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The Urinary System Functions of The Urinary System: © 2018 Pearson Education, Inc. 1

The urinary system filters waste from the blood to produce urine. The kidneys contain nephrons that filter blood in the glomerulus and reabsorb useful substances through the renal tubules. Remaining fluid containing waste products travels through the ureters to the bladder for storage and is later excreted through the urethra. The kidneys regulate blood pressure, produce erythropoietin and active vitamin D, and remove toxins and drugs from the bloodstream through urine formation.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
108 views

The Urinary System Functions of The Urinary System: © 2018 Pearson Education, Inc. 1

The urinary system filters waste from the blood to produce urine. The kidneys contain nephrons that filter blood in the glomerulus and reabsorb useful substances through the renal tubules. Remaining fluid containing waste products travels through the ureters to the bladder for storage and is later excreted through the urethra. The kidneys regulate blood pressure, produce erythropoietin and active vitamin D, and remove toxins and drugs from the bloodstream through urine formation.

Uploaded by

Stef Fie
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 13

Chapter 15

The Urinary System

Functions of the Urinary System


• Kidneys dispose of waste products in urine
• Nitrogenous wastes
• Toxins
• Drugs
• Excess ions
• Kidneys’ regulatory functions include:
• Production of renin to maintain blood pressure
• Production of erythropoietin to stimulate red blood cell production
• Conversion of vitamin D to its active form

Organs of the Urinary System


• Kidneys
• Ureters
• Urinary bladder
• Urethra

Kidneys
• Location and structure
• The kidneys are situated against the dorsal body wall in a retroperitoneal
position (behind the parietal peritoneum)
• The kidneys are situated at the level of the T 12 to L3 vertebrae
• The right kidney is slightly lower than the left (because of position of the liver)

Kidneys
• Kidney structure
• An adult kidney is about 12 cm (5 in) long and 6 cm (2.5 in) wide
• Renal hilum
• A medial indentation where several structures enter or exit the kidney
(ureters, renal blood vessels, and nerves)
• An adrenal gland sits atop each kidney

Kidneys
• Kidney structure (continued)
• Three protective layers enclose the kidney
• Fibrous capsule encloses each kidney
• Perirenal fat capsule surrounds the kidney and cushions against blows
• Renal fascia is the most superficial layer that anchors the kidney and
adrenal gland to surrounding structures

© 2018 Pearson Education, Inc. 1


Kidneys
• Kidney structure (continued)
• Three regions revealed in a longitudinal section
1. Renal cortex—outer region
2. Renal medulla—deeper region
• Renal (medullary) pyramids—triangular regions of tissue in the
medulla
• Renal columns—extensions of cortexlike material that separate
the pyramids

Kidneys
• Kidney structure (continued)
• Three regions (continued)
3. Renal pelvis—medial region that is a flat, funnel-shaped tube
• Calyces form cup-shaped “drains” that enclose the renal
pyramids
• Calyces collect urine and send it to the renal pelvis, on to the
ureter, and to the urinary bladder for storage

Kidneys
• Blood supply
• One-quarter of the total blood supply of the body passes through the kidneys
each minute
• Renal artery provides each kidney with arterial blood supply
• Renal artery divides into segmental arteries → interlobar arteries → arcuate
arteries → cortical radiate arteries

Kidneys
• Venous blood flow
• Cortical radiate veins → arcuate veins → interlobar veins → renal vein
• There are no segmental veins
• Renal vein returns blood to the inferior vena cava

Nephrons
• Structural and functional units of the kidneys
• Each kidney contains over a million nephrons
• Each nephron consists of two main structures
1. Renal corpuscle
2. Renal tubule

2 © 2018 Pearson Education, Inc.


Nephrons
• Renal corpuscle consists of:
1. Glomerulus, a knot of capillaries made of podocytes
• Podocytes make up the inner (visceral) layer of the glomerular capsule
• Foot processes cling to the glomerulus
• Filtration slits create a porous membrane—ideal for filtration
2. Glomerular (Bowman’s) capsule is a cup-shaped structure that surrounds the
glomerulus
• First part of the renal tubule

Nephrons
• Renal tubule
• Extends from glomerular capsule and ends when it empties into the collecting
duct
• From the glomerular (Bowman’s) capsule, the subdivisions of the renal tubule
are:
1. Proximal convoluted tubule (PCT)
2. Nephron loop (loop of Henle)
3. Distal convoluted tubule (DCT)

Nephrons
• Cortical nephrons
• Located entirely in the cortex
• Include most nephrons
• Juxtamedullary nephrons
• Found at the cortex-medulla junction
• Nephron loop dips deep into the medulla
• Collecting ducts collect urine from both types of nephrons, through the renal
pyramids, to the calyces, and then to the renal pelvis

Nephrons
• Two capillary beds associated with each nephron
1. Glomerulus
2. Peritubular capillary bed

© 2018 Pearson Education, Inc. 3


Nephrons
• Glomerulus
• Fed and drained by arterioles
• Afferent arteriole—arises from a cortical radiate artery and feeds the
glomerulus
• Efferent arteriole—receives blood that has passed through the
glomerulus
• Specialized for filtration
• High pressure forces fluid and solutes out of blood and into the glomerular
capsule

Nephrons
• Peritubular capillary beds
• Arise from the efferent arteriole of the glomerulus
• Low-pressure, porous capillaries
• Adapted for absorption instead of filtration
• Cling close to the renal tubule to receive solutes and water from tubule cells
• Drain into the interlobar veins

Urine Formation and Characteristics


• Urine formation is the result of three processes
1. Glomerular filtration
2. Tubular reabsorption
3. Tubular secretion

Urine Formation and Characteristics


• Glomerular filtration
• The glomerulus is a filter
• Filtration is a nonselective passive process
• Water and solutes smaller than proteins are forced through glomerular
capillary walls
• Proteins and blood cells are normally too large to pass through the
filtration membrane
• Once in the capsule, fluid is called filtrate
• Filtrate leaves via the renal tubule

Urine Formation and Characteristics


• Glomerular filtration (continued)
• Filtrate will be formed as long as systemic blood pressure is normal
• If arterial blood pressure is too low, filtrate formation stops because
glomerular pressure will be too low to form filtrate

4 © 2018 Pearson Education, Inc.


Urine Formation and Characteristics
• Tubular reabsorption
• The peritubular capillaries reabsorb useful substances from the renal tubule
cells, such as:
• Water
• Glucose
• Amino acids
• Ions
• Some reabsorption is passive; most is active (ATP)
• Most reabsorption occurs in the proximal convoluted tubule

Urine Formation and Characteristics


• Tubular secretion
• Reabsorption in reverse
• Some materials move from the blood of the peritubular capillaries into the
renal tubules to be eliminated in filtrate
• Hydrogen and potassium ions
• Creatinine

Urine Formation and Characteristics


• Tubular secretion (continued)
• Secretion is important for:
• Getting rid of substances not already in the filtrate
• Removing drugs and excess ions
• Maintaining acid-base balance of blood
• Materials left in the renal tubule move toward the ureter

Urine Formation and Characteristics


• Nitrogenous wastes
• Nitrogenous waste products are poorly reabsorbed, if at all
• Tend to remain in the filtrate and are excreted from the body in the urine
• Urea—end product of protein breakdown
• Uric acid—results from nucleic acid metabolism
• Creatinine—associated with creatine metabolism in muscles

Urine Formation and Characteristics


• In 24 hours, about 1.0 to 1.8 liters of urine are produced
• Urine and filtrate are different
• Filtrate contains everything that blood plasma does (except proteins)
• Urine is what remains after the filtrate has lost most of its water, nutrients, and
necessary ions through reabsorption
• Urine contains nitrogenous wastes and substances that are not needed

© 2018 Pearson Education, Inc. 5


Urine Formation and Characteristics
• Urine characteristics
• Clear and pale to deep yellow in color
• Yellow color is normal and due to the pigment urochrome (from the
destruction of hemoglobin) and solutes
• Dilute urine is a pale, straw color
• Sterile at the time of formation
• Slightly aromatic, but smells like ammonia with time
• Slightly acidic (pH of 6)
• Specific gravity of 1.001 to 1.035

Urine Formation and Characteristics


• Solutes normally found in urine
• Sodium and potassium ions
• Urea, uric acid, creatinine
• Ammonia
• Bicarbonate ions

Urine Formation and Characteristics


• Solutes NOT normally found in urine
• Glucose
• Blood proteins
• Red blood cells
• Hemoglobin
• WBCs (pus)
• Bile

Ureters
• Slender tubes 25–30 cm (10–12 inches) attaching the kidney to the urinary bladder
• Continuous with the renal pelvis
• Enter the posterior aspect of the urinary bladder
• Run behind the peritoneum
• Peristalsis aids gravity in urine transport

Urinary Bladder
• Smooth, collapsible, muscular sac situated posterior to the pubic symphysis
• Stores urine temporarily
• Trigone—triangular region of the urinary bladder base based on three openings
• Two openings from the ureters (ureteral orifices)
• One opening to the urethra (internal urethral orifice)
• In males, the prostate surrounds the neck of the urinary bladder

6 © 2018 Pearson Education, Inc.


Urinary Bladder
• Wall of the urinary bladder
• Three layers of smooth muscle collectively called the detrusor muscle
• Mucosa made of transitional epithelium
• Walls are thick and folded in an empty urinary bladder
• Urinary bladder can expand significantly without increasing internal pressure

Urinary Bladder
• Capacity of the urinary bladder
• A moderately full bladder is about 5 inches long and holds about 500 ml of
urine
• Capable of holding twice that amount of urine

Urethra
• Thin-walled tube that carries urine from the urinary bladder to the outside of the body
by peristalsis
• Function
• Females—carries only urine
• Males—carries urine and sperm

Urethra
• Release of urine is controlled by two sphincters
1. Internal urethral sphincter
• Involuntary and made of smooth muscle
2. External urethral sphincter
• Voluntary and made of skeletal muscle

Urethra
• Length
• In females: 3 to 4 cm (1.5 inches long)
• In males: 20 cm (8 inches long)
• Location
• Females—anterior to the vaginal opening
• Males—travels through the prostate and penis
• Prostatic urethra
• Membranous urethra
• Spongy urethra

© 2018 Pearson Education, Inc. 7


Micturition
• Micturition
• Voiding, or emptying of the urinary bladder
• Two sphincters control the release of urine, the internal urethral sphincter and
external urethral sphincter
• Bladder collects urine to 200 ml
• Stretch receptors transmit impulses to the sacral region of the spinal cord
• Impulses travel back to the bladder via the pelvic splanchnic nerves to cause
bladder contractions

Micturition
• When contractions become stronger, urine is forced past the involuntary internal
sphincter into the upper urethra
• Urge to void is felt
• The external sphincter is voluntarily controlled, so micturition can usually be delayed

Fluid, Electrolyte, and Acid-Base Balance


• Blood composition depends on three factors
1. Diet
2. Cellular metabolism
3. Urine output

Fluid, Electrolyte, and Acid-Base Balance


• Kidneys have four roles in maintaining blood composition
1. Excreting nitrogen-containing wastes (previously discussed)
2. Maintaining water balance of the blood
3. Maintaining electrolyte balance of the blood
4. Ensuring proper blood pH

Maintaining Water Balance of the Blood


• Normal amount of water in the human body
• Young adult females = 50%
• Young adult males = 60%
• Babies = 75%
• The elderly = 45%
• Water is necessary for many body functions, and levels must be maintained

8 © 2018 Pearson Education, Inc.


Maintaining Water Balance of the Blood
• Water occupies three main fluid compartments
1. Intracellular fluid (ICF)
• Fluid inside cells
• Accounts for two-thirds of body fluid
2. Extracellular fluid (ECF)
• Fluids outside cells; includes blood plasma, interstitial fluid (IF), lymph,
and transcellular fluid
3. Plasma (blood) is ECF, but accounts for 3L of total body water.
• Links external and internal environments (Figure 15.9)

Maintaining Water Balance of the Blood


• The link between water and electrolytes
• Electrolytes are charged particles (ions) that conduct electrical current in an
aqueous solution
• Sodium, potassium, and calcium ions are electrolytes

Maintaining Water Balance of the Blood


• Regulation of water intake and output
• Water intake must equal water output if the body is to remain properly
hydrated
• Sources for water intake
• Ingested foods and fluids
• Water produced from metabolic processes (10%)
• Thirst mechanism is the driving force for water intake

Maintaining Water Balance of the Blood


• Thirst mechanism
• Osmoreceptors are sensitive cells in the hypothalamus that become more
active in reaction to small changes in plasma solute concentration
• When activated, the thirst center in the hypothalamus is notified
• A dry mouth due to decreased saliva also promotes the thirst mechanism
• Both reinforce the drive to drink

Maintaining Water Balance of the Blood


• Sources of water output
• Lungs (insensible since we cannot sense the water leaving)
• Perspiration
• Feces
• Urine

© 2018 Pearson Education, Inc. 9


Maintaining Water Balance of the Blood
• Hormones are primarily responsible for reabsorption of water and electrolytes by the
kidneys
• Antidiuretic hormone (ADH) prevents excessive water loss in the urine and
increases water reabsorption
• ADH targets the kidney’s collecting ducts

Maintaining Electrolyte Balance


• Small changes in electrolyte concentrations cause water to move from one fluid
compartment to another
• A second hormone, aldosterone, helps regulate blood composition and blood volume
by acting on the kidney
• For each sodium ion reabsorbed, a chloride ion follows, and a potassium ion
is secreted into the filtrate
• Water follows salt: when sodium is reabsorbed, water follows it passively back
into the blood

Electrolyte Balance
• Renin-angiotensin mechanism
• Most important trigger for aldosterone release
• Mediated by the juxtaglomerular (JG) apparatus of the renal tubules
• When cells of the JG apparatus are stimulated by low blood pressure, the
enzyme renin is released into blood

Electrolyte Balance
• Renin-angiotensin mechanism (continued)
• Renin catalyzes reactions that produce angiotensin II
• Angiotensin II causes vasoconstriction and aldosterone release
• Result is increase in blood volume and blood pressure

Maintaining Acid-Base Balance of Blood


• Blood pH must remain between 7.35 and 7.45 to maintain homeostasis
• Alkalosis—pH above 7.45
• Acidosis—pH below 7.35
• Physiological acidosis—pH between 7.0 and 7.35

Maintaining Acid-Base Balance of Blood


• Kidneys play greatest role in maintaining acid-base balance
• Other acid-base controlling systems
• Blood buffers

10 © 2018 Pearson Education, Inc.


• Respiration

Maintaining Acid-Base Balance of Blood


• Blood buffers
• Acids are proton (H+) donors
• Strong acids dissociate completely and liberate all of their H + in water
• Weak acids, such as carbonic acid, dissociate only partially
• Bases are proton (H+) acceptors
• Strong bases dissociate easily in water and tie up H +
• Weak bases, such as bicarbonate ion and ammonia, are slower to
accept H+

Maintaining Acid-Base Balance of Blood


• Molecules react to prevent dramatic changes in hydrogen ion (H +) concentrations
• Bind to H+ when pH drops
• Release H+ when pH rises
• Three major chemical buffer systems
1. Bicarbonate buffer system
2. Phosphate buffer system
3. Protein buffer system

Maintaining Acid-Base Balance of Blood


• The bicarbonate buffer system
• Mixture of carbonic acid (H2CO3) and sodium bicarbonate (NaHCO3)
• Carbonic acid is a weak acid that does not dissociate much in neutral
or acid solutions
• Bicarbonate ions (HCO3−) react with strong acids to change them to
weak acids
HCl + NaHCO3 → H2CO3 + NaCl
strong acid weak base weak acid salt

Maintaining Acid-Base Balance of Blood


• The bicarbonate buffer system (continued)
• Carbonic acid dissociates in the presence of a strong base to form a weak
base and water
NaOH + H2CO3 → NaHCO3 + H2O
strong base weak acid weak base water

Maintaining Acid-Base Balance of Blood


• Respiratory mechanisms
• Respiratory rate can rise and fall depending on changing blood pH to retain

© 2018 Pearson Education, Inc. 11


CO2 (decreasing the blood pH) or remove CO2 (increasing the blood pH)

12 © 2018 Pearson Education, Inc.


Maintaining Acid-Base Balance of Blood
• Renal mechanisms
• When blood pH rises:
• Bicarbonate ions are excreted
• Hydrogen ions are retained by kidney tubules
• When blood pH falls:
• Bicarbonate ions are reabsorbed
• Hydrogen ions are secreted
• Urine pH varies from 4.5 to 8.0

Developmental Aspects of the Urinary System


• The kidneys begin to develop in the first few weeks of embryonic life and are
excreting urine by the third month of fetal life
• Common congenital abnormalities include polycystic kidney and hypospadias
• Common urinary system problems in children and young to middle-aged adults
include infections caused by fecal microorganisms, microorganisms causing sexually
transmitted infections, and Streptococcus

Developmental Aspects of the Urinary System


• Control of the voluntary urethral sphincter does not start until age 18 months
• Complete nighttime control may not occur until the child is 4 years old
• Urinary tract infections (UTIs) are the only common problems before old age
• Escherichia coli (E. coli), a bacterium, accounts for 80 percent of UTIs

Developmental Aspects of the Urinary System


• Renal failure is an uncommon but serious problem in which the kidneys are unable
to concentrate urine, and dialysis must be done to maintain chemical homeostasis of
blood
• With age, filtration rate decreases and tubule cells become less efficient at
concentrating urine, leading to urgency, frequency, and incontinence
• In men, urinary retention is another common problem

Developmental Aspects of the Urinary System


• Problems associated with aging
• Urgency—feeling that it is necessary to void
• Frequency—frequent voiding of small amounts of urine
• Nocturia—need to get up during the night to urinate
• Incontinence—loss of control
• Urinary retention—common in males, often the result of hypertrophy of the
prostate gland

© 2018 Pearson Education, Inc. 13

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