. GLOMERULAR FILTRATION
➤ Passive process driven by hydrostatic pressure
URINE FORMATION — 1. GLOMERULAR FILTRATION
URINE FORMATION — 1. GLOMERULAR FILTRATION
➤ Three layers of ltration
membrane:
➤ fenestrated endothelium
of glomerular capillaries
➤ basement membrane
➤ foot processes of
podocytes
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URINE FORMATION — 1. GLOMERULAR FILTRATION
➤ Pressures that a ect ltration:
➤ hydrostatic pressure in
glomerular capillaries (HPgc)
➤ hydrostatic pressure in the
capsular space (HPcs)
➤ colloid osmotic pressure in
glomerular capillaries (OPgc)
➤ NFP = net ltration pressure
fi
ff
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URINE FORMATION — 1. GLOMERULAR FILTRATION
➤ Glomerular Filtration Rate (GFR): volume of ltrate formed each minute by the
combined activity of all 2 million glomeruli
➤ GFR directly proportional to:
➤ Net ltration pressure (NFP)
➤ Total surface area available for ltration
➤ Filtration membrane permeability
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fi
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GFR REGULATION
URINE FORMATION — 2. TUBULAR REABSORPTION
➤ Reclaiming ltrate contents and returning them to blood
➤ Begins in proximal tubules
➤ Reabsorption occurs through either:
➤ transcellular route
➤ paracellular route
➤ Reabsorption process may be active or passive
➤ active tubular reapsorption: requires ATP either directly or indirectly
➤ passive tubular reabsorption: substances move down their electrochemical
gradients (di usion, facilitated di usion, or osmosis)
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ff
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URINE FORMATION — 2. TUBULAR REABSORPTION
URINE FORMATION — 2. TUBULAR REABSORPTION
HORMONES THAT FINE TUNE REABSORPTION IN THE DCT AND COLLECTING DUCT
➤ ADH: antidiuretic hormone
➤ inhibits diuresis (urine output)
➤ determines number of aquaporins
➤ Aldosterone
➤ enhances reabsorption of remaining Na+
➤ reduces K+ concentration in blood
➤ Atrial natriuretic peptide (ANP)
➤ reduces blood Na+ (opposite of aldosterone)
➤ released by cardiac atrial cells when blood volume or pressure is elevated
➤ Parathyroid hormone (PTH)
➤ increases reabsorption of Ca2+
URINE FORMATION — 3. TUBULAR SECRETION
➤ Reabsorption in reverse
➤ Moves selected substances from peritubular capillaries through tubule cells into the
ltrate
➤ Urine contains both ltered and secreted substances
➤ PCT is main site of secretion
➤ Important for:
➤ Disposing of substances bound to plasma proteins
➤ Eliminating undesirable substances that were passively reabsorbed
➤ Ridding body of excess K+
➤ Controlling blood pH
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URINE CONCENTRATION AND VOLUME
➤ Regulated by kidneys by creating and using an osmotic
gradient
➤ Osmolality: concentration of solute particles per kg of
water
➤ Measured in milliosmol (mOsm) / kg
➤ Countercurrent mechanisms: uid owing in opposite
directions through adjacent vessels
➤ Two countercurrent mechanisms used by kidneys:
➤ Countercurrent multiplier — ascending and
descending limbs of long nephron loops
(juxtamedullary nephrons)
➤ Countercurrent exchanger: ascending and descending
portions of vasa recta
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COUNTERCURRENT EXCHANGER
➤ Vasa recta preserve medullary gradient
by:
➤ 1. preventing rapid removal of salt
from medullary interstitial space
➤ 2. removing reabsorbed water
DILUTE OR CONCENTRATED URINE?
PHYSICAL CHARACTERISTICS OF URINE
➤ Color and transparenc

➤ Clear, pale to deep yellow (due to urochrome

➤ Concentrated urine has a deeper yellow colo

➤ Drugs, vitamin supplements, and diet can change the color of urin

➤ Cloudy urine may indicate infection of the urinary tract


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PHYSICAL CHARACTERISTICS OF URINE


➤ Odor
➤ Fresh urine is slightly aromatic
➤ Standing urine develops an ammonia odor
➤ Some drugs and vegetables alter the usual odor
PHYSICAL CHARACTERISTICS OF URINE
➤ pH
➤ Slightly acidic (pH 6)
with a range of 4.5 to
8.0
➤ Diet can alter pH
CHEMICAL COMPOSITION OF URINE
➤ Water (95%)
➤ Urea
➤ Other nitrogenous wastes:
uric acid and creatinine
➤ Other normal solutes:
➤ Sodium, potassium,
phosphate, sulfate,
calcium, magnesium, &
bicarbonate ions
URETERS
➤ Slender tubes that convey
urine from the kidneys to
the bladder
➤ Ureters enter the base of the
bladder through the
posterior wall
URETERS
➤ Ureters have a trilayered wall
➤ Transitional epithelial mucosa
➤ Smooth muscle muscularis
➤ Fibrous connective tissue adventitia
➤ Ureters actively propel urine to the
bladder
TRANSITIONAL EPITHELIUM
URINARY BLADDER
➤ Smooth, collapsible, muscular sac that
stores urine temporarily
➤ It lies retroperitoneally on the pelvic
oor posterior to the pubic symphysis
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URINARY BLADDER
URINARY BLADDER
➤ The bladder wall has same three layers
as ureters
➤ The bladder is distensible and collapses
when empty
➤ As urine accumulates, the bladder
expands without signi cant rise in
internal pressure
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URETHRA
SPHINCTERS OF THE URETHRA
MICTURITION

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