well, the kidney cleans up your blood
Each day your kidneys process around 200 liters of blood. All of the blood must cycle through the kidneys.
All the blood passes through
Actually I believe that in the kidneys there are little compartments in the kidneys that the blood goes through and at some point the blood gets filtered and the blood falls through but the bad stuff gets captured because the things that the blood goes through is too small for the bad stuff to get through. Its like how a colander works.
1 Galon
When the blood goes to the Kidneys, you would feel a lot of pain. Normally, blood isn't supposed to enter the Kidneys.
Each day your kidneys process around 53 gallons of blood, with around a quarter to a half gallon of waste leaving the body as urine. No water in its pure form goes through the kidneys... only the amount of water that is in the blood.
Each day your kidneys process around 53 gallons of blood, with around a quarter to a half gallon of waste leaving the body as urine. No water in its pure form goes through the kidneys... only the amount of water that is in the blood.
The kidneys filter blood through structures called nephrons, which are the functional units of the kidney. Blood enters the nephrons through tiny blood vessels called glomeruli, where waste products and excess substances are filtered out into the urine. The filtered blood then leaves the nephron and is returned to circulation.
Each day your kidneys process around 100 gallons of blood, with around 50 gallon of waste leaving the body as pee. No water in its pure form goes through the kidneys... only the amount of water that is in the blood. You also get blood by pooping
yes, it does. it has to in order to clean it and make u urinate. At rest, about 1/5th of your cardiac output flow through your kidneys, thus on average all your blood is filtered every 5 minutes.
Blood enters the kidneys through the renal arteries. The blood pressure at the top of the nephron is relatively high compared to that in the renal veins, to aid diffusion of substances across the Bowman's capsule. But aside from the difference in pressure, there are also discrepancies in composition. Waste products such as urea and excess ions will not be found in the blood that leaves the kidneys; they would have been absorbed and transferred to the bladder as urine.
Blood removes wastes from the body through the kidneys, which filter waste products from the blood and eliminate them in the form of urine. Additionally, the liver also plays a role in removing toxins and waste products from the blood.