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The Urinary System: - Functions of Urinary System - Anatomy of Kidney - Urine Formation

The document discusses the anatomy and functions of the urinary system, including the structure and role of the kidneys in filtering blood and producing urine through processes like glomerular filtration, tubular reabsorption and secretion. It explains how the kidneys regulate fluid and electrolyte balance and excrete nitrogenous wastes, while also addressing the countercurrent mechanism that allows urine concentration.

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

The Urinary System: - Functions of Urinary System - Anatomy of Kidney - Urine Formation

The document discusses the anatomy and functions of the urinary system, including the structure and role of the kidneys in filtering blood and producing urine through processes like glomerular filtration, tubular reabsorption and secretion. It explains how the kidneys regulate fluid and electrolyte balance and excrete nitrogenous wastes, while also addressing the countercurrent mechanism that allows urine concentration.

Uploaded by

JasonS.Flaviano
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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The Urinary System

• Functions of urinary system


• Anatomy of kidney
• Urine formation
– glomerular filtration
– tubular reabsorption
– tubular secretion
• Urine and renal function tests
• Urine storage and elimination
23-1
Urinary System

Two kidneys

Two ureters

Urethra

23-2
Kidney Location

23-3
Three layers of supportive tissue surround each kidney:
1. Renal capsule
--- fibrous, transparent capsule
--- adheres directly to the kidney surface
--- provides a strong barrier that prevents infections in surrounding
regions from spreading to the kidneys
2. Adipose capsule
--- middle layer
--- fatty mass
--- helps to hold the kidney in place against the posterior trunk muscles
and cushions it against blows
3. Renal fascia
--- the outermost layer
--- dense connective tissue
--- surrounds not only the kidney and its attendant membranes, but also
the adrenal gland and anchors these organs to surrounding structures
INTERNAL ANATOMY: 3 Distinct
Regions
1. Renal cortex
--- the most superficial region
--- light in color and has a granular appearance
2. Renal medulla
--- deep to the cortex
--- darker, reddish brown which exhibits cone-shaped tissue
masses called medullary or renal pyramids
3. Renal pelvis
--- medial to the hilus within the renal sinus
--- funnel-shaped tube which is continuous with the ureter
leaving the hilus
BLOOD AND NERVE SUPPLY
The kidneys receive 25% of the total cardiac
output/minute.
The vascular pathway through a kidney is as follows:

Aorta  renal artery  segmental arteries  lobar


arteries  interlobar arteries  arcuate arteries 
interlobular arteries  afferent arterioles  glomeruli
 efferent arterioles  peritubular capillary beds 
interlobular veins  arcuate veins  interlobar veins
 renal vein  inferior vena cava
Kidney Functions
• Filters blood plasma
– returns useful substances to blood
– eliminates waste
• Regulates
– osmolarity of body fluids, blood volume, BP
– acid base balance
• Secretes
– renin and erythropoietin
• Detoxifies free radicals and drugs
• Gluconeogenesis 23-7
Nitrogenous Wastes
• Urea
– proteinsamino acids NH2
removed forms ammonia, liver
converts to urea
• Uric acid
– nucleic acid catabolism
• Creatinine
– creatine phosphate catabolism
• Renal failure
– azotemia: BUN, nitrogenous
wastes in blood
– uremia: toxic effects as wastes
accumulate 23-8
Excretion
• Separation of wastes from body fluids and
eliminating them; by four systems
– respiratory: CO2
– integumentary: water, salts, lactic acid, urea
– digestive: water, salts, CO2, lipids, bile
pigments, cholesterol
– urinary: many metabolic wastes, toxins,
drugs, hormones, salts, H+ and water

23-9
Anatomy of Kidney
• Position, weight and size
– retroperitoneal, level of T12 to L3
– about 160 g each
– about size of a bar of soap (12x6x3 cm)
• Shape
– lateral surface - convex; medial - concave
• CT coverings
– renal fascia: binds to abdominal wall
– adipose capsule: cushions kidney
– renal capsule: encloses kidney like cellophane
wrap 23-10
Anatomy of Kidney

• Renal cortex: outer 1 cm


• Renal medulla: renal columns, pyramids - papilla
• Lobe of kidney: pyramid and it’s overlying cortex
23-11
Lobe of Kidney

23-12
Renal Corpuscle

• Glomerular filtrate collects in capsular space, flows into renal tubule


23-13
Renal (Uriniferous) Tubule
• Proximal convoluted
tubule (PCT)
– longest, most coiled,
simple cuboidal with
brush border
• Nephron loop - U
shaped; descending
and ascending limbs
– thick segment
(simple cuboidal)
initial part of
descending limb and
part or all of
ascending limb,
active transport of
salts
– thin segment (simple
squamous) very
water permeable
• Distal convoluted
tubule (DCT)
– cuboidal, minimal 23-14
microvilli
Renal (Uriniferous) Tubule 2
• Collecting duct
– several DCT’s join

• Flow of glomerular
filtrate:
– glomerular capsule
 PCT  nephron
loop  DCT 
collecting duct 
papillary duct 
minor calyx 
major calyx  renal
pelvis  ureter 
urinary bladder  23-15
urethra
Nephrons
• True proportions of nephron
loops to convoluted tubules
shown
• Cortical nephrons (85%)
– short nephron loops
– efferent arterioles branch off
peritubular capillaries
• Juxtamedullary nephrons
(15%)
– very long nephron loops,
maintain salt gradient, helps
conserve water
23-16
Nephron Diagram

• Peritubular capillaries shown only on right


23-17
Path of Blood Through Kidney
• Renal artery
 interlobar arteries (up renal columns, between lobes)
 arcuate arteries (over pyramids)
 interlobular arteries (up into cortex)
 afferent arterioles
 glomerulus (cluster of capillaries)
 efferent arterioles (near medulla  vasa recta)
 peritubular capillaries
 interlobular veins  arcuate veins  interlobar veins
• Renal vein
23-18
Blood Supply Diagram

23-19
Urine Formation Preview

23-20
Mechanisms of Reabsorption in the Proximal Convoluted Tubule

23-21
Tubular Secretion of PCT
and Nephron Loop
• Waste removal
– urea, uric acid, bile salts, ammonia,
catecholamines, many drugs
• Acid-base balance
– secretion of hydrogen and bicarbonate ions
regulates pH of body fluids
• Primary function of nephron loop
– water conservation
– generates salinity gradient, allows CD to conc.
urine
– also involved in electrolyte reabsorption 23-22
DCT and Collecting Duct
• Principal cells – receptors for hormones;
involved in salt/water balance
• Intercalated cells – involved in acid/base
balance
• Function
– fluid reabsorption here is variable, regulated
by hormonal action

23-23
DCT and Collecting Duct
• Aldosterone effects
  BP  renin release  angiotensin II
formation
– angiotensin II stimulates adrenal cortex
– adrenal cortex secretes aldosterone
• promotes Na+ reabsorption  promotes water
reabsorption   urine volume  maintains BP

23-24
DCT and Collecting Duct
• Effect of ADH
– dehydration stimulates hypothalamus
– hypothalamus stimulates posterior pituitary
– posterior pituitary releases ADH
– ADH  water reabsorption
  urine volume

23-25
DCT and Collecting Duct
• Atrial natriuretic peptide (ANP)
– atria secrete ANP in response to  BP
– has four actions:
1. dilates afferent arteriole, constricts efferent
arteriole -  GFR
2. inhibits renin/angiotensin/aldosterone
pathway
3. inhibits secretion and action of ADH
4. inhibits NaCl reabsorption
• Promotes Na+ and water excretion, 
urine volume,  blood volume and BP 23-26
DCT and Collecting Duct
• Effect of PTH
  calcium reabsorption in DCT -  blood Ca2+
  phosphate excretion in PCT,  new bone
formation
– stimulates kidney production of calcitriol

23-27
Collecting Duct Concentrates
Urine

• Osmolarity 4x as concentrated
deep in medulla
• Medullary portion of CD is more
permeable to water than to NaCl
23-28
Control of Water Loss
• Producing hypotonic urine
– NaCl reabsorbed by cortical CD
– water remains in urine
• Producing hypertonic urine
– dehydration   ADH   aquaporin
channels,  CD’s water permeability
– more water is reabsorbed
– urine is more concentrated

23-29
Countercurrent Multiplier
• Recaptures NaCl and returns it to renal medulla
• Descending limb
– reabsorbs water but not salt
– concentrates tubular fluid
• Ascending limb
– reabsorbs Na+, K+, and Cl-
– maintains high osmolarity of renal medulla
– impermeable to water
– tubular fluid becomes hypotonic
• Recycling of urea: collecting duct-medulla
– urea accounts for 40% of high osmolarity of medulla
23-30
Countercurrent Multiplier
of Nephron Loop Diagram

23-31
Countercurrent Exchange System

• Formed by vasa recta


– provide blood supply to medulla
– do not remove NaCl from medulla
• Descending capillaries
– water diffuses out of blood
– NaCl diffuses into blood
• Ascending capillaries
– water diffuses into blood
– NaCl diffuses out of blood
23-32
Maintenance of Osmolarity
in Renal Medulla

23-33
Summary of Tubular
Reabsorption and Secretion

23-34
23-35
Composition and Properties of Urine
• Appearance
– almost colorless to deep amber; yellow color due to
urochrome, from breakdown of hemoglobin (RBC’s)
• Odor - as it stands bacteria degrade urea to ammonia
• Specific gravity
– density of urine ranges from 1.001 -1.028
• Osmolarity - (blood - 300 mOsm/L) ranges from
50 mOsm/L to 1,200 mOsm/L in dehydrated person
• pH - range: 4.5 - 8.2, usually 6.0
• Chemical composition: 95% water, 5% solutes
– urea, NaCl, KCl, creatinine, uric acid
23-36
23-37
Urine Volume
• Normal volume - 1 to 2 L/day
• Polyuria > 2L/day
• Oliguria < 500 mL/day
• Anuria - 0 to 100 mL/day

23-38
Diabetes
• Chronic polyuria of metabolic origin
• With hyperglycemia and glycosuria
– diabetes mellitus I and II, insulin
hyposecretion/insensitivity
– gestational diabetes, 1 to 3% of pregnancies
• ADH hyposecretion
– diabetes insipidus; CD  water reabsorption

23-39
Diuretics
• Effects
  urine output
  blood volume
• Uses
– hypertension and congestive heart failure
• Mechanisms of action
  GFR
  tubular reabsorption

23-40
Renal Function Tests
• Renal clearance: volume of plasma cleared of a
waste in 1 minute
• Determine renal clearance (C) by assessing
blood and urine samples: C = UV/P
– U (waste concentration in urine)
– V (rate of urine output)
– P (waste concentration in plasma)
• Determine GFR: inulin is neither reabsorbed or
secreted so its GFR = renal clearance GFR =
UV/P
• Clinical GFR estimated from creatinine excretion
23-41
Urine Storage and Elimination
• Ureters (about 25 cm long)
– from renal pelvis passes dorsal to bladder and
enters it from below, with a small flap of
mucosa that acts as a valve into bladder
– 3 layers
• adventitia - CT
• muscularis - 2 layers of smooth muscle with
3rd layer in lower ureter
– urine enters, it stretches and contracts in
peristaltic wave
• mucosa - transitional epithelium
– lumen very narrow, easily obstructed 23-42
Urinary Bladder and Urethra -
Female

23-43
Urinary Bladder
• Located in pelvic cavity, posterior to pubic
symphysis
• 3 layers
– parietal peritoneum, superiorly; fibrous adventitia rest
– muscularis: detrusor muscle, 3 layers of smooth
muscle
– mucosa: transitional epithelium
• trigone: openings of ureters and urethra,
triangular
• rugae: relaxed bladder wrinkled, highly
distensible
• capacity: moderately full - 500 ml, max. - 800 ml
23-44
Female Urethra
• 3 to 4 cm long
• External urethral orifice
– between vaginal orifice and
clitoris
• Internal urethral sphincter
– detrusor muscle thickened,
smooth muscle, involuntary
control
External urethral sphincter
skeletal muscle, voluntary
control
23-45
Male Bladder and Urethra

• 18 cm long
• Internal urethral sphincter
• External urethral sphincter
3 regions
prostatic urethra
during orgasm receives semen
membranous urethra
passes through pelvic cavity
spongy urethra

23-46
Voiding Urine - Micturition
• 200 ml urine in bladder, stretch receptors send
signal to sacral spinal cord
• Signals ascend to
– inhibitory synapses on sympathetic neurons
– micturition center (integrates info from amygdala, cortex)
• Signals descend to
– further inhibit sympathetic neurons
– stimulate parasympathetic neurons
• Result
– urinary bladder contraction
– relaxation of internal urethral sphincter
• External urethral sphincter - corticospinal tracts to
sacral spinal cord inhibit somatic neurons - relaxes 23-47
Neural Control of Micturition

23-48
Hemodialysis

23-49

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