B6 The Excretry System Review Flashcards
What is the role of the excretory system?
-Regulates the volume and composition of bodily fluids by removing waste and returning needed substances to the body for reuse
Describe kidneys
-Contain nephrons
-release urine into the ureters
-urine is moved by peristalsis to the urinary bladder
-urine release is controlled by a voluntary and involuntary sphincter
What are nephrons?
-Tubule system where wastes are collected and excreted
-closely connected to the blood supply
What are the 3 processes of nephrons?
- Filtration: occurs at the glomerulus
- Reabsorption: materials moving from the nephron back into the blood
- Secretion: materials moving from the blood into the nephron
Describe filtration in the glomerulus
-Glomerulus is a high pressure capillary bed
-all materials in plasma expect blood cells and proteins are filtered
-porous capillaries
-filtration depends on permeability of capillaries and blood pressure
-filtrate: material filtered into the nephron from plasma (chemical composition is similar to plasma minus blood cells and protein)
Describe Reabsorbtion
~65% of filtrate passing through the proximal tubule is reabsorbed
-proximal tubule has many mitochondria (make ATP)
-active transport of Na+, glucose and other solutes into the blood
- (-) charged ions move passively, attracted by electric charge
-water follows by osmosis
What is the loop of henle? (re-absorption)
-Reabsorbs water and ions from filtrate
-descending loop is permeable to water, so at the bottom of the limb Na+ concentration is the highest
-ascending loop is impermeable to water and permeable to solutes
-Na+ diffuses into the blood passively then by active transport
What is the distal tubule? (Reabsorption)
-Passive reabsorption of negative ions
What is the collecting duct? (Reabsorbtion)
-Water is reabsorbed (osmosis)
Describe secretion
-Occurs primarily in the distal tubule
-K+ ions are actively secreted into the distal tubule from capillaries
-H+ is secreted to maintain Ph
-other substances not part of the body such as drugs are secreted as well
What are osmoreceptors?
-Cells sensitive to osmotic (water) pressure
-located in the hypothalamus (brain)
-send impulses to pituitary gland to release ADH
What is ADH?
-Antidiuretic hormone
-increases the permeability of the distal tubule and the collecting duct to water
-allows more water to be reabsorbed
-travels through the blood to the kidney
What happens if blood plasma concentration increases? (Water regulation)
-Osmoreceptors signal ADH to be released which allows more water to be reabsorbed
-decreased water in urine
What happens if blood plasma concentration decreases? (water regulation)
-Osmoreceptors stop or prevent the release of ADH which allows more water to be excreted in urine
-solutes are concentrated in the blood
What is diabetes insipidus?
-ADH is insufficient and individuals urinate often, thirst is high and dehydration can occur