Homeostasis - Water Balance + Excretory System Flashcards

1
Q

Hyperosmotic (hypertonic)

A

Property of solution on one side of selectively permeable membrane that has lower conc. of water (higher conc. of solute)

Water leaves cell, causing it to shrink + shrivel

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2
Q

Hypoosmotic (hypotonic)

A

Property of solution on one side of selectively permeable membrane that has higher conc. of water (lower conc. of solute)

Water moves into cell, cell swells + can burst

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3
Q

Isosmotic (isotonic)

A

Property of two solutions that have equal water conc. (equal solute conc.)

No net movement of water, cell’s volume remains stable

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4
Q

Osmotic pressure

A

Pressure that results from difference in solute concentration between two sides of selectively permeable membrane

Pushes water to hypertonic side of membrane

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5
Q

Hydrostatic pressure

A

Water pressure against cell membrane/wall

If hydrostatic and osmotic pressure is equal, there is no net flow of water

Hydrostatic pressure cannot build in animal cells because they do not have strong cell walls

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6
Q

What is excretion?

A

The elimination of waste products + foreign matter from the body

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7
Q

Why do humans excrete urea?

A
  • Very soluble in water
  • Minimally toxic
  • Requires very little water to be eliminated from the body
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8
Q

Structures of kidney + function

A
  • Renal medulla: outer layer
  • Renal cortex: inner layer
  • Renal artery: supplies blood to kidney
  • Renal vein: clean blood exits kidney
  • Renal pelvis: connects kidney to ureter
  • Ureter: passes urine to urinary bladder
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9
Q

Bowman’s capsule

A

Small folded structure that encircles glomerulus

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10
Q

Glomerulus

A

Network of capillaries within Bowman’s capsule that performs 1st step in blood filtration
- Filters water, ions, small nutrient molecules, + nitrogenous waste molecules into nephron

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11
Q

Afferent arteriole

A

Vessel that supplies blood to nephron

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12
Q

Efferent arteriole

A

Vessel that carries blood away from nephron

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13
Q

Peritubular capillaries

A

Net of capillaries in nephron that reabsorb essential ions + minerals from filtered blood

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14
Q

Proximal convoluted tubule

A

Duct portion of nephron that connects Bowman’s capsule to loop of Henle
- Active reabsorption: K+, Na+, Cl-, amino acids, glucose + other nutrients
- Passive reabsorption: water through aquaporins
- Secretion: H+ ions (actively)

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15
Q

Loop of Henle

A

U-shaped part of duct that connects proximal convoluted tubule to distal convoluted tubule
- Descending reabsorption: water through aquaporins (passive)
- Ascending reabsorption: Na+ and Cl- (active)

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16
Q

Distal convoluted tubule

A

Duct portion of nephron that connects loop of Henle to ducts that lead to renal pelvis
- Reabsorption: Na+ and Cl- (active)
- Secretion: K and Na+ (active), water sometimes (passive)

17
Q

Collecting ducts

A

Lead to renal pelvis
- Reabsorption: water (passive), some urea, H+ ions

18
Q

What is filtration?

A

Process in which blood and fluid pass through a selectively permeable membrane

19
Q

What is reabsorption?

A

Transfer of water, ions, + nutrients back into interstitial fluid via passive + active transport

20
Q

What is secretion?

A

Removal of waste materials from blood and intercellular fluid

21
Q

How can secretion be used to maintain blood pH?

A

Secretion of H+ ions into filtrate helps counteract the acidity constantly generated in the body by metabolic reactions

If too acidic, H+ ions are secreted into proximal convoluted tubule + collecting ducts