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Bio 210 Urinary System Notes

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This is a comprehensive and detailed note on Chapter 24: The urinary system. *Essential Study Material!!

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  • October 20, 2024
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Chapter 24

Lecture Notes

• Urinary System

• Cardiovascular system (CVS) delivers nutrients (from digestive tract) and O2 (from lungs) to cells
in peripheral tissues

• CVS carries CO2 and waste products from peripheral tissues to sites of excretion

– CO2 removed at lungs

– Most physiological waste products removed by urinary system

– Urinary System (Figure 24.1a)

• Urinary System (Figure 24.1b)

• Introduction to the Urinary System

• Functions of the kidneys

– removes waste products and converts filtrate into urine

– Formation of calcitriol

• synthesizes final enzyme in calcitriol hormone formation

– Production and release of erythropoietin

• indirectly measures oxygen level of blood

• secretes erythropoietin (EPO) in response to low blood oxygen

– stimulates red bone marrow to increase rate of erythrocyte formation

– erythrocytes transporting additional oxygen from lungs

– Introduction to the Urinary System

• Functions of the kidneys(continued)

– Regulation of ion levels and acid-base balance

• helps control blood’s inorganic ion balance

• e.g., Na+, K+, Ca2+

• aids in maintaining acid-base balance

, – alters levels of H+ and HCO3-

– Regulation of blood pressure

• alters amount of fluid lost in urine

– helps regulate blood volume

• releases renin enzyme

– required for production of angiotensin II

» hormone increasing blood pressure

• Introduction to the Urinary System

• Functions of the kidneys(continued)

– Potential to engage in gluconeogenesis

• during prolonged fasting or starvation

• produces glucose from noncarbohydrate sources

• helps maintain normal blood glucose levels

• Introduction to the Urinary System

• Blood Flow and Filtered Fluid Flow:
Filtrate, Tubular Fluid, and Urine Flow

• Definitions

– Filtrate

• Blood flowing through glomerulus

• Both water and solutes filtered from blood plasma

• Moves across wall of glomerular capillaries and into capsular space

• Forms filtrate

– Tubular fluid

• Filtrate renamed as enters proximal convoluted tubule

• Flows through PCT, nephron loop, DCT

• Enters collecting tubules to collecting ducts

, • Blood Flow and Filtered Fluid Flow:
Filtrate, Tubular Fluid, and Urine Flow

• Definitions (continued)

– Urine

• Tubular fluid renamed as leaves collecting ducts

• Enters papillary duct located within renal papilla

• Flows within renal sinus of kidney

• Flows from minor calyx, to major calyx, to renal pelvis

• Renal pelvis connecting to ureter

• Ureter connecting to urinary bladder

– stored and excreted from body through urethra

• Structures That Transport Fluids Through the Urinary System (Figure 24.9)

• Production of Filtrate Within the Renal Corpuscle: Overview of Urine Formation

• Urine formed from three processes (filtration, tubular reabsorption, tubular secretion)

– Filtration

• in glomerular capillaries

• separates some water and dissolved solutes from blood plasma

• water and solutes entering capsular space of renal corpuscle

– due to pressure differences across the filtration membrane

• separated fluid termed filtrate

• Production of Filtrate Within the Renal Corpuscle: Overview of Urine Formation

• Urine formed from three processes (continued)

– Tubular reabsorption

• movement of components within tubular fluid

• move by diffusion, osmosis, or active transport

• move from lumen of tubules and collecting ducts across walls

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