Urine always contains urea because it is a primary waste product formed from the breakdown of proteins and amino acids in the liver through a process called deamination. Urea is less toxic than ammonia, allowing the body to safely excrete excess nitrogen. The kidneys filter urea from the blood and concentrate it in urine for excretion, making it a consistent component of urine production.
Yes, urine contains urea nitrogen and uric acid.
a protein-rich diet will result in more urea being present in ur urine.
Urine is a mixture contained of fluids throughout your intestines and functioning bladder. these are water, keratin, urea, positive hydrogen...
yes it contain urea and many more impurities so it is a compound
No, it is not urine. However, both sweat and urine contain many of the same elements, including water and urea.
No they do not. Humans does not contain ammonia in urine.
Urea is a byproduct of urine. All animals produce urea in their urine, not just cows.
The concentration of urea is high in urine because urea is a waste product produced by the liver when it breaks down proteins. The kidneys then filter urea from the blood and excrete it in urine to maintain the body's nitrogen balance.
Urea is the chemical made from ammonia that is excreted in the urine. Our body converts ammonia, a waste product of protein metabolism, into urea in the liver. Urea is then filtered by the kidneys and excreted in the urine.
Urine is made up of urea, chloride, sodium, potassium, creatinine and other dissolved ions, inorganic and organic compounds.
To calculate the grams of urea in 50 ml of urine where 1.8% is urea, first convert the ml to grams using the density of urine (about 1 g/ml). Then, multiply the volume of urine in grams by the percentage of urea (0.018) to find the grams of urea present in 50 ml of urine.
Urea is one of the substances in urine, and urine is in your blood stream until the kidney extract the urine from your blood.