Flow; also circulation, as in the Circulatory System.
Filtration is the movement of materials from the blood to the tubular fluid in the kidneys.
The movement of blood carrying food and oxygen to the cells is called circulation. This process involves blood being pumped by the heart through blood vessels to reach all parts of the body, delivering nutrients and oxygen while removing waste products.
Active transport of substances from the blood into the nephron is called tubular secretion. This process involves the movement of certain substances, such as drugs and ions, from the blood into the renal tubules for excretion in the urine. It helps in regulating the composition of body fluids and maintaining homeostasis.
blood flow is called circulation
Blood cells are called erythrocytes (red blood cells), leukocytes (white blood cells), and thrombocytes (platelets). Nerve cells are called neurons.
The movement of blood is called circulation.
Filtration is the movement of materials from the blood to the tubular fluid in the kidneys.
The movement of blood carrying food and oxygen to the cells is called circulation. This process involves blood being pumped by the heart through blood vessels to reach all parts of the body, delivering nutrients and oxygen while removing waste products.
circulation
diastole
The movement of the WBC through a capillary is called diapedesis. In very general terms it is also called extravasation
This is called absorption.
SecretionSecretion is the process by which substances move into the distal and collecting tubules from blood in the capillaries around these tubules.
leukocyte
The vessels that pump blood round your body are called: veins, arteries and capilaries.
The forceful movement of waste substances from the blood into the kidney tubules is primarily due to a process called filtration. This occurs in the glomeruli of the kidneys, where blood pressure drives the movement of water, ions, and small molecules from the blood into the Bowman’s capsule, forming the filtrate. This process is crucial for the removal of waste products and the regulation of body fluids and electrolytes.
Both Glucose and Carbon Dioxide don't pass through the red blood cells but stay in the yellow watery part of the blood called plasma