Biology - Excretory products and their elimination

Complete Biology for Medical Entrance Exam Olympiad, Foundation, NEET, AIIMS, CBSE, iGCSE, GCSE, MCAT, AP-Biology

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Biology - Excretory products and their elimination

What You Will Learn!

  • State the function of the urinary system
  • Name the products of excretion
  • Describe the structure of the urinary system.
  • Recall that urine is stored in the bladder.
  • Describe the function of the kidneys in filtering the bloodstream.
  • Describe the function of the skin in excretion

Description

Description

Many nitrogen containing substances, ions, CO2 , water, etc., that accumulate in the body have to be eliminated. Nature of nitrogenous wastes formed and their excretion vary among animals, mainly depending on the habitat (availability of water). Ammonia, urea and uric acid are the major nitrogenous wastes excreted.

Protonephridia, nephridia, malpighian tubules, green glands and the kidneys are the common excretory organs in animals. They not only eliminate nitrogenous wastes but also help in the maintenance of ionic and acid-base balance of body fluids.

In humans, the excretory system consists of one pair of kidneys, a pair of ureters, a urinary bladder and a urethra. Each kidney has over a million tubular structures called nephrons. Nephron is the functional unit of kidney and has two portions – glomerulus and renal tubule. Glomerulus is a tuft of capillaries formed from afferent arterioles, fine branches of renal artery. The renal tubule starts with a double walled Bowman’s capsule and is further differentiated into a proximal convoluted tubule (PCT), Henle’s loop (HL) and distal convoluted tubule (DCT). The DCTs of many nephrons join to a common collecting duct many of which ultimately open into the renal pelvis through the medullary pyramids. The Bowman’s capsule encloses the glomerulus to form Malpighian or renal corpuscle.

Urine formation involves three main processes, i.e., filtration, reabsorption and secretion. Filtration is a non-selective process performed by the glomerulus using the glomerular capillary blood pressure. About 1200 ml of blood is filtered by the glomerulus per minute to form 125 ml of filtrate in the Bowman’s capsule perminute (GFR). JGA, a specialised portion of the nephrons, plays a significant role in the regulation of GFR. Nearly 99 per cent reabsorption of the filtrate takes place through different parts of the nephrons. PCT is the major site of reabsorption and selective secretion. HL primarily helps to maintain osmolar gradient (300 mOsmolL–1 -1200 mOsmolL–1) within the kidney interstitium. DCT and

collecting duct allow extensive reabsorption of water and certain electrolytes, which help in osmoregulation: H+ , K+ and NH3 could be secreted into the filtrate by the tubules to maintain the ionic balance and pH of body fluids.

A counter current mechanism operates between the two limbs of the loop of Henle and those of vasa recta (capillary parallel to Henle’s loop). The filtrate gets concentrated as it moves down the descending limb but is diluted by the ascending limb. Electrolytes and urea are retained in the interstitium by this arrangement. DCT and collecting duct concentrate the filtrate about four times, i.e., from 300 mOsmolL–1 to 1200 mOsmolL–1, an excellent mechanism of conservation of water. Urine is stored in the urinary bladder till a voluntary signal from CNS carries out its release through urethra, i.e., micturition. Skin, lungs and liver also assist in excretion.

Who Should Attend!

  • Biology enthusiast.
  • Beginners in Biology.
  • NEET & MHT-CET aspirants
  • Those preparing for board and competitive exams State Board, CBSE, ICSE , IGCSE, MHT-CET & NEET

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Tags

  • Biology

Subscribers

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Lectures

11

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