What is Excretion ?, organ used, types of regulation, modes of excretion, explanation of each, human excretory system & function, kidney and its parts, mechanism of urine formation, Dialysis
2. What is Excretion
Excretion is the removal of metabolic waste from the cells.
Metabolic waste is the unwanted material that is formed as a
result of the bodies metabolism. That is the large number of
chemical reactions that occur in the cells, tissues and organs.
The waste products of metabolism are frequently toxic and so
must be removed from the body.
Kidney plays important role in excretion process in all vertebrates.
While skin also helps in excretion of urea, inorganic salts & water
through sweat glands.
3. Functions of Kidney
Elimination on nitro. waste
Maintain H2O level
ie.
osmoregulation
Maintain H+ ion concentration
ie
iso-tonic
4. Modes of excretion process..
Excretion carried out in different manner in different animals viz.
Detoxificatation
Ammonia to urea
Ammonia to uric acid
Deamination
Amino acid to ammonia
6. Ammonotelism
Phenomenon of formation of excretory product in form of
ammonia is called as ammonotelism.
Organisms which show this activity are “ammonotelic”.
Ammonia is highly soluble in water & highly toxic in nature
It can be excreted by simple diffusion so its concentration in
body is kept very low.
As it is harmful for body tissues hence need to remove as
soon as formed.
7. Ammonotelic animals
For elimination of ammonia large quantity of
water is required.
Due to this reason ammonotelism is seen in
aquatic animals, bony fish, tadpole larva.
Such animals ammonia diffuse through the skin
and gills and kidney.
8. Ureotelism
Excretion of nitrogenious waste in form of urea
is uricotelism.
In this urea formation require expenditure of
energy and formed in liver by ornithine cycle.
Urea can store in water in its dissolved form
urine
Modrate amount of water is require ie 50 ml for
1 gm
Animals have this excretory systems are
Turtles
Mammals
Ornithine Citralline
Arginine
NH3
CO2
H2O
NH3
H2O
Urea
H2O
9. Uricotelism
Elimination of nitrogenous waste in form of uric acid.
Synthesis of uric acid require more energy. It takes place by
inosinic pathway.
Uric acid is eliminated in form of solid pallets or thick paste
which require very less amount of water
10 ml for 1 gm hence useful for desert animals
Animals possess this excretion system are
Snails
Reptiles
Lizards
10. Human Excretory system
Human Excretory System consist of following
organs
A pair of kidney,
A pair of ureters,
A single unpaired urinary bladder,
A urethra in males / vestibule in females.
11. Function of the Excretory System
The human excretory system functions to remove waste from the human body.
During this process animals get rid of nitrogenous waste products of
metabolism, including ammonia, urea, and uric acid.
Although excretory systems are diverse, nearly all produce urine in a process that
involves several steps.
Kidneys
Urethras
Urinary bladder
Urethra
Organs of
the
Excretory
System
12. 1. Filtration:
The excretory tubule collects filtrate from the blood. Water
and solutes are forced by blood pressure across the
selectively permeable membranes of a cluster of capillaries
and into the excretory tubule.
2. Reabsorption:
The transport epithelium reclaims valuable substances from
the filtrate and returns them.
3. Secretion:
Other substances are extracted from body fluids and added
to the contents of the excretory tube.
4. Excretion:
The filtrate leaves the system and the body.
Function of the Excretory System
13. Structure of the Excretory System
This system consists of specialized structures and capillary networks that
assist in the excretory process.
The human excretory system includes the kidney and its functional unit, the
nephron.
The excretory activity of the kidney is changed by specialized hormones
that regulate the amount of absorption within the nephron.
Bladder Kidneys
Urethra
Ureters
Meatus
15. The kidneys are two bean-shaped organs about five-inches long,
three-inches wide and one-inch thick located in your back on each
side of your spine.
Each kidney is about the size of a fist and weighs from four to six
ounces. They are situated above your waist, with the left kidney a
little higher and a little larger.
The right kidney is a little lower and smaller to make room for the
liver. The lower ribs protect your kidneys.
Inside the kidneys are nephrons. These are tiny units where the
filtering of excess fluids and dissolved particles occurs. There are
between 1 and 1.3 million nephrons in each kidney.
Blood enters the kidneys through renal arteries and leaves through
renal veins.
Tubes called ureters carry waste products from the kidneys to the
urinary bladder for storage or for release.
During urination, urine is expelled from the urinary bladder through
the urethra.
Kidney
17. Kidneys filter about 1700 liters of blood daily in the average adult.
Parts of the kidneys
• Cortex
-outer protective portion
• Medulla
-inner soft portion
• Hilum
-a depression located in the middle of the
concave side of the kidney where blood
vessels, nerves, and the ureters enter and exit
the kidneys
Cortex
Medulla
Hilum
The cortex is where the blood is filtered.
The medulla contains the collecting ducts which carry filtrate (filtered
substances) to the pelvis.
The pelvis is a hollow cavity where urine accumulates and drains into the
ureter.
18. Ureters
Peristalsis, a rhythmic contraction of the ureter
smooth muscle which helps to move the urine into
the bladder.
A tube approximately 6 to 7 inches long attached
to each kidney.
Made up of three layers of tissue
Smooth muscle
Fibrous tissue
Mucous layer
19. Urinary Bladder
•Hollow, muscular organ that stores urine
•Sphincter muscles hold the urine in place
•Holds 300 to 400 milliliters of urine before
emptying
•Walls contain epithelial tissue that stretch
to allow the bladder to hold twice its
capacity
Urethra
Prostate
gland
Ureter
Urinary bladder
•The trigone is a triangular area at the
base of the bladder where the ureters
enter and the urethra exits
20. Urethra
Female Urethra Male Urethra
•Approximately 1.5
inches long
•Opens through the
meatus
•Approximately 8 inches long
•Passes through three different
regions:
Prostate gland
Membranous portion
Penis
A tube of smooth muscle with a mucous lining that carries urine
from the bladder to the outside of the body.
21. The functional units of the kidney are called nephrons.
Nephrons are located in the renal cortex, except for their loops of Henle, which
descend into the renal medulla.
Nephron
22. Two parts
a. Renal Corpuscle
1. Bowman Capsule
2. Glomerulus
a. Fenestrae - pore in endothelial walls of glomerulus.
b. Podocytes - specialized cells.
c. Filteration slits
b. Renal Tubule - Series of single layer tubules
1. Proximal Convoluted tubule
2. Loop of Henle
3. Distal Convoluted tubule
Nephron
Kidneys are made up of nephrons. Blood enters the nephron, where impurities are
filtered out and emptied into the collecting duct. The purified blood leaves the
nephron through the renal vein.
24. The glomerulus is a mass of thin-walled capillaries.
The Bowman’s capsule is a double-walled, cup-shaped structure.
The proximal tubule leads from the Bowman’s capsule to the Loop of Henle.
The loop of Henle is a long loop which extends into the medulla.
The distal tubule connects the loop of Henle to the collecting duct.
Each nephron has its own blood supply:
An arteriole
A venule
A network of capillaries connecting them
Each nephron releases fluids to a collecting duct, which leads
to the ureter.
25. Each kidney contains more than 1 million nephrons.
Blood Flow through the Kidneys
Blood enters through the renal artery Arterioles
Each arteriole leads to a nephron Renal corpuscle
The glomerulus filters fluid from the blood, and is the first place where
urine is formed in the kidneys.
Blood flows through the glomerulus at a constant rate.
Each glomerulus is surrounded by a capsule known as Bowman’s capsule.
Blood then passes into the renal tubules where some substances are
reabsorbed and the remaining become urine.
26. The Kidneys
As blood enters a nephron through the arteriole, impurities are filtered
out and emptied into the collecting duct.
The purified blood exits the nephron through the venule.
How is blood filtered?
The mechanism of blood purification involves two distinct processes:
Filtration
Reabsorption
27. Filtration
Passing a liquid or gas through a filter to remove wastes is called filtration.
The filtration of blood mainly takes place in the glomerulus.
The glomerulus is a small network of capillaries encased in the top of the nephron
by a hollow, cup-shaped structure called Bowman's capsule.
Fluid from the blood flows into Bowman’s capsule.
The materials filtered from the blood include water, urea, glucose, salts, amino acids,
and some vitamins.
Plasma proteins, cells, and platelets remain in the blood because they are too large
to pass through the capillary walls.
28. Composition And Formation of Urine
urine formation take place in three different stages :
Ultrafiltration,
Selective Reabsorption,
Tubular secretion.
29. Ultrafiltration
Takes place in Malpighian body, its physical process.
Glomerulus & bowman’s capsule act as filtering unit.
10-1000 X more permeable capillaries of glomerulus help to enter water plasma blood inside
the filtering unit
Afferent arteriole diameter is larger than efferent.
30. Selective Reabsorption
This process stake place in two steps :
Passive transport
Active transport.
Water is reabsorbed by osmosis in PCT, DCT, descending loop of Henle almost everywhere
except acending part of it known as, “Obligatory absorption of water”.
The kidneys maximum capacity for reabsorption of substance is transport renal threshold.
Eg.
45-95 mg of sugar in 100 ml of blood is normal level, but if it rise above maximum level ie
160 mg per 100 ml. then glucose appears in urine. This knows as “Glucosuria”.
31. Reabsorption
Most of the material removed from the blood at Bowman's capsule makes its way
back into the blood.
The process in which liquid is taken back into a vessel is called reabsorption.
Almost 99% of the water that enters Bowman’s capsule is reabsorbed into the
blood.
When the filtrate drains in the collecting ducts, most water and nutrients have
been reabsorbed into the blood.
Glomerulus
Afferent arteriole
Efferent arteriole
Bowman’s
capsule
Glomerular
Filtration
32. Remaining material, called urine, is emptied into a collecting duct.
Urine is primarily concentrated in the loop of Henle.
The loop of Henle is a section of the nephron tubule in which water is conserved
and the volume of urine minimized.
As the kidney works, purified blood is returned to circulation while urine is
collected in the urinary bladder.
Urine is stored here until it is released from the body through a tube called the
urethra.
33. Tubular secretion
It does not synthesize or add any material in the urine.
Substance which generally secreted are creatinineand potassium and hydrogen ion.
Secretion of ion in in DCT and collecting tubule is important to regulate the acidity of blood.
Some abnormal substance in blood are also secreted in the urine.
Anti-biotics like penicillin iodine compound, iodopyrace are secreted in urine
34. Composition of Urine
Depends on food that individual eat consume on daily basis.
On an average 1.2-1.5 ltr of urine produced per day.
Characteristic yellow colour is due to presence of pigment “urochrome”.
Contains :
95 % of water
Rest of urea, uric acid, creatinine
35. Tiny pores in the tubing allow salts and small
molecules to pass through.
Wastes diffuse out of the blood into the fluid-
filled chamber, allowing purified blood to be
returned to the body.
Dialysis
Air detector Dialysis
machine
Fresh dialysis fluid
Compressed air
Vein
Artery
Shunt
Blood pump
Blood in tubing flows through
dialysis fluid
Used dialysis fluid
Blood is removed by a tube and
pumped through special tubing
that acts like nephrons.