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Urinary System Information

7. Adrenal gland Vessels: 8. Renal artery and vein, 9. Inferior vena cava, 10. Abdominal aorta, 11. Common iliac artery and vein With transparency: 12. Liver, 13. Large intestine, 14. Pelvis

Latin systema urinarium

The urinary system (also called the excretory system) is the organ system that produces, stores, and eliminates urine. In humans it includes two kidneys, two ureters, the bladder, the urethra, and two sphincter muscles.

Contents

Physiology of urinary system

Kidney

Main article: Kidney

The kidneys are bean-shaped organs that lie in the abdomen, retroperitoneal to the organs of digestion, around or just below the ribcage and close to the lumbar spine. The organ is about the size of a human fist and is surrounded by what is called Peri-nephric fat, and situated on the superior pole of each kidney is an adrenal gland. The kidneys receive their blood supply of 1.25 L/min (25% of the cardiac output) from the renal arteries which are fed by the abdominal aorta. This is important because the kidneys' main role is to filter water soluble waste products from the blood. The other attachment of the kidneys are at their functional endpoints the ureters, which lies more medial and runs down to the trigone of urinary bladder.

The kidneys perform a number of tasks, such as: concentrating urine, regulating electrolytes, and maintaining acid-base homeostasis. The kidney excretes and re-absorbs electrolytes (e.g. sodium, potassium and calcium) under the influence of local and systemic hormones. pH balance is regulated by the excretion of bound acids and ammonium ions. In addition, they remove urea, a nitrogenous waste product from the metabolism of amino acids. The end point is a hyperosmolar solution carrying waste for storage in the bladder prior to urination.

Humans produce about 2.9 litres of urine over 24 hours, although this amount may vary according to circumstances. Because the rate of filtration at the kidney is proportional to the glomerular filtration rate, which is in turn related to the blood flow through the kidney, changes in body fluid status can affect kidney function. Hormones exogenous and endogenous to the kidney alter the amount of blood flowing through the glomerulus. Some medications interfere directly or indirectly with urine production. Diuretics achieve this by altering the amount of absorbed or excreted electrolytes or osmalites, which causes a diuresis.

See also

References

· · Human systems and organs
TA 2–4: MS
Skeletal system Bone (Carpus · Collar bone (clavicle) · Thigh bone (femur) · Fibula · Humerus · Mandible · Metacarpus · Metatarsus · Ossicles · Patella · Phalanges · Radius · Skull (cranium) · Tarsus · Tibia · Ulna · Rib · Vertebra · Pelvis · Sternum) · Cartilage
Joints Fibrous joint · Cartilaginous joint · Synovial joint
Muscular system Muscle · Tendon · Diaphragm
TA 5–11: splanchnic/ viscus
mostly Thoracic
Respiratory system URT (Nose, Nasopharynx, Larynx) · LRT (Trachea, Bronchus, Lung)
mostly Abdominopelvic
Digestive system+ adnexa Mouth (Salivary gland, Tongue) · upper GI (Oropharynx, Laryngopharynx, Esophagus, Stomach) · lower GI (Small intestine, Appendix, Colon, Rectum, Anus) · accessory (Liver, Biliary tract, Pancreas)
GU: Urinary system Kidney · Ureter · Bladder · Urethra
GU: Reproductive system Female (Uterus, Vulva, Ovary, Placenta) · Male (Scrotum, Penis, Prostate, Testicle, Seminal vesicle)
Endocrine system Pituitary · Pineal · Thyroid · Parathyroid · Adrenal · Islets of Langerhans
TA 12–16
Circulatory system
Cardiovascular system peripheral (Artery, Vein, Lymphatic vessel) · Heart
Lymphatic system primary (Bone marrow, Thymus) · secondary (Spleen, Lymph node)
Nervous system (Brain, Spinal cord, Nerve) · Sensory system (Ear, Eye)
Integumentary system Skin · Subcutaneous tissue · Breast (Mammary gland)
Blood (Non-TA)
Myeloid Myeloid immune system
Lymphoid Lymphoid immune system
General anatomy: , , , ,
· · Anatomy: urinary system (TA A08, TH H3.06, GA 11.1215)
Abdomen
Kidneys
Layers Renal fasciaRenal capsuleRenal cortex (Renal column) • Renal medulla (Renal sinus, Renal pyramids, medullary interstitium) • Renal lobeCortical lobuleMedullary rayNephron
Intrarenal arteries (Renal artery) → Segmental arteriesInterlobar arteriesArcuate arteriesInterlobular arteriesAfferent arterioles
Renal tubule Renal corpuscle (Glomerulus, Bowman's capsule) → Proximal tubuleLoop of Henle (Descending, Thin ascending, Thick ascending) → Distal convoluted tubuleConnecting tubuleCollecting ducts aka Duct of BeliniRenal papilla → Minor calyx → Major calyxRenal pelvis
Intrarenal veins Efferent arteriolesPeritubular capillaries / Vasa rectaArcuate veinInterlobar veins → (Renal vein)
JGA Macula densaJuxtaglomerular cellsMesangium/Extraglomerular mesangial cell
Filtration Glomerular basement membranePodocyteFiltration slitsMesangium/Intraglomerular mesangial cellTubular fluid
Ureters Orifice of ureter • AdventitiaMuscular layerMucosa
Pelvis
Bladder ApexUvulaNeckMedian umbilical ligamentMuscular layer (TrigoneDetrusor) • MucosaSubmucosa
Urethra Urethral sphincters (External sphincter muscle of male urethra, External sphincter muscle of female urethra, Internal sphincter muscle of urethra)

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Categories: Urinary system

 

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from: Wikiquote: urinary system,
Mon Jun 13 10:01:05 2011