kidney, ureter, bladder, urethra
Oxygen enters your nose,then goes through the trachea,to the bronchi,and last to your lungs.
the reaction increased in order The system has become more random
Be a little more specific.In general: You breath in oxygen through your nose, into your lungs. It is carried from you lungs into the blood system and is carried be bonding to Iron in hemoglobin. It goes throughout the body because the heart pumps the blood through the circulatory system. Cells absorb Oxygen in order to perform aerobic reparation in the mitochondria. Carbon dioxide is a by-product of the production of ATP in aerobic respiration. At the end of ATP synthase Oxygen combines with hydrogen and forms water.
The Periodic Table. The table has Groups and Period. in order to classify elements.
That depends on how you define "level of entropy". Usually the term refers to the degree of randomness in a system. If the system is defined as a deck of cards, then the level of entropy will depend on how randomized the cards are. A standard deck comes with the cards in a pre-set order for which the entropy would be considered zero (perfect order). Any deviation from that initial order would then increase the level of entropy; it is thus necessary to not only state what the system is (a deck of cards) but to also state the condition of the system (how well shuffled the cards are) before you can determine the level of entropy of the system.
The Urinary System is defined as such, "The bodily system consisting of the organs that produce, collect, and eliminate urine and including the kidneys, ureters, urinary." The Digestive System is defined as such, " The group of organs that break down food and absorb the nutrients used by the body for fuel. The organs in the digestive system, in the order in which food travels through them, are: Mouth, Esophagus, Stomach, Small Intestine, Large Intestine, Rectum, and finally, Anus."
Filtration into the bowmans capsule, through the proximal convolutes tubule, through the loop of henle, through the distal convoluted tubule, into the collecting duct, into the ureter which carries it to the urinary bladder. From the bladder is exits the body through the urethra.
No order. It flows in all of the parts at the same time.
The Urinary System is defined as such, "The bodily system consisting of the organs that produce, collect, and eliminate urine and including the kidneys, ureters, urinary." The Digestive System is defined as such, " The group of organs that break down food and absorb the nutrients used by the body for fuel. The organs in the digestive system, in the order in which food travels through them, are: Mouth, Esophagus, Stomach, Small Intestine, Large Intestine, Rectum, and finally, Anus."
The primary waste removal system is the urinary system.
toward the ocean
An organ system is the name of a group of organs that work together in order to perform biological functions. There are ten major organ systems: the circulatory system, the cardiovascular system, the lymphatic system, the digestive system, the endocrine system, the integumentary system, the muscular system, the respiratory system, the skeletal system, and the urinary/excretory system.
cardiovascular
The coolant pump draws coolant from the radiator and circulates the coolant through coolant jackets in the engine cylinder block and the cylinder heads. The coolant is then directed back to the radiator. The system directs some coolant through hoses to the heater core in order to provide for defrost and passenger compartment heat. A surge tank connects to the cooling system. Pressurized coolant continuously flows through the surge tank and the process repeats
Energy is often released in the form of hydrogen ions moving down an electrochemical gradient, such in chloroplasts or mitochondria.
To answer the question is somewhat difficult being that these two illnesses are completely different. One is a urinary tract infection which is caused by a bacteria getting into the urinary system and has nothing to do with an STD (sexually transmitted disease). So to answer your question I will offer three different answers. 1) No, urinary tract infections are not contagious and are very common in women. 2) No, a urinary tract infection can not cause an STD. 3) One must have an STD in order to give another an STD; which again has nothing to do with a urinary tract infection. Anyone can get a urinary tract infection and it has nothing to do with intercourse; even animals can get these infections. Hope this helps and take care, Jupiter's Dawn
Actually Phenazopyridine is a local analgesic that can be used in order to ease pain caused by for example urinary tract infections or surgery related to the urinary tract.