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Excretory System A. The Challenge: Shifts in Extracellular Fluid 1. The volume and composition of extracellular fluid (interstitial plus blood) must be maintained within tolerable ranges. 2. 3. 4. Water Gains and Losses i. Water is gained by two processes: 1. Absorption of water from liquids and solid foods occurs in the gastrointestinal tract. 2. Metabolism of nutrients yields water as a by-product. ii. Water is lost by at least four processes: 1. Excretion of water is accomplished by the urinary system. 2. Evaporation occurs from respiratory surfaces and the skin. 3. Sweating occurs on the skin surface. 4. Elimination of small amounts of water in feces is a normal occurrence. iii. Urinary excretion affords the greatest control over water loss.. b. Solute Gains and Losses i. Solutes are added to the internal environment by four processes: 1. Nutrients, mineral ions, drugs, and food additives are absorbed by the gastrointestinal tract. 2. Secretion from endocrine glands adds hormones. 3. Respiration adds oxygen to the blood and metabolizing cells add carbon dioxide. 4. Metabolism reactions contribute waste products. ii. Extracellular fluid loses mineral ions and metabolic wastes in three ways: 1. Respiratory exhalation rids the body of carbon dioxide. 2. Various mineral ions are lost in sweat. 3. Urinary excretion rids the body of these wastes: a. Uric acid is formed in reactions that degrade nucleic acids. b. Ammonia is formed when amino groups are removed from amino acids. c. Urea is formed by reactions in the liver that unite two ammonia molecules with carbon dioxide. d. Phosphoric acid and sulfuric acid are formed during protein breakdown. iii. The kidneys filter a variety of substances from the blood. 1. Most of the filtrate is returned to the blood; about 1% ends up as urine, a waste fluid of excess water and solutes. 2. The kidneys regulate the volume and solute concentrations of extracellular fluid. The Urinary System a. The kidneys are the central components of the urinary system. i. Each kidney is a bean-shaped organ about the size of a clenched fist. ii. Each kidney is composed of two zones--an outer cortex and inner medulla--wrapped with a renal capsule. 1. Nephrons filter and retain water and solutes, leaving a concentrated urine to pass through collecting ducts to the central renal pelvis. 2. Urine flows from each kidney through a ureter to a urinary bladder (for storage) and then out of the body through the urethra. b. More than a million nephrons are packed inside each kidney. i. An afferent arteriole delivers blood to the renal corpuscle of each nephron. 1. Filtration occurs in the glomerulus--a ball of capillaries nestled inside the Bowman's capsule. 2. The Bowman's capsule collects the filtrate and directs it through the continuous nephron tubules: proximal >>> loop of Henle >>> distal >>> collecting duct. ii. The capillaries exit the glomerulus, converge into an efferent arteriole, then branch again to form the peritubular capillaries around the nephron tubules where they participate in reclaiming water and essential solutes that are carried out of the kidney and back to the general circulation. How Urine Forms a. Filtration, Reabsorption, and Secretion 5. 6. i. Urine is a fluid that rids the body of water and solutes that are in excess of the amounts needed to maintain the extracellular fluid. ii. Urine forms through a sequence of three processes: 1. In filtration, blood pressure forces filtrate out of the glomerular capillaries into Bowman's capsule, then into the proximal tubule. a. Blood cells, proteins, and other large solutes cannot pass the capillary wall into the capsule. b. Water, glucose, sodium, and urea are forced out. 2. Reabsorption takes place in the tubular parts of the nephron where water and solutes move across the tubular wall out of the nephron (by diffusion or active transport) and into the surrounding capillaries. 3. Secretion moves substances from the capillaries into the nephron walls. a. Capillaries surrounding the nephrons secrete excess amounts of hydrogen ions and potassium ions into the nephron tubules. b. This process also rids the body of drugs, uric acid, hemoglobin breakdown products, and other wastes. iii. Urination is a reflex response which empties the bladder. 1. The internal urethral sphincter (involuntary control) regulates flow from the bladder into the urethra. 2. The external urethral sphincter (voluntary control) opens to void urine from the body. 3. Kidney stones are deposits of uric acid that collect in the renal pelvis or lodge in the ureter; they can be removed by surgery or lithotripsy. b. Factors That Influence Blood Filtration i. The kidneys can process about 1.5 quarts of blood each minute because of two factors: 1. Blood enters the glomerulus under high pressure in arterioles that have wider diameters than most arterioles. 2. Glomerular capillaries are highly permeable to water and small solutes. ii. The rate at which the kidneys filter a given volume of blood depends on the flow of blood through them and the rate of reabsorption in the tubules; neural and hormonal controls operate. Reabsorption of Water and Sodium a. Reabsorption in the Proximal Tubule i. Mechanisms within the kidney carefully regulate the excretion and retention of substances based on intake and bodily need. ii. Most of the water is reabsorbed in the proximal tubule. 1. Sodium ions are pumped out of the tubule (filtrate) and into the interstitial fluid surrounding the peritubular capillaries. 2. Significant amounts of water follow passively down the gradient that has been created. b. Reabsorption in Other Parts of the Nephron i. In the descending limb of the loop of Henle, water moves out by osmosis, but in the ascending portion sodium is actively pumped out. ii. This interaction of the limbs of the loop produces a very high solute concentration in the deeper parts of the kidney medulla and delivers a rather dilute urine to the distal tubule. Hormonal Adjustments of Reabsorption a. How ADH Influences Water Reabsorption i. Antidiuretic hormone (ADH) from the posterior pituitary is secreted 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. ii. When water intake is excessive, ADH secretion is inhibited; less water is reabsorbed, and thus more is excreted. iii. Caffeine and alcohol are diuretics, substances that promotes loss of water. b. How Aldosterone Influences Sodium Reabsorption i. When sodium levels fall so does the volume of extracellular fluid; this triggers the juxtaglomerular apparatus to secrete renin, which calls forth angiotensins I and II, which act on the adrenal cortex to release aldosterone, which promotes sodium reabsorption. ii. Sodium retention is accompanied by water retention, which can lead to increased blood pressure--hypertension, which can affect kidney function. c. Salt-Water Balance and Thirst 7. 8. i. When solute concentration in the extracellular fluid rises, the thirst center of the hypothalamus responds by decreasing saliva production. ii. The dry sensation in the mouth causes a liquid-seeking behavior. The Acid-Base Balance a. Kidneys also regulate the acidity and alkalinity of extracellular fluid. i. Overall acid-base balance is maintained by controlling hydrogen ions through buffer systems, respiration, and excretion by the kidneys. ii. Buffers can neutralize hydrogen ions, and the lungs can eliminate carbon dioxide. b. Only the urinary system can eliminate excess hydrogen ions, permanently, and restore the bicarbonate buffering ions to the blood. i. The HCO that forms in the nephron cells is moved to the capillaries where it neutralizes excess acid. ii. The H+ that forms in the cells is secreted into the tubular fluid where it combines with bicarbonate ions to form carbon dioxide (which is returned to the blood and excreted by the lungs) and water (which is excreted in the urine). Maintaining the Body's Core Temperature a. Many different physiological and behavioral responses help to maintain the body's required internal core temperature (37°C). i. If body temperature rises above 41°C, enzymes will be denatured. ii. As body core temperature drops below 35°C, enzyme activity decreases, shivering stops, breathing may cease, and consciousness is lost; further decreases usually are fatal. iii. As endotherms, humans have a body temperature regulated by metabolic activity and mechanisms that control heat conservation and dissipation. b. Responses to Cold Stress i. Mammals respond to cold by constricting the smooth muscles in the blood vessels of the skin (peripheral vasoconstriction), which retards heat loss. ii. In the pilomotor response, the hairs become more erect to create a layer of still air that reduces convective and radiative heat losses. iii. Rhythmic tremors (shivering) is a common response to cold but is not effective for very long and comes at high metabolic cost. iv. Nonshivering heat can be produced by a hormonal stimulation of a special brown adipose tissue. v. Hypothermia is a condition in which the core temperature drops below normal; it may lead to brain damage and death; frostbite is localized cell death due to freezing. c. Responses to Heat Stress i. Peripheral vasodilation is the enlargement of the diameters of blood vessels to allow greater volumes of blood to reach the skin and dissipate the heat. ii. Evaporative heat loss by sweating is a common and obvious cooling mechanism. iii. Hyperthermia is a rise in core temperature, with devastating effects such as heat exhaustion and heat stroke.. iv. During a fever, the hypothalamus resets the body's "thermostat" to a new temporary core temperature. 1. At the onset of fever, heat loss decreases and heat production increases; the person feels chilled. 2. When the fever breaks, peripheral vasodilation and sweating increase as the body attempts to reduce the core temperature to normal. 3. The controlled increase in body temperature (mediated by interleukins, interferons and prostaglandins) during a fever seems to enhance the body's immune response.