Title: PowerLecture: Chapter 12
1PowerLectureChapter 12
2Learning Objectives
- Explain how the chemical composition of
extracellular fluid is maintained by mammals. - Describe the components of the human urinary
system. - Understand the processes of urine formation and
excretion. - Explain the controls that maintain fluid balance
and blood pressure. - Explain why kidney disorders can be so damaging
to human health.
3Impacts/Issues
4Truth in a Test Tube
- Urine can be used to determine much about the
general health and habits of human beings. - Changes to the composition
- of urine can indicate
- metabolic problems,
- infection, or even pregnancy.
- Urine can also show the
- presence of illegal
- performance enhancing
- drugs in athletes.
5Truth in a Test Tube
- Urine is a useful indicator of health because
each day the kidneys filter all of the blood in
the body a total of 30 times, eliminating excess
water and harmful solutes.
6Useful References for Impacts/Issues
- The latest references for topics covered in this
section can be found at the book companion
website. Log in to the books e-resources page at
www.thomsonedu.com to access InfoTrac articles. - Science Daily Early Prostate Cancer Detected in
Molecular-Based Urine Test - InfoTrac NCAA Steps Up Steroid Tests
Organization Is Making a Far-Reaching Effort to
Ensure That College Athletes Stay Clean. Kansas
City Star, June 22, 2006.
7How Would You Vote?
- To conduct an instant in-class survey using a
classroom response system, access JoinIn Clicker
Content from the PowerLecture main menu. - Do you think employers should be allowed to
require a person to undergo urine testing before
being hired? - a. Yes, drug users are less safe and productive
employees. Employers have a right to screen them
out. - b. No, unless the job involves public safety, it
is a violation of an employee's privacy.
8Useful References for How Would You Vote?
- The latest references for topics covered in this
section can be found at the book companion
website. Log in to the books e-resources page at
www.thomsonedu.com to access InfoTrac articles. - InfoTrac Reasons to Consider Drug Testing.
Industrial Safety Hygiene News, April 2002. - InfoTrac Urine Or You're Out Drug Testing Is
Invasive, Insulting, and Generally Irrelevant to
Job Performance. Reason, Nov. 2002. - InfoTrac Street Smarts Just Say Yes. Inc., Nov.
1, 2004.
9Section 1
- The Challenge Shifts in Extracellular Fluid
10Shifts in Extracellular Fluid
- Extracellular fluid (ECF) is comprised of tissue
fluid, blood plasma, and other fluids such as
lymph that occurs outside of cells intracellular
fluid is the fluid inside cells. - There is a constant exchange of gases and other
materials between intracellular and extracellular
fluid. - The volume and composition of the ECF must remain
stable for these exchanges to occur. - The urinary system is responsible for maintaining
relatively stable conditions in the ECF.
11Shifts in Extracellular Fluid
- The body gains water from food and metabolic
processes. - Absorption of water from liquids and solid foods
occurs in the gastrointestinal tract. - Metabolism of nutrients yields water as a
by-product. - The body loses water in urine, sweat, feces, and
by evaporation. - Water leaves the body by
- excretion in urine, evaporation
- from the lungs and skin,
- sweating, and in feces.
12Shifts in Extracellular Fluid
- The body exerts the most control over urinary
excretion, the production of urine. - The least amount of water is lost in feces.
13Shifts in Extracellular Fluid
- Solutes enter extracellular fluid from food,
metabolism, and other ways. - Solutes enter the body when nutrients and mineral
ions are absorbed from the GI tract. - Living cells secrete substances into tissue fluid
and blood. - The respiratory system brings oxygen into the
- blood respiring cells add carbon dioxide.
14Fig. 12.1, p. 213
food, water intake
oxygen intake
elimination of carbon dioxide
DIGESTIVESYSTEM
RESPIRATORYSYSTEM
nutrients, water, salts
oxygen
carbon dioxide
CARDIOVASCULAR SYSTEM
URINARYSYSTEM
water, solutes
elimination of food residues
rapid transport to and from all living cells
elimination of excess water, salts, wastes
15Shifts in Extracellular Fluid
- Solutes leave the ECF by urinary excretion, in
sweat, and during breathing. - Respiratory exhalation rids the body of carbon
dioxide all other major wastes of metabolism
leave in urine. - Uric acid is formed in reactions that degrade
nucleic acids too much uric acid in the ECF
crystallizes in joints, causing gout. - Ammonia is formed when amino groups are removed
from amino acids it is turned into urea in the
liver and either reabsorbed or excreted. - Other products of protein degradation are also
excreted.
16Shifts in Extracellular Fluid
- The kidneys filter a variety of substances from
the blood, including nitrogen, sodium, potassium,
and calcium. - Sodium, potassium, and calcium are called
- electrolytes because a solution in which they
are - dissolved will carry an electric current.
- Only 1 of the water that enters the kidneys is
- excreted in urine most is returned to the
blood.
17Animation Water and Solute Balance
CLICKTO PLAY
18Useful References for Section 1
- The latest references for topics covered in this
section can be found at the book companion
website. Log in to the books e-resources page at
www.thomsonedu.com to access InfoTrac articles. - Medicinenet.com Electrolytes
- InfoTrac Gouty Arthritis A Primer on Late-Onset
Gout. Geriatrics, July 2005.
19Section 2
- The Urinary SystemBuilt for Filtering and Waste
Disposal
20The Urinary System Built for Filtering and
Waste Disposal
- Each kidney is a bean-shaped organ about the size
of a rolled up pair of socks. - A kidney has several internal lobes an outer
- cortex wraps around the central medulla.
- The whole kidney is wrapped in a coat of
connective tissue called the renal capsule. - The central cavity of the kidney is the renal
pelvis.
21Fig. 12.2c, p. 214
kidney cortex
kidney medulla
renal artery
renal vein
renal pelvis
renal capsule
ureter
22Animation Kidney Structure
CLICKTO PLAY
23The Urinary System Built for Filtering and
Waste Disposal
- Kidneys have several functions
- They produce erythropoietin, which stimulates
production of red blood cells. - They aid in calcium absorption from food.
- Kidneys make renin, an enzyme that helps regulate
blood pressure. - Their main function is to remove metabolic wastes
and maintain fluid balance. - The urinary system also consists of tubelike
ureters that carry urine to the urinary bladder
for storage until urination urine leaves the
bladder through the urethra.
24Animation Human Urinary System
CLICKTO PLAY
25Fig. 12.2ab, p. 214
heart
POSTERIOR
diaphragm
adrenal gland
kidney
abdominal aorta
inferior vena cava
ureter
ANTERIOR
urinary bladder
urethra
26Fig. 12.2b, p. 214
POSTERIOR
vertebral column
right kidney
left kidney
peritoneum
abdominal cavity
ANTERIOR
27The Urinary System Built for Filtering and
Waste Disposal
- Nephrons are the kidney filters.
- Each lobe of the kidney contains blood vessels
and over a million thin tubes called nephrons,
which filter water and solutes from the blood. - The wall of the nephron balloons around a cluster
of blood capillaries called the glomerulus the
balloon is called the Bowmans capsule the rest
of the nephron is a winding tubule. - Filtrate from the Bowmans capsule enters the
proximal tubule, passes through the loop of Henle
and into the distal tubule, and finally empties
into a collecting duct.
28The Urinary System Built for Filtering and
Waste Disposal
proximal tubule (orange)
distal tubule (brown)
Bowmans capsule (red)
- Some parts of the nephron allow absorption of
water and solutes, other parts do not.
KIDNEY CORTEX
KIDNEY MEDULLA
collecting duct (tan)
loop of Henle (yellow)
Figure 12.3a
29Animation Structure of the Nephron
CLICKTO PLAY
30The Urinary System Built for Filtering and
Waste Disposal
- Special vessels transport blood to, in, and away
from nephrons. - An afferent arteriole delivers blood to each
nephron where it enters the glomerulus for
filtration the glomerular capillaries are much
more permeable than other capillaries. - Glomerular capillaries merge to form an efferent
arteriole. - The efferent arteriole splits to form the
peritubular capillaries, which eventually carry
filtered blood into venules and out of the
kidneys.
31Fig. 12.3b, p. 215
efferent arteriole
afferent arteriole
glomerular capillaries inside Bowmans capsule
peritubular capillaries threading around tubular
nephron regions
32Useful References for Section 2
- The latest references for topics covered in this
section can be found at the book companion
website. Log in to the books e-resources page at
www.thomsonedu.com to access InfoTrac articles. - InfoTrac Renal Anatomy and Overview of Nephron
Function. Nephrology Nursing Journal, April 2003.
33Section 3
- How Urine Forms Filtration, Reabsorption, and
Secretion
34How Urine Forms Filtration, Reabsorption, and
Secretion
- Filtration removes a large amount of fluid and
solutes from the blood. - In filtration, blood pressure forces filtrate out
of the glomerular capillaries into the Bowmans
capsule, then into the proximal tubule. - Blood cells, proteins, and other large solutes
cannot pass into the capsule water, glucose,
sodium, and urea, however, are forced out of the
blood.
35How Urine Forms Filtration, Reabsorption, and
Secretion
- Next, reabsorption returns useful substances to
the blood. - Reabsorption takes place across the walls of the
proximal tubules. - Water, glucose, and salt diffuse through the
tubule wall active transport then moves glucose
and sodium ions into the tissue fluid. - Negatively charged ions follow the sodium into
the tissues water also follows. - Solutes are actively transported from the tissues
to the peritubular capillaries, water follows,
and reabsorption is complete.
36How Urine Forms Filtration, Reabsorption, and
Secretion
- Any solutes and water remaining in the tubules
become part of urine.
37How Urine Forms Filtration, Reabsorption, and
Secretion
- Secretion rids the body of excess hydrogen ions
and some other substances. - During secretion, urea, excess hydrogen ions, and
excess potassium ions are returned to the
nephrons to add to forming urine. - This process maintains the bodys acid-base
balance and also rids the body of drugs, uric
acid, hemoglobin breakdown products, and other
wastes.
38How Urine Forms Filtration, Reabsorption, and
Secretion
- Urination is a controllable reflex.
- The internal urethral sphincter (involuntary
control) regulates urine flow from the bladder
into the urethra during urination. - The external urethral sphincter (voluntary
control) opens to void urine from the body.
39Animation Urine Formation
CLICKTO PLAY
40Fig. 12.4, p. 216
a Filtration. Occurs at glomerular capillaries in
Bowmans capsule.
b Reabsorption. Occurs all along a
nephrons tubular parts.
distal tubule
proximal tubule
c Secretion. Starts at proximal tubule and
continues all along the nephron tubule.
CORTEX
peritubular capillaries
MEDULLA
loop of Henle
increasing solute concentration
d Urine is concentrated in loop of Henle and
collecting duct.
Urine flows from collecting duct into renal
pelvis.
loop of Henle
41Animation Reabsorption and Secretion
CLICKTO PLAY
42glomerular capillaries enclosed by Bowmans
capsule
efferent arteriole (to peritubular capillaries)
Bowmans capsule
filtrate to proximal tubule
afferent arteriole (from renal artery)
Fig. 12.5a, p. 217
43transport protein
Na glucose
Na, glucose
Cl
Cl
H2O
H2O
interior of tubule
wall of tubule
tissue fluid
peritubular capillary
Fig. 12.5b, p. 217
44H
H
K
K
urea
urea
interior of tubule
wall of tubule
tissue fluid
peritubular capillary
Fig. 12.5c, p. 217
45Useful References for Section 3
- The latest references for topics covered in this
section can be found at the book companion
website. Log in to the books e-resources page at
www.thomsonedu.com to access InfoTrac articles. - InfoTrac Renal Hemodynamics An Overview.
Nephrology Nursing Journal, Aug. 2003. - InfoTrac Glomerular Filtration An Overview.
Nephrology Nursing Journal, June 2003.
46Section 4
- How Kidneys Help Manage Fluid Balance and Blood
Pressure
47How Kidneys Help Manage Fluid Balance and Blood
Pressure
- The total volume of body fluids doesnt vary much
because the kidneys make adjustments to keep the
volume of extracellular fluid, and blood in
particular, in a normal range. - Water follows salt as urine forms.
48How Kidneys Help Manage Fluid Balance and Blood
Pressure
- The loop of Henle pulls more water and salts from
the filtrate to return it to the body. - The descending part of the loop sits in salty
tissue fluid water is drawn out of the tube to
be reabsorbed. - The salt concentration of the remaining fluid in
the loop rises until it matches the concentration
of the surrounding tissues. - In the ascending limb of the loop, water is
inhibited from passing through the wall of the
loop, but sodium is actively transported out of
the loop.
Figure 12.6
49Fig. 12.6, p. 218
Na
Cl
H2O
loop of Henle
kidney medulla saltiest near turn
50How Kidneys Help Manage Fluid Balance and Blood
Pressure
- Salt continues to be removed in the distal
tubule, but not water as salt leaves the
filtrate, salt gradients become steep, driving
reabsorption of solutes into the peritubular
capillaries. - Urea helps boost the gradient by diffusion out of
the collecting duct, taking water with it.
51How Kidneys Help Manage Fluid Balance and Blood
Pressure
- Hormones control whether kidneys make urine that
is concentrated or dilute. - Antidiuretic hormone (ADH) is secreted by the
brain in response to a decrease in extracellular
fluid ADH causes the distal tubules and
collecting ducts to become permeable to water,
which moves back into the blood capillaries.
52Fig. 12.7, p. 219
ADH targets
aldosterone target
KIDNEY CORTEX
KIDNEY MEDULLA
53e ResponseReceptors in brain detect the increase
in blood volume. Signals for ADH secretion stop.
a Stimulus Water loss reduces blood volume.
Sensors in the brain trigger release of ADH.
b ADH makes distal tubules, collecting ducts more
permeable to water.
c Kidneys reabsorb more water, so less water
leaves in urine.
d The blood volume rises.
Fig. 12.8, p. 219
54a Stimulus Water loss reduces blood volume.
Sensors in the brain trigger release of ADH.
e ResponseReceptors in brain detect the increase
in blood volume. Signals for ADH secretion stop.
b ADH makes distal tubules, collecting ducts more
permeable to water.
c Kidneys reabsorb more water, so less water
leaves in urine.
d The blood volume rises.
Stepped Art
Fig. 12.8, p. 219
55How Kidneys Help Manage Fluid Balance and Blood
Pressure
- Decreases in the volume of extracellular fluid is
sensed by cells in the efferent arterioles these
cells, part of the juxtaglomerular apparatus,
release renin. - Renin stimulates production of angiotensin I,
which is converted to angiotensin II. - Angiotensin II stimulates the adrenal cortex of
the kidney to make aldosterone, which causes
cells of the distal tubules and collecting ducts
to increase reabsorption of salts. - Caffeine and alcohol are diuretics, substances
that promote loss of water.
56Fig. 12.9, p. 219
57Fig. 12.9a, p. 219
(efferent arteriole leaving the glomerus)
renin-secreting cells in juxtaglomerular
apparatus
distal tubule
Bowmans capsule
proximal tubule
(afferent arteriole leading into glomerus)
58Fig. 12.9b, p. 219
Receptors in kidneys, elsewhere detect
falling sodium level
Renin released from cells in the JGA
Angiotensinogen converts to angiotensin I
Angiotensin II
Aldosterone secreted (from adrenal glands)
Aldosterone acts on distal tubules
Sodium (and water) reabsorbed
59How Kidneys Help Manage Fluid Balance and Blood
Pressure
- A thirst center monitors sodium.
- When solute concentration in the extracellular
fluid rises, the amount of saliva produced by the
salivary glands drops a dry mouth stimulates the
thirst center of the brain. - Stimulation of the thirst center and release of
ADH cause liquid-seeking behavior.
60Useful References for Section 4
- The latest references for topics covered in this
section can be found at the book companion
website. Log in to the books e-resources page at
www.thomsonedu.com to access InfoTrac articles. - InfoTrac Urinary Concentration and Dilution.
Nephrology Nursing Journal, MayJune 2004.
61Section 5
- Removing Excess Acids and Other Substances in
Urine
62Removing Excess Acids and Other Substances in
Urine
- The bodys acid-base balance, the relative
amounts of acidic and basic substances in
extracellular fluid, is maintained in part by the
kidneys. - Kidneys maintain acid-base balance by controlling
the levels of bicarbonate in the blood.
63Removing Excess Acids and Other Substances in
Urine
- When the blood is too acid, water and carbon
dioxide combine in cells in the wall of the
nephron tubules to give rise to bicarbonate and
H. - The bicarbonate enters the peritubular
capillaries and from there it enters the blood to
neutralize acid. - The H in the tubules enters the filtrate to
combine with phosphate, ammonia, or bicarbonate
to be excreted. - When the blood is too alkaline, less bicarbonate
is reabsorbed into the blood.
64peritubular capillary
cells of tubule wall
tubule interior
H2O
CO2
enzyme action
(carbonic acid)
H2CO3
tissue fluid
HCO 3
H
H ammonia
bicarbonate enters bloodstream
H phosphate
excreted in urine
Fig. 12.10, p. 220
65Removing Excess Acids and Other Substances in
Urine
- Many other substances end up in urine once
filtered from the blood traces of drugs excess
glucose, which is a sign of diabetes pus, a sign
of infection and even blood, a sign of
infection, cancer, or injury.
66Useful References for Section 5
- The latest references for topics covered in this
section can be found at the book companion
website. Log in to the books e-resources page at
www.thomsonedu.com to access InfoTrac articles. - InfoTrac Urine Albumin Considered Independent
Marker for Kidney, Cardiovascular Disease. Heart
Disease Weekly, July 4, 2004.
67Section 6
68Kidney Disorders
- Kidney stones are deposits of uric acid, calcium
salts, and other substances that have settled out
of urine and collected in the renal pelvis. - Small stones can pass out during urination, but
larger stones can inhibit urination. - Lithotripsy uses sound waves to fragment the
stones so they can pass out in the urine.
69Kidney Disorders
- Inflammation of the bladder (cystitis) or kidneys
(pyelonephritis) is the result of infections to
the urinary tract nephritis is general
inflammation of the kidneys and can be severe
enough to limit function. - Polycystic kidney disease is an inherited
disorder in which cysts form in the kidneys and
gradually destroy normal tissue. - Glomerulonephritis describes a variety of
disorders that disrupt the flow of blood through
the glomeruli of the kidneys.
70Kidney Disorders
- Dialysis refers to the exchange of substances
across a membrane between solutions of differing
compositions in hemodialysis, a machine is
connected to an artery or vein, blood enters the
tubes of the machine, and - materials are removed
- from the blood before
- it is returned to the body.
Figure 12.11
71Animation Kidney Dialysis
CLICKTO PLAY
72Useful References for Section 6
- The latest references for topics covered in this
section can be found at the book companion
website. Log in to the books e-resources page at
www.thomsonedu.com to access InfoTrac articles. - National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and
Kidney Disease National Kidney and Urologic
Diseases Information Clearinghouse - InfoTrac Filter Fault Is Kidney Failure. The
Economic Times, April 24, 2006. - InfoTrac Battle Well Fought Miami Herald, July
13, 2006.
73Video Buffer System
CLICKTO PLAY
74Video Reabsorption and Secretion
CLICKTO PLAY