nitrogenous waist is carried through the blood. the waist passes into the nephrons (kidney cells)
inside the nephrons the blood passes through "the loop of henly" in which the waist is pulled out of the blood and send to the bladder to be concentrated as urea
by: micah cuticutey
The metabolic waste products of the body are carried to the kidneys by the blood.
waste from bloodkidneyThe kidney filters waste from the blood.
Urine is waste from the blood that the kidneys filter from the body. Kidneys in the body of a frog function in the excretion of urine.
The Kidneys
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.
The nephrons filter blood through the body and get rid of the waste which exits the body. The liver also filters blood other than the kidney.
Kidneys
The kidneys filter waste products from the blood. Blood flows into the kidneys through the renal arteries and waste products are removed through a series of filtration processes. The waste is then excreted in the form of urine.
the kidneys
The dirty blood in our body is filtered by the kidneys. The kidneys remove waste products, excess minerals, and toxins from the blood to produce urine.
The waste leave the kidney through the nephrons, which separate waste materials, while waste in blood from capillaries, and the wastes all together through a collecting duct. Collecting ducts join together join into the ureter and the ureter leads the waste out of the kidneys, which veins carry the cleansed blood out of the kidney.
The waste products that are extracted from the blood by the kidneys include urea, creatinine, and excess salts and water. These waste products are filtered out by the kidneys and excreted from the body in the form of urine.