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Definition
Elimates waste (particularly ammonia), regulates water and salt balance. |
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Urinary and Reproductive System |
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Produce Urine.
Outter = cortex
Inner = medulla |
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Functional unit of the kidney that spans the cortex and medulla.
Nephron + collecting duct/tubules |
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Definition
Connects the kidney and the bladder. |
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Definition
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Used for storage of urine before excretion.
Forms and outpocket of the Cloaca. |
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Definition
Connects the bladder to the outside. |
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Heart->dorsal aorta->renal artery->kidney->kidney vein-> inferior vena cava->heart |
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Forms from filtered blood included in the urinary and circulatory structures. |
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Structure of the Mammalian Kidney |
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Definition
Renal Capsule (Bowman's)
Proximal Tubule
Loop of Henle
Distal Tubule
Collecting Duct |
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Term
3 steps of Filtration in the Kidney |
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Definition
- Glomerular Filtration in the glomerulus and renal capsule
- Tubular Reabsoption in the tubules, loops, and collecting ducts.
- Tubular Secretion in the distal convoluted tubule.
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Term
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Definition
Glom is a capillary bed between two arterioles so there is a higher pressure than normal capillary bed.
This forces fluid out of the cap. into the renal capsule with all the components (formed elements do not leave - RBC, WBC, platelets, plasma proteins).
What is left travels back through the circulature. |
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Term
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Definition
Fluid without formed elements that is similar to plasma. |
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Definition
Reabsorb substances from the ultrafiltrate back into the blood since the glom filtration is very effective - the ultrafiltrate is waste and non waste - nonwaste needs to be reabsorbed.
Begins in proximal tubule. Sugars, amino acids, water reabsorbed.
Some water, nitro wastes, and excess salts, sugars are not reabsorbed.
Descending Loop - water leaves.
Ascending Loop - salt leaves (impermeable to water)
Loop goes from cortex to medulla - as you go to medulla, solute concentration outside the loop increases to create an osmotic gradient.
Loop length relative to water conservation capabilities. |
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Term
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Definition
Second way for substances to enter the nephron.
Active reabsorption of Na.
Substances such as creatinine, protons, etc are transferred to the distal convoluted tubule as well.
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Concentrates the urine as water is reabsorbed across the walls. |
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Definition
- Renal arteries bring blood to kidney.
- Arteries from cap beds (glom) each bed associated with a renal capsule
- Glom filtrate formed
- Filtrate enters prox convoluted tubule
- Filtrate enters Loop of Henle
- Filtrate enters distal conv tubule for tubular secretion
- Enters collecting duct
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Term
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Definition
Reabsorb water and solutes removed from the filtrate.
Connects to the renal vein via a venule. |
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Definition
From the mesoderm (dorsal and post body wall).
Mesoderm expands and forms the nephric ridge which is separated into 3 locations:
1. Anterior = pronephros
2. Posterior = metaonephros
3. Middle = Mesonephros |
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Term
Elimination of Nitrogenous Waste |
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Definition
- Ammonotelism
- Uricotelism
- Ureotelism
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Term
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Definition
Direct excretion of NH3 that requires a lot of water (NH3 is soluble in water).
Aquatic animals.
Elimination of ammonia over the gills. |
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Definition
Mechanism to conserve water.
Excrete uric acid (slightly soluble in water) from kidneys. Little water required.
In cloaca, uric acid precipitates with Na, K, ammonia salts as "sludge"
Ex: Birds/reptiles |
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Definition
Mechanism to conserve water because urine is concentrated.
Exrete urea.
Kidneys accumulate urea and excrete it as concentrated urine.
Ex: mammals. |
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Term
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Definition
Maintain body fluids at a constant osmotic level through active physiological process. |
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Osmoregulation: Freshwater Fish
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Definition
Inside of fish is saltier than environment.
Hyperosmotic.
Take up water.
Well developed kidneys and large glomeruli.
High dilute urine to eliminate water. |
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Osmoregulation: Saltwater Fish
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Definition
Inside of the fish is less salty then environment.
Hypoosmotic.
Lose water - do not produce much filtrate/urine.
The goal is to mangage water flux. |
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Osmoregulation: Terrestrial
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Definition
Drink water.
Thick integument, need to recover water before eliminating wastes.
Filtration kidneys and concentrated urine. |
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Term
Regulation of Salt Balance |
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Definition
DCT revoers salt from urine.
Gills pump out salt (SW) or into the body (FW).
Rectal Glands.
Salt Glands (Birds/reptiles)
Skin/Aquatic Amphibians lose salt passivelt across skin and actively take up salt across the skin. |
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