The kidney.
Urobilinogen is colourless but may react with reagents to form a pink colour for lab analysis. Dr Pete Chamberlain
Formation of urine Human kidneys consist of three layers. These layers are, in order, the cortex on the outside of the organ, the medulla, and the pelvis. Blood flows into the medulla through the renal artery. In the medulla and cortex, the renal artery branches into increasingly smaller arteries. Each of these arteries ends in a blood filtration unit called a nephron. Two healthy kidneys contain a total of about 2 million nephrons, which filter about 190 litres of blood daily. A nephron consists of a network of tiny blood vessels, the glomerulus, surrounded by Bowman's capsule, a two-layer membrane that opens into a convoluted tubule. Pressure forces much of the blood plasma (fluid portion of the blood) through the glomerulus and into Bowman's capsule. The resulting tubular fluid, which contains water and dissolved chemicals, then passes into the convoluted tubule. The portion of the blood that remains in the glomerulus flows into small vessels called capillaries, which surround the convoluted tubule. As the tubular fluid flows through the tubule, substances needed by the body are absorbed by the cells of the tubule wall. These substances, which include amino acids, glucose, and about 99 per cent of the water, then rejoin the blood in the capillaries. The capillaries return the blood to the heart by way of the renal vein. Substances not absorbed in the tubule are wastes that the body cannot use. Other wastes are secreted into the tubular fluid by the tubular cells of the kidney. These various substances, which include ammonia, urea, uric acid, and excess water, make up urine. The urine passes from the convoluted tubules into larger collecting tubules and then into the pelvis layer of the kidney. A tube called the ureter carries urine from each kidney into the urinary bladder. Urine collects in the bladder until it passes out of the body through another tube, the urethra. Healthy kidneys produce from 1 to 2 litres of urine daily.
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several soldiers form a squad. several squads form a platoon. Several platoons form a company and several companies form a battalion.
why did the roman military form
kidney
the bladder
blader
The kidney.
Our urine form is the Liquid form. And it is boldily waste and chemicals.
Your kidneys filer your blood of nitrogenous wastes. These wastes are then moved to the bladder in the form of urine and expelled.
The body's urinary system has three major functions. It makes urine in the kidneys; stores urine in the bladder; and removes urine from the body through the urethra. The kidneys filter waste products and water from the blood to form urine. Anwsered by Savanah of Texas.
No. Both males and females have a bladder. It is located in your lower abdomen at the very bottom in front. It collects your bodies waste fluids in the form of urine.
Urine, if it is liquid waste, or feces if it is solid waste. but i don't actually think kidneys process the solid waste... hope this helped! ;D
through urine
They are stored in liquid form as urine and held in the urinary bladder until you "relieve" yourself by urinating.
The nephron is the part of the kidney that produces urine.