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Urinary System

The urinary system, including the kidneys, ureters, bladder, urethra and sphincters, allows us to expel waste from our body. Ask questions about this vital system here.

2,844 Questions

Do the kidneys help maintain the bodys acid base balance by removing acess hydrogen ions?

Not entirely. In order to maintain acid-base homeostasis, acid production must balance the neutralization or excretion. The lungs and kidneys are the main regulators of acid-base homeostasis. The lungs release CO2, an end product of carbonic acid (H2CO3). The renal tubules, with the regulation of bicarbonate (HCO3-), excrete other acids produced from the metabolism of proteins, carbohydrates, and fats.

Renal compensation kicks in when the other mechanisms have been ineffective, generally after about 6 hours of sustained acidosis or alkalosis. While respiratory compensation occurs almost immediately, renal mechanisms can take hours to days to make a difference.

In acidosis the kidneys excrete H+ in urine and retain HCO3-. In alkalosis, the kidneys excrete bicarbonate and retain H+ in the form of organic acids, resulting in near-normalization of pH.2,3

Lastly, bone may also serve as a buffer because it contains a large reservoir of bicarbonate and phosphate and can buffer a significant acute acid load.

Why a person's urinary system can still function well even if one of them is removed?

we have 2 kidneys in our body if one of them is removed the other kidney left can function well.

Give all processes involved in urine formation?

THE FORMATION OF URINEFIGURATION, REABSORPTION, AND SECRETION

Every one of us depends on the process of urination for the removal of certain waste products in the body. The production of urine is vital to the health of the body. Most of us have probably never thought of urine as valuable, but we could not survive if we did not produce it and eliminate it. Urine is composed of water, certain electrolytes, and various waste products that are filtered out of the blood system. Remember, as the blood flows through the body, wastes resulting from the metabolism of foodstuffs in the body cells are deposited into the bloodstream, and this waste must be disposed of in some way. A major part of this "cleaning" of the blood takes place in the kidneys and, in particular, in the nephrons, where the blood is filtered to produce the urine. Both kidneys in the body carry out this essential blood cleansing function. Normally, about 20% of the total blood pumped by the heart each minute will enter the kidneys to undergo filtration. This is called the filtration fraction. The rest of the blood (about 80%) does not go through the filtering portion of the kidney, but flows through the rest of the body to service the various nutritional, respiratory, and other needs that are always present.

For the production of urine, the kidneys do not simply pick waste products out of the bloodstream and send them along for final disposal. The kidneys' 2 million or more nephrons (about a million in each kidney) form urine by three precisely regulated processes: filtration, reabsorption, and secretion.

FiltrationFigure 3. Urine formation takes place in the nephron.

Urine formation begins with the process of filtration, which goes on continually in the renal corpuscles (Figure 3). As blood courses through the glomeruli, much of its fluid, containing both useful chemicals and dissolved waste materials, soaks out of the blood through the membranes (by osmosis and diffusion) where it is filtered and then flows into the Bowman's capsule. This process is called glomerular filtration. The water, waste products, salt, glucose, and other chemicals that have been filtered out of the blood are known collectively as glomerular filtrate. The glomerular filtrate consists primarily of water, excess salts (primarily Na+ and K+), glucose, and a waste product of the body called urea. Urea is formed in the body to eliminate the very toxic ammonia products that are formed in the liver from amino acids. Since humans cannot excrete ammonia, it is converted to the less dangerous urea and then filtered out of the blood. Urea is the most abundant of the waste products that must be excreted by the kidneys. The total rate of glomerular filtration (glomerular filtration rate or GFR) for the whole body (i.e., for all of the nephrons in both kidneys) is normally about 125 ml per minute. That is, about 125 ml of water and dissolved substances are filtered out of the blood per minute. The following calculations may help you visualize how enormous this volume is. The GFR per hour is:125 ml/min X 60min/hr= 7500 ml/hr.

The GFR per day is:

7500 ml/hr X 24 hr/day = 180,000 ml/day or 180 liters/day.

Now, see if you can calculate how many gallons of waterwe are talking about. Here are some conversion factors for you to consider: 1 quart = 960 ml, 1 liter = 1000 ml, 4 quarts. = 1 gallon. Remember to cancel units and you will have no problem.

Now, what we have just calculated is the amount of waterthat is removed from the blood each day - about 180 liters per day. (Actually it also includes other chemicals, but the vast majority of this glomerular filtrate is water.) Imagine the size of a 2-liter bottle of soda pop. About 90 of those bottles equals 180 liters! Obviously no one ever excretes anywhere near 180 liters of urine per day! Why? Because almost all of the estimated 43 gallons of water (which is about the same as 180 liters - did you get the right answer?) that leaves the blood by glomerular filtration, the first process in urine formation, returns to the blood by the second process - reabsorption.

ReabsorptionReabsorption, by definition, is the movement of substances out of the renal tubules back into the blood capillaries located around the tubules (called the peritubular copillaries). Substances reabsorbed are water, glucose and other nutrients, and sodium (Na+) and other ions. Reabsorption begins in the proximal convoluted tubules and continues in the loop of Henle, distal convoluted tubules, and collecting tubules (Figure 3). Let's discuss for a moment the three main substances that are reabsorbed back into the bloodstream.

Large amounts of water - more than 178 liters per day - are reabsorbed back into the bloodstream from the proximal tubules because the physical forces acting on the water in these tubules actually push most of the water back into the blood capillaries. In other words, about 99% of the 180 liters of water that leave the blood each day by glomerular filtration returns to the blood from the proximal tubule through the process of passive reabsorption.

The nutrient glucose (blood sugar) is entirely reabsorbed back into the blood from the proximal tubules. In fact, it is actively transported out of the tubules and into the peritubular capillary blood. None of this valuable nutrient is wasted by being lost in the urine. However, even when the kidneys are operating at peak efficiency, the nephrons can reabsorb only so much sugar and water. Their limitations are dramatically illustrated in cases of diabetes mellitus, a disease which causes the amount of sugar in the blood to rise far above normal. As already mentioned, in ordinary cases all the glucose that seeps out through the glomeruli into the tubules is reabsorbed into the blood. But if too much is present, the tubules reach the limit of their ability to pass the sugar back into the bloodstream, and the tubules retain some of it. It is then carried along in the urine, often providing a doctor with her first clue that a patient has diabetes mellitus. The value of urine as a diagnostic aid has been known to the world of medicine since as far back as the time of Hippocrates. Since then, examination of the urine has become a regular procedure for physicians as well as scientists.

Sodium ions (Na+) and other ions are only partially reabsorbed from the renal tubules back into the blood. For the most part, however, sodium ions are actively transported back into blood from the tubular fluid. The amount of sodium reabsorbed varies from time to time; it depends largely on how much salt we take in from the foods that we eat. (As stated earlier, sodium is a major component of table salt, known chemically as sodium chloride.) As a person increases the amount of salt taken into the body, that person's kidneys decrease the amount of sodium reabsorption back into the blood. That is, more sodium is retained in the tubules. Therefore, the amount of salt excreted in the urine increases. The process works the other way as well. The less the salt intake, the greater the amount of sodium reabsorbed back into the blood, and the amount of salt excreted in the urine decreases.

SecretionNow, let's describe the third important process in the formation of urine. Secretion is the process by which substances move into the distal and collecting tubules from blood in the capillaries around these tubules (Figure 3). In this respect, secretion is reabsorption in reverse. Whereas reabsorption moves substances out of the tubules and into the blood, secretion moves substances out of the blood and into the tubules where they mix with the water and other wastes and are converted into urine. These substances are secreted through either an active transportmechanism or as a result of diffusion across the membrane. Substances secreted are hydrogen ions (H+), potassium ions (K+), ammonia (NH3), and certain drugs. Kidney tubule secretion plays a crucial role in maintaining the body's acid-base balance, another example of an important body function that the kidney participates in. SummaryIn summary, three processes occurring in successive portions of the nephron accomplish the function of urine formation:
  1. Filtration of water and dissolved substances out of the blood in the glomeruli and into Bowman's capsule;
  2. Reabsorption of water and dissolved substances out of the kidney tubules back into the blood (note that this process prevents substances needed by the body from being lost in the urine);
  3. Secretion of hydrogen ions (H+), potassium ions (K+), ammonia (NH3), and certain drugs out of the blood and into the kidney tubules, where they are eventually eliminated in the urine.

Is ok that it feels good to pee in your pants so you purpsly put a pad on and pee on it?

Well, it isn't hurting any one else, so it isn't actually bad. But it is definitely a bit weird, and think about how embarrassed you'd be if someone found out.

How much urine can you drink safely at a one time?

I think it would taste totally nasty. Pee is just like chyme, a mixture of acids, juices, and mashed up food(basically barf). So I wouldn't go drinking pee unless I was stranded and about to die!

It might put strain on your kidneys because urine is all of the unwanted product taken out of your body. If you drank it it would have no valuable nutrients and it would need to be filtered back out of the blood again. This would add on extra work for the kidneys, because that is what they do.

As a general answer: No. Unless a person has a urinary tract infection, urine, itself, is sterile, so it would be safe to drink. Please keep in mind that some infections, like chlamydia, are so mild that the person may not even know that they have it.

The other way to answer your question is to point out that in order for your kidneys to produce 400 ml (14 oz) of urine they have to filter 100 times more blood. That comes out to 40 liters, or about 10 gallons! I would not recommend drinking urine very often because it puts a strain on your kidneys.

Yeah it's sterile wont taste good though

Urine from a healthy person is sterile and harmless. It won't hurt your kidneys, but has little (if any) nutritional value. Be aware that certain medications (and illicit drugs like MDMA 'ecstasy') are passed in varying quantities in urine!

Why does it hurt when i wipe after i pee and sometimes end up bleeding?

Sounds like a urinary tract infection (UTI). Ask your doctor for a suitable remedy.

What can you take to decrease protein in your urine?

Protein in your urine is a sign of a medical condition, such as diabetes. The best thing you can do is see your doctor and follow his/her care plan. High protein level in urine is also associated with ailments such as gout. Do a Uric Acid test and most importantly control your diet. Avoid protein rich food especially sardines, spinach, etc. Consult your physician.

Why increasing the size of the afferent arteriole increase volume of filtrate and rate filtration?

It increases the volume of blood at filtration site , increases the filtration gradient, and increases time of contact of blood with filtration site.

Has anyone heard of a kidney stone moving backward further up the ureter rather than down into the bladder?

Can't say I have, but I have a Kidney Stone right now, and that's what I'm experiencing. It's lovely, to say the least.

What happens when Pelvicalyceal system is not dilated?

What happens when psychedelically system is not dilated

Why do babies pee in your face?

Notice, they usually laugh at the same time...

How can a girl pee outside?

When girls are really urgent, what they do is to find a deserted place, take off their pants, skirts, panties etc. etc. Then they pee behind a bush or something like that. Of course not on the side that is towards the road. Always bring toilet paper in the car. Good for emergencies.

There are also several "funnel" products available for women who would rather pee standing up. These include the P-Mate (disposable single-use cardboard), Whiz Freedom (reusable plastic), and Shenis (reusable plastic with a realistic penis shape).

If you could survive with one kidney then why do you need two?

you wouldn't be able to survive as long as you could have with two kidneys..

in other words two kidneys lengthen your life span..

What is the external opening of the urinary system?

The external opening is the urethra.

Not really. The urethra is the tube that leads from the bladder. The opening is called the urethral opening.

What does it mean when your urine smells strong and your period has not started?

Well, not having your period could mean that you're pregnant but you probably know that. Other signs of pregnany are: -your body excretes a whitish-fluid called Projestorone- otherwise known as "Pregnancy Fluid" -best is to go to the gynaecologist, pregnancy can be deteced in a urine sample

Do salts leave the body in urine?

Yes, but only partially; salts can be released also by transpiration.

Why is urine yellow Why is urine clear Which is better?

Urine is yellow due to the presence of a pigment called urobilin. When urine is dilute,its colour becomes light due to the abundance of water. Dark yellow urine shows that the urine is concentrated which is because of dehydration.

How does the kidney produce urine?

Your Kidneys and How They Work, see the link below