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Structure of The Kidney

Structure of The Kidney. Objectives. Define the term excretion and explain the importance of removing waste material from the body Describe the process which forms urea from amino acids Describe the general structure of the kidney , the nephron , and associated blood vessels.

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Structure of The Kidney

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  1. Structure of The Kidney

  2. Objectives • Define the termexcretion and explain the importance of removing waste material from the body • Describe the process which forms urea from amino acids • Describe the general structure of the kidney, the nephron, and associated blood vessels

  3. Excretion • What waste material do we produce? • CO2 released through lungs • Feces released through digestive tract • Urine released through kidneys • All are poisonous materials (toxins) • Where do they come from? • CO2 cellular respiration • Feces material not absorbed by body • Urine forms from urea; produced by the liver from excess amino acids

  4. It All Starts In The Liver • After absorption, food molecules are assimilated • Assimilation to become a useful part of a cell or organ • Roles of the Liver • Glycogen is made from excess blood glucose • Amino acids used to make proteins • Fatty acids/glycerols are made into fat • Form cholesterol from fat • Excess amino acids deaminated; forms urea

  5. Deamination: Forming Urea • What are our major sources of energy? • Carbohydrates, Fats, and Proteins • How are carbs and fats stored? Proteins? • Glycogen and fat (adipose tissue) • Deamination removal of for amino group from an amino acid to form a keto acid and ammonia (NH3) • Keto acids can form glucose and fat • Ammonia is toxic

  6. Deamination: Forming Urea • To prevent damage from ammonia build up, ammonia instantly combines with CO2and produce urea and H2O • Urea passes from the liver into the blood plasma and then filtered out through the kidneys • Uric Acid minor nitrogenous excretory product made from the breakdown of DNA

  7. Structure of the Urinary System • Renal artery takes unfiltered blood to kidneys • Renal vein takes filtered blood from kidneys • Kidney bean-shaped network of filtering units called nephrons • Ureter carries urine from kidneys to bladder • Bladder elastic storage area for urine • Urethra carries urine from bladder to outside the body

  8. Layers of a Kidney • 2 main roles of kidneys: • Removal of urea • Regulating water levels, ion levels, and pH of blood (homeostasis) • Capsule tough outer layer to protect kidney from damage • 3 main areas of a Kidney • Cortex contains all glomerulus, renal capsules, and area where ultrafiltation occurs • Medulla contains kidney tubules and collecting ducts, and area where reabsorbtionoccurs • Pelviswhere all collecting ducts meet to carry waste away through ureters

  9. Glomeruli K Cortex L Collecting ducts M Medulla N Pelvis O

  10. Structure of a Nephron • Nephron(kidney tubule) filtration unit a kidney • Renal (Bowman’s) capsule cup-shaped site where arterial blood is filtered • Blood comes in from arteriole • Glomerulus splitting capillaries in capsule to increase filtering rate • Filtered blood leaves through the arteriole

  11. Ultrafiltration • Renal capsule filters urea, H2O, and small molecules from the blood • Reabsorption pulls important molecules and H2O back into blood • 3 layers of Filtration walls inside renal capsule have small gaps; only small molecules get through • Blood cells are too big • Blood pressure helps force waster material through filter and out of the blood (125 ml/min)

  12. Reabsorption • What inside the filtrate? • Urea • Water • Glucose • Na + / Cl-; Ions • What do we need back? • Glucose and Ions • Capillaries wrapped about nephronsreabsorb glucose and ions into the blood • Water is reabsorbed in the collecting ducts depending on your blood water levels • Hydrated clear/light yellow • Dehydrated dark yellow

  13. Kidney Failure • What happens when the kidneys shut down? • Urea builds up in body • Toxic levels effect organs; death • What can cause kidneys to fail? • Physical damage • Blood clots; blockage in tubes • Kidney Stones • Toxins; Alcohol and Drugs • Genetics; DNA • Disease • How do we know kidneys are damaged? • Blood in urine • Large proteins in urine • Pain and illness

  14. Living With One Kidney • What does living with one kidney mean? • More urea in blood • Higher blood pressure • More stress on remaining kidney • Toxins have longer effects; alcohol and drugs • Greater chance of losing other kidney • What options do you have if you lose both kidneys? • Dialysis • Kidney Transplant

  15. Kidney Dialysis • Kidney dialysis machine filtering blood outside the body • Machine draws out blood from vein • Inside machine; blood passes by several dialysis membranes; Urea drawn out of blood into dialysis fluid (dialysate). How? • Diffusion 3) Dialysis fluid is contains salt and sugar. Why? • No diffusion; glucose/salts stays in blood 4) Filtered blood returns to body vein • 3-4 hours; 2-3 times a week • What diet must you have? • Low-Protein = Less Urea

  16. Kidney Transplant • Kidney Transplant surgically replacing the damaged kidney with the healthy kidney of a donor • What are the major difficulties with transplants? • Donor match kidney must be excepted by body (donor should be related to you or similar in DNA) • Drugs can lower white blood count to help kidney acceptance • Might get really sick • Dangerous surgeries always have a risk of killing the patient • Expensive lots of money needed to get kidney and pay the hospital; plus after hospital care

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