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Biology


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Kyla Encalada


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What metabolic waste is not removed during excretion?
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blood

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Explain how and why large amounts of dilute urine is produced
1. hypothalamus detects solute concentration in blood 2. If too low, sends a message to the pituitary glans to secrete less ADH 3. ADH travels in blood to kidneys 4. Less ADH makes distal convoluted tubules and collecting ducts less permeable to water (less water reabsorbed from filtrate) 5. Large amounts of dilute urine produced
Examples of waste product of organisms are?
Ammonia, urea, uric acid nitrogenous waste
What is the function of secretion?
To actively transport materials from the blood to the kidneys
Filtration occurs by:
Passive transport
Molecules included in filtration:
Glucose, Amino acids, Salts, vitamins,
What is the four steps that a nephron uses to carry out its function?
Filtration, Reabsorption, Secretion, Excretion
What is a function of transport epithelia?
In osmoregulation, it is the cause of the movement of solutes
Effect of Carbon dioxide build up
PH of blood and tissue fluid lowers which affects the rate at which chemical reaction occur within the cell
Why is homeostasis important?
Because cells need a constant environment to function efficiently
Effect of too much water
Body cells malfunction
Effect of high temperature
Denatures proteins and enzymes
Effect of Low temperature
Chemical reaction are too slow
Waste products that can damage and kill cells:
Carbon Dioxide, Nitrogenous Waste, low temperature, high temperature, too much water
Examples of homeostasis
Excretion and osmoregulation
Tissue fluids must:
1. be within a small range of pH (acidity) 2. contain enough glucose for respiration and activity 3. contain enough oxygen for respiration 4. be specific for body cells to function normally 5. be within small temperature range 6. not contain high levels of carbon dioxide and nitrogenous waste
How do you fix high levels of glucose?
1. pancreas detects high concentration of glucose 2. Secretes insulin into the blood stream 3. the insulin binds to receptors on certain cells which takes in some of the glucose floating around in our blood
How do you fix low levels of glucose?
1. pancreas detects low concentration of glucose 2. Secretes glucagon into the blood stream 3. Liver cells break it down into glucose and release it back into the blood stream
State the function of glucagon
Increases blood glucose
State the function of insulin
Tells receptors on certain cells to take in some of the glucose floating around in our blood
What is vasoconstriction?
Keeping the blood away from the surface of the skin
What is vasodilation?
Blood vessels near the surface of your skin allows blood to flow through them
What does the hypothalamus do?
Measures temperature of the blood flowing through it, collects information from temperature sensors around the body, and decides if it is too hot or too cold
What does the hypothalamus do if you are too hot?
It sends signals to the body via the nervous system sends a signal to your sweat glands to secrete sweat
What is the relationship between high blood pressure and kidney failure?
HBP can cause arteries around the kidneys to narrow/weaken/harden damaged arteries might not be able to deliver enough blood to the kidney
What is the relationship between heart disease and kidney failure?
When the heart is no longer pumping blood efficiently it become congested with blood causing pressure to build up in the main vein connected to the kidneys and leading to congestion in the kidneys too
What is the relationship between diabetes and kidney disease?
Overtime levels of sugar in the blood damages the filtering units within each kidney
What is a graft?
Healthy transplanted kidney
How does kidney dialysis work?
Tube is surrounded by dialysis fluid that has the same concentration of normal blood Any excess substance in the blood (urea, salts) will diffuse out Dialysis fluid leaving the machine will be rich in salts and body wastes like urea
What are components of dialysis fluid?
Purified water electrolytes glucose
What is kidney dialysis?
The process that removes excess water, solutes and toxins from the blood from people whose kidneys cannot function normally
Factors that contribute to Kidney failure
1. diabetes 2. heart disease 3. High blood pressure
3 Symptoms of kidney failure
Poor appetite, decreased urine output, tired, trouble sleeping, fluid retention (swelling in ankles/feet/legs), shortness of breath, fatigue, irregular heartbeat
Define kidney failure
Occurs when your body looses the ability to sufficiently filter waste from your blood
Why should dialysis fluid and blood be close to/ the same concentration ?
So there is no net movement of glucose out of the blood by diffusion.
What is the glomerulus, where is it found?
Mass of capillaries, filters the blood during urine formation, enclosed by Bowman's capsule
What are nephrons, where are they found?
Nephrons are tiny structures that spans the cortex and medulla they are at the end of collecting ducts so urine flows through the ducts then into the pelvis.
Function of the pelvis
Collects urine from the collecting ducts
What is the medulla made up of?
Loops of Henle, collecting ducts that open into the pelvis
What is the cortex made up of?
Bowman's capsule, glomerulus, convoluted tubules of all nephrons
A weak bladder means...
That the sphincter muscles are weak and bladder does not hold as much urine
Function of the sphincter muscles
Control release of urine from the bladder by contracting walls of the bladder
What occurs after blood is cleansed in the kidney to when it reaches the bladder?
Cleansed blood returns to the heart via renal vein. Nitrogenous waste flow down the ureter as urine to the bladder to be stored
What is the function of the renal artery in the excretory system?
Brings blood and nitrogenous waste products to the kidneys to be cleansed
What are the components of urine?
Mineral salts and urea dissolved in water