No. Waste is filtered out of the blood by the kidneys. The liquid waste is then sent to the bladder to be emptied through the urethra.
renal pelvis
The human excretory system, primarily the kidneys, filter waste products from the blood through tiny filters called nephrons. These waste products are then stored in the bladder as urine. When the bladder is full, urine is eliminated from the body through the urethra during urination.
The urethra.
it connects the kidney to the bladder which connects to the digestive system!
The articular capsue containing synovial fluid inside.
Kidney --> Ureter --> Urinary Blatter --> Urethra
The human bladder is roughly the size and shape of a pear when empty, measuring approximately 12 centimeters in length and 6 centimeters in diameter. When full, it can expand to hold around 400-600 milliliters of urine before signaling the need to urinate.
To remove water and salt from blood
Renal calculosis is one of many names for the condition or formation of kidney stones or renal calculi. Nephrolithiasis refers to the condition of having kidney stones or renal calculi. Urolithiasis refers to the condition of having calculi in the urinary tract (which also includes the kidneys), which may form or pass into the urinary bladder. Ureterolithiasis is the condition of having a calculus in the ureter, the tube connecting the kidneys and the bladder. The term bladder stones usually applies to urolithiasis of the bladder in non-human animals such as dogs and cats.
water swallowed => esophagus => duodenum => small intestine => intracellular space => heart => renal artery => kidney => ureter => urinary bladder => urethra => urine.
well it starts when u try to hold it then u dont havft to go it stores it
The organs of the urinary system include the kidneys, ureters, bladder, and urethra. The kidneys filter waste and excess substances from the blood to produce urine. The ureters transport urine from the kidneys to the bladder, where it is stored until it is expelled through the urethra during urination.