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Title: The kidney and osmoregulation
Description: International Baccalaureate Biology HL Topic 11.3 2018 Clear and detailed notes of topic 11.3 from the book and lecture
Description: International Baccalaureate Biology HL Topic 11.3 2018 Clear and detailed notes of topic 11.3 from the book and lecture
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The kidney and osmoregulation
Topic 11
...
3
Biology HL
Uric acid isn’t water soluble and therefore it can be stored within the egg as
the embryo develops
○
Energy inexpensive and the animals don’t need to drink water so often
Anatomy of the kidney
➢ The function of the kidneys is to filter waste products from the blood
➢ The renal artery takes blood into each of the kidneys and the filtered blood goes
away from them by the renal vein
○
The blood is filtered in the renal cortex and renal medulla
➢ Excess water and waste products make up the urine which is collected in an area
called renal pelvis and later it’s taken away to the bladder by the ureter
➢ The composition of blood plasma in the renal artery compared with the renal vein
is different, since the levels of water, salts and urea differ
Nephrons
➢ Each kidney is made up pf filtering units called nephrons
➢ Each nephron consists of:
○
A glomerulus ⇒ a capillary bed which filters substances
○
The Bowman’s capsule ⇒ a capsule that surrounds the glomerulus
○
A tubule that extends from the Bowman’s capsule ⇒ includes the proximal
and distal convoluted tubule, loop of Henle and the collecting duct
○
The peritubular capillary bed which surrounds the tubule mentioned above
Bowman’s capsule
➢ The afferent arteriole is a small branch of the renal artery that brings unfiltered
blood to the nephron and branches into the glomerulus
➢ The glomerulus has small slits in the walls called fenestrations which open when
the blood pressure increases
○
The blood is provided by the efferent arteriole
➢ The efferent arteriole drains blood from the glomerulus and has smaller diameter
than the afferent arteriole
○
That’s why the pressure increases when they join at the glomerulus
➢ Ultrafiltration describes the process by which various substances are filtered
through the glomerulus and its fenestrations under the unusually high blood
pressure in the capillary bed
○
The fluid that is ultrafiltered passes through the basement membrane
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The kidney and osmoregulation
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○
Topic 11
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3
Biology HL
➢ Alcohol consumption gives an abnormally low production of ADH and therefore
the urine contains more water
Differences
➢ What changes do the kidneys make to the blood?
➢ The blood in the renal vein compared with the renal artery will have:
○
A lower concentration of urea
○
A lower concentration of salt ions
○
A lower concentration of water
○
A nearly identical concentration of glucose
○
A nearly identical concentration of protein
○
Absolutely no change in blood cells
Water conservation
➢ Kidneys are highly diverse organs when you compare them in different species
○
Frogs and toads have no loops of Henle and so they can’t absorb water
○
Animals that live in desert regions have longer loops
➢ The banner-trail kangaroo rat lives in South-West USA
○
They have a very long loop of Henle that produces a large hypertonic area for
water reabsorption in the medulla using ADH collective duct mechanism
■
Almost all the water is recycled
Osmoregulation
➢ The total volume of water eliminated depends on many physiological factors:
○
Perspiration rate
○
Ventilation rate
○
Volume of water ingested recently
➢ The body’s response mechanisms that attempt to maintain homeostatic levels of
water are called osmoregulation
○
Homeostasis describes the body’s ability to maintain a stable internal
environment
➢ Animals can either be osmoregulators or osmoconformers
○
Osmoregulators are animals whose internal tissues have a different
concentration of solute compared to the environment
■
Must be actively maintained ⇒ energy expensive
■
Most animals are osmoregulators
4
The kidney and osmoregulation
■
Topic 11
...
They actively transport ions out through the
gills and very concentrated urine
●
Freshwater fish have hypertonic tissues in a hypotonic
environment
...
3
Biology HL
Testing
➢ In a healthy individual should be no glucose in the urine
➢ Blood cells are too big to pass through the fenestrations, which means that finding
blood in the urine signals kidney malfunction, infection or bleeding in the renal
tubes
➢ Proteins are also too big to pass through the fenestrations and therefore should not
be found in the urine
➢ Most drugs are filtered by the kidneys and as they’re soluble in water, they end up
in the urine
De- and overhydration
➢ Dehydration
○
Sleepiness
○
Constipation
○
Dry mouth and skin
○
Dizziness and headache
➢ Overhydration
○
Change in behaviour/confusion
○
Blurred vision
○
Muscle cramps
○
Nausea and vomiting
6
Title: The kidney and osmoregulation
Description: International Baccalaureate Biology HL Topic 11.3 2018 Clear and detailed notes of topic 11.3 from the book and lecture
Description: International Baccalaureate Biology HL Topic 11.3 2018 Clear and detailed notes of topic 11.3 from the book and lecture