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Kidneys filter nitrogenous waste from the blood.
Yes, nitrogenous waste, such as urea, is removed from the blood by filtration in the kidneys. As blood passes through the kidneys, waste products are filtered out into the urine, which is then excreted from the body.
Examples of nitrogenous waste include ammonia, urea, and uric acid. These waste products are produced as byproducts of protein metabolism in animals and must be excreted from the body to prevent toxicity. Different organisms have evolved different strategies for eliminating nitrogenous waste, depending on factors like habitat and physiology.
The main nitrogenous waste in human blood is urea, which is produced from the breakdown of proteins and amino acids. Urea is primarily removed from the blood by the kidneys through a process called filtration in the nephrons, where it is excreted in urine. The kidneys filter the blood, reabsorbing necessary substances and allowing urea to be eliminated from the body, thereby maintaining nitrogen balance.
Urea is the nitrogenous waste product filtered from the blood and excreted in the form of urine.
Urea is the main nitrogenous waste in urine. It is an organic compound that is essential for metabolism in humans because it allows the kidneys to produce hyperosmotic urine.
The kidneys remove nitrogenous waste from the blood and produce urine to remove the waste.
Urine contains nitrogenous wastes.
Azotemia or uremia means high blood levels of nitrogenous waste.
nitrogenous waste
There isn't a difference in fetal elimination of nitrogenous wastes between a pig and a human. Both send the waste back to the mother through the umbilical cord where the mother excretes the waste.
Urea
uric acid
Mollusks have a unique way of excreting nitrogenous waste. It is processed in the excretory organ and released into the water.
Hi, The three nitrogenous waste products (secreted in the urine) are Urea, Uric Acid and Creatinine... ...
Grasshoppers eliminate their nitrogenous waste through the malipighian tubules that are on the digestive tract. Earthworms eliminate their nitrogenous waste by the nephridia.
Kidneys filter nitrogenous waste from the blood.