The question implies that the urine is already formed prior to arrival at the kidneys. This assumption is inaccurate. Unrine is formed in the kidneys, by the kidneys, when blood is filtered to make a solution of urea, ions, glucose and water. The glucose, along with some of the water and ions, are reabsorbed into the bloodstream, leaving a solution of urea and excess water/ions. This is the urine that we excrete when we pay a visit to the loo.
No. The urine is not produced in the kidney. The kidney is a filter.
The ureter leads urine out of the kidney and into the bladder.
The renal pelvis is the reservoir in the kidney that collects the urine.
Presence of kidney stone may cause kidney pain and sticky urine.
Kidney produces urine and stool
Blood carries waste products to the kidney when it is filtered out forming urine.
kidney
ya i think kidney is the most important organ in our body which helps to produce the urine
If there is albumin in the urine, it is not because the kidney is producing it, but rather, because it is leaking into the urine from the blood.
Yes, a kidney infection can lead to the presence of blood in the urine.
The kidney pelvis is a funnel-shaped structure that collects urine from the kidney's calyces and funnels it into the ureter for transport to the bladder. It also contains the renal papilla, through which urine flows out of the kidney and into the ureter. The kidney pelvis helps maintain the flow and excretion of urine from the kidney.
No, but if it is it can show that there is kidney problems, such as kidney disease