Chapter 25: The Urinary System Flashcards
Urinary System Organs:
o 2 Kidneys
o 2 Ureters
o 1 Urinary Bladder
o 1 Urethra
Nephrology:
Study of the Kidneys
Urology:
Study of entire Urinary System.
Urine Flow:
o 1) Kidneys make urine.
o 2) Ureters transport urine to the bladder.
o 3) Urinary bladder stores urine (regulated by urinary sphincters).
o 4) Urethra transports urine from bladder to the external urethral orifice & out of body.
Macroscopic Anatomy of Kidney:
o 4-5” long, 2-3” wide, 1” thick (bar of soap). o Found just above the waist between the peritoneum & posterior wall of abdomen (retroperitoneal). o Protected by 11th & 12th ribs with the right kidney lower. o Renal (fibrous) capsule = transparent membrane that maintains organ shape. o Perirenal fat capsule = Adipose capsule that protects and anchors. o Renal fascia = dense, irregular connective tissue that anchors kidneys to posterior body wall.
Anatomy of Ureters:
o 10-12” long.
o 1 to 10 mm in diameter (think about renal stones!!).
o 3 tunics:
o Mucosa (transitional epithelium with goblet cells).
o Muscularis (inner longitudinal and outer circular layers smooth muscle—3rd layer distally.
o Adventitia.
o Extends from renal pelvis to bladder.
o Retroperitoneal.
o Enter posterior wall of bladder.
o Flow results from peristalsis, gravity & hydrostatic pressure.
Anatomy of Urinary Bladder:
o Hollow, distensible muscular organ with capacity for 700-800 mL.
o Rugae of urinary bladder allow stretching.
o Trigone is smooth flat area bordered by 2 ureteric openings and internal urethral orifice.
o Detrusor muscle & internal/external urethral sphincter.
Location of Female Urinary Bladder:
o Posterior to pubic symphysis.
o Females: Urinary bladder is anterior to vagina & inferior to uterus.
o Females: pubic symphysis goes to bladder goes to vagina lastly to the rectum.
o Males: Pubic symphysis to bladder lastly to rectum.
Histology of Urinary Bladder:
o 3 Tunics: o Mucosa = transitional epithelium with rugae. o Muscularis: detrusor muscle (3 layers) = inner, outer longtitudinal & inner circular. o Adventitia (urinary bladder is retroperitoneal).
Urination (Micturition):
o MICTURITION = urination = a reflex involving the sacral spinal cord, the parasympathetic & sympathetic nervous systems, and voluntary conscious control.
o Internal urethral sphincter: circular smooth muscle fibers at OPENING to urethra (involuntary control).
o External urethral sphincter: skeletal muscle (modification of urogenital diaphragm muscle), inferior to internal urethral sphincter, voluntary control.
Urinary Incontinence:
o Urinary incontinence = inability to hold urine.
o Normal in 2 or 3 year olds because neurons to sphincter muscles are not developed.
o Stress Incontinence = anything that increases abdominal pressure (coughing, sneezing, laughing, exercising, pregnancy).
o Other causes of incontinence:
o Spinal cord injuries.
o Injury to nerves controlling micturition.
o Damage to external urethral sphincter.
o Irritation of bladder or urethra.
o Obstructed urinary outlet.
o Certain drugs.
Macroscopic Anatomy of Urethra:
o Females:
o 1.5 inches long
o External urethral orifice is between the clitoris and the vaginal opening
o Males:
o 6 to 8 inches long
o Internal urethral orifice to prostate to urogenital diaphragm to penis
o Male urethra has dual role of discharging both semen AND urine, but not at the same time.
Disorders of Urinary System:
o Urethritis: inflammation/infection of urethra (more common in females).
o Cystitis: inflammation/infection of urinary bladder.
o Pyelitis: inflammation/infection of renal pelvis and calyces (where urine collects).
o Pyelonephritis: inflammation or infection of kidneys (very serious, may require IV antibiotics).
General Kidney Overview:
o Kidneys filter the blood & return most of the water and solutes to the blood.
o Blood comes into a glomerulus (big ball of capillaries)… filtration pushes large amounts of plasma and MOST solutes into a capsular space… the rest of the kidney (nephron tubules) is concerned with RECLAIMING the solutes that our bodies want to KEEP the wastes stay in the tubules and eventually become urine.
Overview of Kidney Functions:
o Excrete wastes. o Regulate volume of blood. o Regulate blood pressure. o Renin (from juxtaglomerular cells of kidney)& RAA system (renin-angiotensin-aldosterone). o Regulate composition of blood. o Electrolytes and osmolarity. o Secrete hormones. o Help regulate acid-base balance. o Detoxify free radicals and medications. o Gluconeogenesis during starvation.
Examples of Wastes:
o Nitrogenous wastes:
o NH3 from protein breakdown to Urea (liver).
o Creatinine (from creatine PO4 from muscle).
o Uric acid (purines = building blocks for RNA, DNA, acetyl-CoA).
o Bilirubin and byproducts.
o Foreign substances (meds, environmental toxins).
o Excess vitamins and mineral salts (ions).
o Excess water.
The Nephron:
o Functional Unit of the Kidney.
o Over one million in each kidney.
o Each contains a renal corpuscle and renal tubule.
o Renal corpuscle = site of plasma filtration
o Glomerulus is capillaries where filtration occurs.
o Glomerular (Bowman’s) capsule is double-walled epithelial cup that collects filtrate.
o Renal tubule (resorption).
o 1) proximal convoluted tubule.
o 2) loop of Henle dips down into medulla.
o 3) distal convoluted tubule.
o Collecting ducts (excretion).
Basic Functions of Nephrons:
o Filtration of blood (renal corpuscle).
o Reabsorption of important solutes (back into blood) within the formed filtrate (renal tubule).
o Secretion of wastes/solutes INTO the filtrate (collecting ducts).