Urinary system Flashcards

1
Q

Organs of the urinary system

A
  1. Kidney: Filter waste products from the blood stream and convert the filtrate into urine
  2. Ureters: Transport urine from kidney to bladder via peristalsis
  3. Urinary bladder: Storage of urine
  4. Urethra: Transports urine from bladder to the outside of the body
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2
Q

The Kidney location

A
  • Located retroperitoneally (posterior to peritoneum)
  • Lateral to T12 to L3 vertebrae
  • Right kidney lies inferior
  • Average size: 12cm, 6 cm, 3cm
  • Lateral surface convex, medial is concave
  • Renal hilum- where vessels, nerves and ureters enter and leave the kidney
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3
Q

Kidney function

A

Disposal of waste (toxins, metabolic byproducts, excess water and ions) out of the body in urine while returning needed substances to the blood
- Regulation of blood volume and pressure: filtering role
- Regulation of the blood’s inorganic ion balance- sodium, potassium and phosphate ions (kidneys)
- Acid-base balance through changes in the rates of hydrogen ion and ammonium section
- Regulates of erythrocyte production via erythropoietin

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4
Q

The kidney- protective coverings

A

Fibrous capsule: Thin tough layer of dense connective tissue adheres to the kidney surface
Perirenal fat capsule: Dense connective tissue, maintains kidney shape, protects from pathogens
Renal fascia: Dense irregular tissue, anchors the kidney to surrounding tissues
Pararenal fat capsule: Fat with adipose tissue: cushioning and insulation

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5
Q

The kidney blood supply

A
  • Kidneys continuously cleanse the blood and thus need a rich blood supply
  • 1/4th of systemic output reaches kidneys via renal artery
  • Right renal artery is longer than left
  • Blood drains via veins into renal vein and then the inferior vena cava
    Pathway of blood
  • Each artery has a paired vein that traces pathway in reverse
  • No segmental vein
  • Blood from cortical radiate artery then enters arterioles which feed to capillaries
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6
Q

Nephrons

A
  • The main structural and functional unit of the kidney
  • Lined with simple epithelium
    Composed of:
  • Renal corpuscle: first part of nephron where filtration occurs
  • Renal tubule: long tubular section of proximal tube, loops of henle, distal tubule, collecting duct
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7
Q

Mechanisms of urine formation

A
  • Glomerular filtration: Filtrate of blood leaves kidney capillaries
  • Tubular resorption: Most nutrients, water and essential ions reclaimed
  • Tubular secretion: Active process of removing undesirable molecules
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8
Q

Nephron renal corpuscle and tubule

A

Corpuscle
- Has 2 parts:
1. Glomerulus- tuft of capillaries (inner) that are fenestrated (with pores) to allow fluid and small molecules to enter capsular space
Surrounded by the (2) glomerular/ bowman’s capsule
- Produces a filtrate of blood
Tubule
Proximal convoluted tubule:
- Entirely in renal cortex
- Reabsorbs ion, nutrients, plasma proteins, vitamins and water
- Filtrate is called tubular fluid
Bownman’s capsule: filtration (not part of tubule)
Loop of Henle: Reabsorption of ions and water
Distal convoluted tubule:
- Entirely in renal cortex
- Secrets ions into the tubular fluid and reabsorbs water
- Less active in resorption than proximal
Collecting duct
- Each receives urine from several nephrons
- Ducts join to form larger papillary ducts

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9
Q

2 classes of nephrons

A

Cortical nephrons
- 85% of nephrons
- Short nephron loop
- Glomerulus further from the cortex- medulla junction
- Efferent arteriole supplies peritubular capillaries
Juxtamedullary nephrons
- 15% of nephrons
- Long nephron loop- contribute to kidney’s ability to concentrate urine
- Glomerulus closer to the cortex- medulla junction
- Efferent arteriole supplies vasa recta

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10
Q

Blood vessels associated with nephrons

A
  • Nephrons associate closely with 2 capillary beds:
    Glomerulus
  • Produce filtrate that becomes urine
  • Fed and drained by arterioles
  • Efferent and afferent glomerular arteriole
  • Generate 1 litre of fluid every 8 minutes
  • 99% of filtrate is reabsorbed by tubules
    Peritubular capillaries in cortical nephrons/ vasa recta in juxtamedullary nephrons
  • Arise from efferent arterioles draining cortical glomeruli
  • Ave adapted for absorption
  • Low-pressure, porous capillaries
  • All molecules secreted by nephrons into urine are from peritubular capillaries
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11
Q

Urinary tract - ureters

A
  • 25-30 cm long fibromuscular tubes
  • Extend from renal pelvis to exist the hilum of the kidney
  • Transport urine from kidneys to urinary bladder via peristaltic action of smooth muscle
  • Paired, retroperitoneal organs
  • Oblique (angled) entry into bladder prevents back flow of urine
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12
Q

Ureters

A

3 layers, from innermost to outermost:
1. Mucosa
- Transitional epithelium stretchy to the passage of urine
- Distensible transitional epithelium with rugae
- Bundles of primarily smooth muscle fibres surround the mucosa and help propel urine to the outside of the body
2. Muscularis
- 2 smooth muscle layers: inner longitudinal and outer circular
- Peristaltic waves to propel the urine to the bladder
3. Adventitia
- Areolar connective tissue which anchors the ureter to the posterior abdominal region

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13
Q

Urinary bladder

A
  • The urinary bladder is an expandable, muscular reservoir for urine (retroperitoneal)
  • Receives blood from branches of the internal iliac arteries
  • It is shaped like an upside-down pyramid when empty: when full, it is distended superiorly and oval shaped
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14
Q

Urination innervation

A
  • Process of emptying the bladder via contraction of the detrusor muscle
  • Parasympathetic and sympathetic axons of the ANS:
    The parasympathetic axons come from the micturition reflex centre located in spinal cord segments S2-24. Stimulate urination
  • The sympathetic axons comes from the T11-L2 segments of the spinal cord and inhibit innervation
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15
Q

Female urethra

A
  • 3-5 cm long
  • Conveys urine from bladder to outside of the body
  • Smooth muscle and inner mucosa layer
  • Internal urethral sphincter (involuntary) keeps urethra closed when urine is not being passed
  • External urethral sphincter (voluntary)- inhibits urination until proper time
  • Only transmits urine from bladder to vestibule, an external space immediately internal to the labia minora
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16
Q

Male urethra

A
  • 18-20 cm long passageway from both urine and semen
    Prostatic urethra
  • 2-5cm long
  • Extends through the prostate gland where multiple small prostatic ducts enter it
    Membranous urethra
  • 2-5cm long
  • Extends from inferior prostrate gland through the urogenital diaphragm
    Spongy Ventura
  • 15cm in erectile tissue in the penis called corpus spongiosum
  • Extends to the external urethral orifice
17
Q

External genitalia

A

Collectively called the Vulva
Mons Pubis: Skin and subcutaneous connective tissue; overlies the pubic symphysis; pubic hair covers after puberty
Labia Majora: paired, thickened folds of skin, sebaceous glands, connective tissue, homologue of the male scrotum, encloses the labia minora
Labia minora: Paired, highly vascular folds with sebaceous glands and melanocytes
Vestibule: Space between the labia minora; houses opening to urethra and vagina
Clitoris: anterior to vestibule; is erectile tissue
Prepuce: sold of labia minora covering clitoris

18
Q

Mammary gland

A

Breasts: Modified sweat glands
Alveoli: increases with pregnancy and produce milk
Lactiferous ducts- drains milk from lobe to sinus
Lactiferous sinuses: expanded enda ducts near nipple; milk
- Storage prior to release from the nipple
Breast milk: Complex sequence of internal/external stimuli
- Prolactin stimulates the production of breast milk
- Oxytocin is responsible for milk ejection
Nipple: raised structure surrounded by an areola containing multiple tiny openings
Suspensory ligaments: Provide support to gland tissue