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If sodium reabsorption increases, water reabsorption increases as well.
When the renal capsule is removed from a kidney, the outer layer known as the cortex becomes clearly visible. The cortex is the region of the kidney that contains the renal corpuscles and the convoluted tubules where filtration and reabsorption occur in the process of urine formation.
Reabsorption via a process called "secretion".
The urinary bladder stores liquid waste, as urine, from the kidneys.
the reabsorption of water from pct,alh in nephron which is not influenced by adh.
why reabsorption of certain materials in the kidneys is important for the health
aldosterone
filtration, reabsorption and secretion
Reabsorption
Kidney and Colon
Filtration, Reabsorption, and Secretion
it can help by increasing reabsorption of water by the kidney. With the reabsorption, blood plasma volume increases, thus raising blood pressure
The reabsorption of glucose occurs primarily through the walls of the proximal convoluted tubule. It is found in the nephrons of the kidney.
increases Ca++ (but not phosphate) reabsorption from the glomerular filtrate of kidney nephrons
The reabsorption of water from the kidney tubules back into the blood depends on osmosis.
Urine formation in the kidney
This question is asking about a general phenomenon seen in the kidney: tubular reabsorption. The kidney tubules reabsorb lots of things, so you'd have to be specific in order to get a correct response. If you're asking whether, say, increasing tubular reabsorption of sodium would decrease urine output, the answer is yes assuming normal physiology.