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It is not recommended to dissolve these salts; they are elements for the clinical analysis.
Actually, phosphoric acid is concentrated hourse urine
Neurohypophyseal secretion of antidiuretic hormone or ADH stimulates the formation of concentrated urine. This hormone is also known as argipressin.
Urea Other than Urea, urine is comprised of water and salts.
Urine is composed of water, urea, and excess mineral salts.
They are attracted to the urine. The salts in the urine are utilized by bees so this is why they drink it at times.
Nephrons. This includes the glomerulus where the blood stream encounters a connective tissue filter, the loop of Henle where the filtrate is concentrated and salts are exchanged and the collecting duct into which urine is collected.
The color of urine is determined on how concentrated the urine is. It's from all of the toxins being excreted. In the morning it's a fasting urine and you haven't drank fluids all night. So it's concentrated and dark yellow. During the day, you drink and dilute the urine so there more water in the urine, less concentrated and lighter in color
Someone with highly concentrated urine may be dehydrated, and fluids may help.
The kidney performs this function and it is thus:when the blood is more concentrated as in sugar,salts and so on we say the blood is hypertonic to the cells and this could shrink the cell but the kidney filter this salts from the blood and reabsorbs more water and a more concentrated urine is produced by anti dieretic hormone,but also sometimes the blood is hypotonic in terms of salts and so on in this case the kidney reabsorbs less water and restores some vital salts..so osmotic pressure is regulated.
Concentrated Urine.
It depends. If the body is dehydrated, it will produce highly concentrated (hypertonic) urine in order to conserve water from the blood stream. If your blood is hypotonic (contains excess water), then the kidneys will release hypotonic urine, to reduce the amount of water in the blood. Therefore, if you are dehydrated, the urine is considered hypertonic to the blood. If not, the urine is hypotonic to the blood.
If you think too much bile salts appear in the urine, if you're an a s s h o l e, then probably no bile salts will be there
It is not recommended to dissolve these salts; they are elements for the clinical analysis.
urine is a solution of salts (mostly sodium), urea, and water.
to remove salts in the blood
It is urine's specific gravity that measures the kidney's ability to concentrate or dilute urine in relation to plasma.