The Urniary System Flashcards
(36 cards)
What is the urinary system composed of?
Two kidneys
Two ureters
One urinary bladder
One urethra
Describe the location of the kidneys
Located in the abdominal cavity between the peritoneum and the posterior abdominal wall which makes them retroperitoneal organs
The kidneys extend from vertebrae T12 to L3, the right kidney is slightly lower than the left due to the liver
Describe the external anatomy of the kidneys
Around 10-12cm and 5-7cm wide and 3cm thick
Near the centre of the concave border is a deep vertical feature called the renal hilum, through which the ureter emerges from the kidney along with blood vessels, lymphatic vessels and nerves
Complete diagram 1 of the urinary system on notability
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Describe the anatomy of the renal pelvis
Formed from the upper portion of the Ureter
Branches into cup like structures called major calyces and minor calyces
Each kidney has 2-3 major and 8-10 minor calyces
Major and minor calyces, blood vessels, nerves and adipose tissue are situated in a cavity inside the kidney called the renal sinus
Describe the anatomy of the renal medulla
Consists of 8-10 cone shaped areas called renal pyramids
The apex of each pyramid ends in renal papillae that opens into a minor calyx
Describe the anatomy of the renal cortex
Extends from the renal capsule to the bases of the renal pyramids and the spaces between them
The cortex is divided into two regions
The outer cortical region
The inner juxtamedullary region
The portion of renal cortex that extend between the Renal pyramids are called renal columns
What is a renal lobe
A renal lobe consists of a single renal pyramid, it’s overlying cortex and one half of each adjacent column
Describe the renal Parenchyma
The renal cortex and renal pyramids (medulla ) consistute the renal parenchyma (the functional portion) of the kidney
Within the renal parenchyma there are about one million microscopic structures called nephrons (the functional units of the kidney)
Describe the blood supply of the kidney
Kidneys receive 20-25%of the resting cardiac output via the right and left renal arteries
In adults, renal blood flow rough both kidneys is about 1200ml/min
Memorize blood flow chart on notability
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Describe the anatomy of the nephron
Each nephron consists of two part: Renal corpuscle (where blood plasma is filtered) Renal tubule (a passage for the filtered fluids)
Each renal corpuscle consists of the glomerulus, the glomerular (Bowman’s) capsule (a double walled epithelial cup) The renal tubules consist of; The proximal convoluted tubules Loop of Henle Distal convoluted tubules
The renal corpuscle and both convoluted tubules lie within the renal cortex, the loop of Henle extends into the renal medulla
What happens to the wate material in the distal convoluted tubules
The distal convoluted tubules of several nephrons empty into a single collecting duct.
Collecting tubules then unite to form a large papillary duct which go to the collecting ducts then to the renal pelvis and ureter
Describe the anatomy of the loop of Henle
The loop of henle connects the prox and distal convoluted tubules and consists of two parts
The descending limb of the loop of Henle dips into the renal medulla, it then makes a hairpin turn to the cortex as the ascending limb of the loop of Henle
What are cortical nephrons
About 80-85% of the nephrons are cortical nephrons meaning they have short loops of Henle that lie mainly in the cortex
The blood supply of the short loop of Henle is from the peritubular capillaries
What are juxtamedullary nephrons
About 15-20% of the nephrons are juxtamedullary nephrons which have long loops of Henle that lie mainly in the medulla
The blood supply of the long loop of Henle is from the vas’s recta
The long loops of Henle have a thin descending limb and a thick ascending limb
Describe the main renal physiology
Have a number of homeostatic functions including
Regulation of blood ionic composition including sodium ions (Na+), potassium ions (K+), calcium ions (Ca2+), chloride ions (Cl-) and phosphate ions (HPO42-).
Regulation of blood PH by excreting hydrogen ions (H+)and conserving bicarbonate ions (HCO3-)
Regulation of blood volume by conserving or excreting water
Regulation of blood pressure by excreting the enzyme renin
Maintenance of blood osmolarity by separately regulating loss of water and loss of solutes in the urine, the kidneys maintain a relatively constant blood osmolarity close to 300 milliosmoles per litre .
The kidneys also
Stimulate the production of red blood cells through the secretion of erythropoietin
Excrete waste and foreign substances in urine
What are the three processes that take place to form urine
Glomerular filtration
Tubular reabsorption
Tubular Secretion
Where does glomerular filtration take place and what is removed?
Takes place in through the semi-permeable walls of the glomerulus and glomerular capsule
Water and a large number of small molecules pass through.
Blood cells, plasma proteins and other large molecules are unable to filter through and remain in the capillaries
The filtrate is the glomerulus is very similar in composition to plasma with the exception plasma proteins
What are the three forces that glomerular filtration depends on?
Glomerular blood hydrostatic pressure (GBHP )
Capsular hydrostatic pressure (CHP)
Blood colloid osmotic pressure (BCOP)
What is GBHP an d what causes it
Glomerular blood hydrostatic pressure,
Caused by the pressure in the glomerular capillaries, generallythe GBHP is around 55mmHg
It promotes filtrating by forcing water and solutes in the blood plasma through the the filtration membrane
What is CHP and what causes it
Capsular hydrostatic pressure,
Caused by
The pressure exerted against the filtration membrane by fluid already in the capsular space and renal tube
CHP opposes the filtration and represents back pressure of about 15mmHg
What is BCOP and what causes it
Blood colloid osmotic pressure
Caused by
The presence of proteins in blood plasma
It too opposes filtration and is about 30mmHg
What is a healthy glomerular filtration rate in an adult?
Calculated by adding both kidneys filtrate volume together
Healthy GFR is about 125ml/min I.E 180L of dilute filtrate are formed each day by both kidneys
Most is absorbed with only 1-1.5 bing excreted as urine