Yes, but let me explain. The kidneys filter your blood roughly 60 times a day. The nephrons of the kidneys are involved with making sure our body eliminates all the extra things our blood doesn't need and conserving the thing we do need. For example if we are dehydrated; specialized cells in the nephron tell it to conserve water and our urine becomes more concentrated. This is a very general explanation.... The kidneys are a very complex!
Antibiotics are excreted via the urinary system. They get pulled out of our blood in the nephorns of the kidneys. Anything the body doesn't need gets drained into the collecting duct and makes its way to the ureter then the bladder until we eliminate it.
Urine is excreted from the kidneys.
Water (e.g. a mixture of fluid) is excreted through the urine.Fluids are reabsorbed from the large intestines and then shuttled to the kidneys. The kidneys process fluids for excretion.
It is eventually excreted from the body through the urethra.(Not to be confused with the ureter, which brings the urine from the kidneys to the bladder.)
The ureters carry urine from the kidneys to the bladder, where it is then excreted from the bladder through the urethra.
urine
urine (urea, creatinine, bilirubin, and ammonia)
Urea is produced by the liver and is excreted by the kidneys as a part of urine.
as urine, produced by the kidneys
the body absorbs/uses the amount of vitamin it needs; the remainder is filtered through the kidneys & excreted in the urine.
urea
Most drugs are excreted in the kidneys or filtered through the liver. You can find drugs in your bloodstream and your urine. Sometimes it is excreted through the sweat.
Drugs with a molecular weight of less than 300 mg are typically excreted through the kidneys via urine. This process involves filtration of the drug from the bloodstream into the kidney tubules, followed by reabsorption or secretion. The drug may also be excreted through bile into the gastrointestinal tract, where it can be eliminated in feces.