It removes body waste by the process of deamination.
Your liver converts the nitrogenous waste into urea, which is then transported out of the body when you urinate.
The body eliminates waste materials primarily through the excretory system, which includes the kidneys, liver, lungs, and intestines. The kidneys filter blood to remove toxins and excess substances, excreting them as urine. The liver processes and detoxifies chemicals, and waste is expelled through bile. Additionally, the lungs remove carbon dioxide during respiration, while the intestines eliminate solid waste through feces.
The circulatory system collects blood from different parts of the body and carries it to the kidneys, where waste products produced by cells are removed. The kidneys filter the blood to remove waste products, which are then excreted from the body in urine.
The body removes waste through the excretory system, which includes the kidneys, liver, lungs, and skin. The kidneys filter waste from the blood to produce urine, the liver processes waste products and toxins, the lungs eliminate carbon dioxide and other gases, and the skin removes waste through sweat.
The liver helps metabolize and eliminate waste from the body by breaking down toxins and filtering out harmful substances from the blood. The kidneys also play a crucial role in eliminating waste by filtering the blood to remove waste products and excess substances, which are then excreted as urine.
Yes.
Kidneys and the liver filter waste liquids from the body. If the body doesn't eliminate these from the blood stream thru urination then the body's blood supply will become toxic. If the kidneys and liver are not working or not working to a minimum proficiency than the body can not remove the waste and will die. With kidney failure, a mechanical solution exists in the form of an artificial kidney to remove the waste, it is called dialysis. Dialysis can be performed at home or at a medical site. An artificial liver does not exist and only a liver transplant must be preformed to save the body. Kidneys can also be transplanted!
Your kidneys remove one type of waste your liver removes a different type of waste. Your kidneys remove urea and anything else your body will never want to use again. Your kidneys remove dissolved items from your blood stream. Your liver removes wastes that can be re-digested and used again in the process of digestion. Your liver also removes unwanted solid material from your blood stream.
The liver organ.
Your liver.
Your liver converts the nitrogenous waste into urea, which is then transported out of the body when you urinate.
Your kidneys and liver
The liver disposes of waste and maintains the human body temperature of 98.7
The body eliminates waste materials primarily through the excretory system, which includes the kidneys, liver, lungs, and intestines. The kidneys filter blood to remove toxins and excess substances, excreting them as urine. The liver processes and detoxifies chemicals, and waste is expelled through bile. Additionally, the lungs remove carbon dioxide during respiration, while the intestines eliminate solid waste through feces.
Urea is a waste product. It is synthesized from waste ammonia by the liver as a way to remove nitrogen from the body without changing the pH of body fluids. It travels to the kidneys, where it assists with osmotic action, and is eventually expelled in urine.
No, that's what your spleen and liver are for.
The circulatory system collects blood from different parts of the body and carries it to the kidneys, where waste products produced by cells are removed. The kidneys filter the blood to remove waste products, which are then excreted from the body in urine.