Excretion Flashcards

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1
Q

What is urea and where is it produced?

A

Urea is a compound produced by the breakdown of excess amino acids
It is produced in the liver

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2
Q

What are the exrectory products of the lungs?

A

Carbon dioxide from aerobic respiration is exhaled
Water vapour from water in the blood is exhaled

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3
Q

What are the exrectory products of the skin?

A

Water through sweating
Excess mineral ions (e.g. sodium) through sweating

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4
Q

What are the two functions of the kidneys?

A

Removal of toxic metabolic waste (such as urea)
Regulation of water levels in the blood (osmoregulation)

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5
Q

What are the ureters?

A

Tubes that connect each kidney to the bladder which transports urine

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6
Q

What is the bladder?

A

Organ that stores excess urine

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7
Q

What is the urethra?

A

Tube that connects the bladder to the exterior (where urine is released)

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8
Q

What are the three regions of the kidneys?

A

Cortex - Outermost region of each kidney
Medulla - Innermost region of each kidney
Renal Pelvis - Tube linking nephrons to ureter

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9
Q

What is a nephron?

A

The functional unit of the kidney (where the kidneys function is actually performed)
Each kidney contains around a million of them

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10
Q

What are all the parts of the nephron?

A

Bowmans capsule - Ring shaped tube around the glomerulus which accepts the filtrate
Proximal convoluted tubule - Continuation of the bowmans capsule tube where selective reabsorbtion (specifically of glucose and amino acids) happens
Loop of Henle - Thinner continuation of the PCT where more selective reabsorbtion (specifically of salts and water) happens
Distal covoluted tubule - Continuation of the loop of henle where more selective reabsorbtion (specifically of more salts and water) happens and the blood pH is regulated
Collecting duct - Continuation of the DCT where controlled reabsorbtion of water occurs along with the formation of urine occur

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11
Q

What is the process of ultrafiltration?

A

Arterioles branching off of the renal artery lead to each nephron where they form a knot of capillaries known as the glomerulus which is surrounded by the bowmans capsule
The capillaries in the glomerulus get increasingly smaller which increases the pressure (the pressure is already high as the blood is coming from the renal artery)
This increased pressure forces smaller molecules out of the glomerulus and into the bowmans capsule
All other molecules stay in the blood

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12
Q

Which molecules get forced into the bowmans capsule through ultrafiltration (which comprise the filtrate)?

A

Glucose
Urea
Water
Amino acids (but not big proteins)
Mineral ions
Glycerol, fatty acids and vitamins also

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13
Q

How and where does the selective reabsorbtion of glucose and amino acids happen?

A

It occurs in the promixal convoluted tubule (this is the only place with the necessary gates to facilitate this)
Capillaries wrapping around the PCT selectively reabsorb the glucose and amino acids through diffusion or active transport (so it requires many mitochondria)

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14
Q

How and where does the selective reabsorbtion of salts occur?

A

It occurs in the loop of henle and the distal convoluted tubule
Capillaries wrapping around the loop of henle and distal convoluted tubule selectively reabsorb the mineral ions (salts) through diffusion

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15
Q

How and where does the selective reabsorbtion of water occur?

A

Mostly in the collecting duct, but also in the loop of henle
Capillaries wrapping around the loop of henle selectively reabsorb water through osmosis and in the collecting duct water osmoses through the collecting duct walls (depending on its permeability)

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16
Q

What happens if there is a decrease in blood water levels with regards to ADH?

A
  • If blood water levels decrease, the brain detects the change and signals the pituitary gland to release more ADH.
  • This hormone increases water reabsorption in the kidneys. - reducing urine production and helping to restore normal blood water levels.
17
Q

What happens if there is an increase in blood water levels with regards to ADH?

A
  • If blood water levels increase, the brain detects the change and signals the pituitary gland to release less ADH.
  • This reduces water reabsorption in the kidneys.
  • leading to increased urine production, helping to lower the blood water levels back to normal.
18
Q

Which substances comprise urine?

A
  • water
  • urea
  • salts (mineral ions)