Your liver converts the nitrogenous waste into urea, which is then transported out of the body when you urinate.
urea
It removes body waste by the process of deamination.
Radioactive waste is nearly always a mixture but it is possible to be a pure substance.
excess amino acids in the liver break down in a process called deamination,this splits the amino acids into ammonia which is broken down into urea using carbon dioxide, and carbohydrates which is broken down into glycogen and stored in the liver.In other words urea is formed in the liver as a result of deamination.
liver
through urine
http://wiki.answers.com/Q/How_does_the_liver_help_to_get_rid_of_nitrogenous_waste"
The liver
Urea
Primarily the liver and the kidneys. If by waste you mean crap, them the large and small intestine, the rectum, and the anus.
nitrogen is not flexible at all nitrogen is not flexible at all
I think the answer your looking for is bile. The liver produces Bile from waste.
They will be removed by the excretory system.
this is a very hard question i don't even know we are learning this in 8th grade too
Blood urea nitrogen test (BUN). Urea is a by-product of protein metabolism. This waste product is formed in the liver, then filtered from the blood and excreted in the urine by the kidneys. The BUN test measures the amount of nitrogen.
Urea is a waste product. It is synthesized from waste ammonia by the liver as a way to remove nitrogen from the body without changing the pH of body fluids. It travels to the kidneys, where it assists with osmotic action, and is eventually expelled in urine.
liver
For humans, the waste substance is carbon dioxide.