Where? Glomerulus → Bowman’s capsule
What Moves? Water, ions, glucose, urea, small molecules
Direction? Blood → Filtrate
Selective? No, it's non-selective
process by which water and dissolved particles are pulled out of blood, produces filtrate
Where? Proximal tubule, Loop of Henle, Distal tubule
What Moves? Water, glucose, salts, amino acids
Direction? Filtrate → Blood
Selective? Yes, it's selective
Where? Distal tubule, Collecting duct
What Moves? Hydrogen ions (H⁺), potassium (K⁺), toxins, drugs
Direction? Blood → Filtrate
Selective? Yes, it's selective
Function? Filters blood, forms urine through filtration, reabsorption, and secretion
Main Parts? Glomerulus, Bowman’s capsule, Proximal tubule, Loop of Henle, Distal tubule, Collecting duct
Urine Pathway? Nephron → Collecting duct → Ureter → Bladder → Urethra
1 mil per kidney
composed of many tubes
Definition: Supplies the kidney with blood from the aorta, moves into glomerulus
Key Fact: Brings oxygenated blood to be filtered
Definition: Carries urine from the kidney to the urinary bladder
Key Fact: A tube that prevents backflow with peristalsis
Definition: Muscle that controls urine elimination from the bladder
Key Fact: Prevents involuntary urination
Definition: The liquid removed from blood by nephrons
Key Fact: Contains water, glucose, ions, and waste
Definition: A cluster of porous capillaries surrounded by Bowman’s capsule, fluid is squeezed out of blood by mechanical filtration
Key Fact: Filters small molecules from blood into the nephron
Definition: Carries blood away from the glomerulus, narrower
Key Fact: Leads to peritubular capillaries for reabsorption
Definition: Carries filtered blood away from the kidney
Key Fact: Returns blood to circulation
Definition: The central section of the kidney where filtrate is collected
Key Fact: Connects to the ureter
Definition: Temporarily stores urine before excretion
Key Fact: Expands when full and contracts when empty
filtrate
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filtrate
filtrate
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Definition: Carries urine out of the body
Definition: Carries blood to the glomerulus, wider
Definition: Connects the proximal tubule to the distal tubule, concentrates filtrate by removing more water from it
Definition: Receives filtrate from the glomerulus, surrounds the glomerulus, filtrate collected here for transport through the nephron. small molecules and water can pass through, but larger can not
Definition: The outer layer of the kidney
Definition: The middle layer of the kidney, composed of 7 cone shaped renal pyramids- merge to form renal pelvis
Definition: Cleans the blood and produces urine, bean shaped
Definition: Site of secretion, one of the three urine formation steps
cells in proximal tubule remove h2o and nutrients from filtrate and pass them back into blood, wastes such as urea are retained in the tubule. all glucose (AT), just right salt (AT), least water (O)
wastes that were not initially filtered out in the bowman's capsule are removed from blood in distal tubule, such as ammonia and drugs (AT)
prepares urine for transport out of the body, then collected in renal elvis where it enters ureter, then bladder, small adjustment to water volume
builds up pressure inside because it is wider in and narrower out
physical build up of pressure squeezes fluid out of blood, contains all things dissolved in blood plasma
mechanical filtration, reabsorption, secretion
regulate blood volume and composition so that homeostasis is maintained. this is is achieved through varying the volume and composition of urine
variations in salt and water intake, in the environmental conditions we are exposed to
antidiuretic hormone and aldosterone
osomoreceptors in hypothalamus detect fall in concentration of water in blood (relative water volume on each side of a membrane). they stimulate neurosecretory cells in hypothalamus to synthesize and secrete ADH. passes from hypo to the posterior pituitary where its released into blood
increases permeability of kidney collecting duct to water so more water is reabsorbed and urine volume decreases. (less water in urine)
high fluid intake, high blood volume, low blood sodium levels, alcohol consumption, causes to pee more water. water reabsorption decreases, urine output increases
low fluid intake, low blood volume, high blood sodium levels, nicotine and morphine, causes less water in urine. water reabsorption increases, urine output decreases
low blood volumes stimulate secretion of aldosterone from the adrenal cortex. mediated through complex pathway involving hormone renin from the kindey. causes sodium reabsorption increase, water follows, blood volume restored
The volume decreases because water exits the filtrate.
It becomes more concentrated in the descending loop and less concentrated in the ascending loop.
Active transport of Na+ creates a concentration gradient that helps regulate water and solute movement.
Toward the renal vein and eventually to the bladder for excretion.
Water (but impermeable to solutes).
Water exits into the medullary interstitium, increasing filtrate concentration.
At the deepest part of the loop.
Solutes (but impermeable to water).
Solutes exit, making the filtrate less concentrated.
It pumps out sodium (Na+), reducing filtrate concentration and maintaining the osmotic gradient.
Through active transport of sodium (Na+), which keeps the medullary interstitium salty.
Because solutes exit the filtrate in the ascending loop, increasing osmolarity.
Because ammonia is very toxic, and urea is less toxic.
It is transported to the kidneys and excreted in urine.
To remove nitrogenous waste from the body safely.
water, salt, urea (sweat)
the lungs
the liver
kindeys and large intestine
kidneys, skin, lungs