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Excretory System Tony Serino, Ph.D. Clinical Anatomy Misericordia Univ.
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Excretory System Tony Serino, Ph.D. Clinical Anatomy Misericordia Univ.

Jan 03, 2016

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Page 1: Excretory System Tony Serino, Ph.D. Clinical Anatomy Misericordia Univ.

Excretory System

Tony Serino, Ph.D.

Clinical AnatomyMisericordia Univ.

Page 2: Excretory System Tony Serino, Ph.D. Clinical Anatomy Misericordia Univ.

Excretory System

• Remove wastes from internal environment• Wastes: water, heat, salts, urea, etc.• Excretory organs include: Lungs, Skin, Liver, GI

tract, and Kidneys• Urinary system account for bulk of excretion

Page 3: Excretory System Tony Serino, Ph.D. Clinical Anatomy Misericordia Univ.

Fluid Input & Output

Page 4: Excretory System Tony Serino, Ph.D. Clinical Anatomy Misericordia Univ.

Urinary System

Page 5: Excretory System Tony Serino, Ph.D. Clinical Anatomy Misericordia Univ.

Ureter Histolgy

Mucosa

Muscularis

Adventitia

-about 25 cm long, retroperitoneal, moves urine by peristalsis; volume of urine moved is called a jet (1-5 jets/min)-ureters enter the bladder wall obliquely, allowing them to remain closed except during peristalsis

Page 6: Excretory System Tony Serino, Ph.D. Clinical Anatomy Misericordia Univ.

Urinary Bladder(Remanent of Allantois)

Page 7: Excretory System Tony Serino, Ph.D. Clinical Anatomy Misericordia Univ.

Urinary Bladder Histology

Mucosa

Submucosa

Muscularis

(Serosa)

(Detrusor Muscle)

Page 8: Excretory System Tony Serino, Ph.D. Clinical Anatomy Misericordia Univ.

Urinary Bladder Filling

• Highly distensible• 10-600ml normally• Capable of 2-3X that

volume• Under normal

conditions, the pressure does not significantly increase until at least 300 ml volume is reached

Page 9: Excretory System Tony Serino, Ph.D. Clinical Anatomy Misericordia Univ.

Urethra

Page 10: Excretory System Tony Serino, Ph.D. Clinical Anatomy Misericordia Univ.

Urethra Histology

-epithelium changes from transitional to stratified squamous along its length-large numbers of mucous glands present

Page 11: Excretory System Tony Serino, Ph.D. Clinical Anatomy Misericordia Univ.

Bladder (Storage) Reflex

Voluntary control

• As urine accumulates, the bladder wall thins and rugae disappear

• Innervation (sympathetic) to the sphincter muscles (particularly the internal sphincter) keeps the bladder closed and depresses bladder contraction

Page 12: Excretory System Tony Serino, Ph.D. Clinical Anatomy Misericordia Univ.

Micturition Reflex (Voiding)• Urine volume increases, and

the smooth muscle increases pressure in bladder

• Stretch receptors in detrusor muscle, increase parasympathetic activity in the splanchnic nerve cause increase bladder contraction and internal sphincter relaxation

• Voluntary relaxation of external sphincter by a decrease in firing of the pudendal nerve

Page 13: Excretory System Tony Serino, Ph.D. Clinical Anatomy Misericordia Univ.

Kidney Location (x.s.)(Retroperitoneal)

Page 14: Excretory System Tony Serino, Ph.D. Clinical Anatomy Misericordia Univ.

Cortex vs. Medulla

Capsule

Page 15: Excretory System Tony Serino, Ph.D. Clinical Anatomy Misericordia Univ.

Anatomy of Kidney

Page 16: Excretory System Tony Serino, Ph.D. Clinical Anatomy Misericordia Univ.

Major and Minor Calyx

Page 17: Excretory System Tony Serino, Ph.D. Clinical Anatomy Misericordia Univ.

Arterial Supply

Page 18: Excretory System Tony Serino, Ph.D. Clinical Anatomy Misericordia Univ.

Venous Drainage

Page 19: Excretory System Tony Serino, Ph.D. Clinical Anatomy Misericordia Univ.

Renal Circulation

Page 20: Excretory System Tony Serino, Ph.D. Clinical Anatomy Misericordia Univ.

Nephron (two types)

Page 21: Excretory System Tony Serino, Ph.D. Clinical Anatomy Misericordia Univ.

Urine Formation Overveiw

a. Pressure Filtration

b. Reabsorption

c. Secretion

d. Reabsorption of water

d

Page 22: Excretory System Tony Serino, Ph.D. Clinical Anatomy Misericordia Univ.

GlomerulusBowman’s Capsule

Page 23: Excretory System Tony Serino, Ph.D. Clinical Anatomy Misericordia Univ.

Podocytes

Page 24: Excretory System Tony Serino, Ph.D. Clinical Anatomy Misericordia Univ.

Filtration in GlomerulusCapillary Lumen Endothelium

Fenestration

Basement Mem.Pedicels

Slit pores

Glomerular Filtrate

Page 25: Excretory System Tony Serino, Ph.D. Clinical Anatomy Misericordia Univ.

Glomerular Filtration• A pressure filtration produced by the BP, fenestrated

capillaries of glomerulus, and the podocytes creates the glomerular filtrate

• Slit size allows filtration of any substance smaller than a protein

• Blood proteins create an osmotic gradient to prevent complete loss of water in blood,

• Pressure in Bowman’s capsule also works against filtration

• Volume of filtrate produced per minute is the Glomerular Filtration Rate (GFR)

• Average GFR = 120-125 ml/min

Page 26: Excretory System Tony Serino, Ph.D. Clinical Anatomy Misericordia Univ.

Tubular Reabsorption• 75-85% of glomerular filtrate reabsorbed in PCT

• Some of the reabsorption is by passive diffusion– Example: Na+

• Much of the reabsorption is active, most linked to the transport of Na+; known as co-transport

• The amount of transporter proteins is limited; so most actively transported substances have a maximum tubular transport rate (Tm)

Page 27: Excretory System Tony Serino, Ph.D. Clinical Anatomy Misericordia Univ.

Loop of Henle and CD

• Provides mechanism where water can be conserved; capable of producing a low volume, concentrated urine

• Loop of Henle acts as a counter-current multiplier to maintain a high salt concentration in medulla

• CD has variable water permeability and must pass through the medulla

• Allows for the passive absorption of water

Page 28: Excretory System Tony Serino, Ph.D. Clinical Anatomy Misericordia Univ.

Counter-current Multiplier• Descending is permeable to

water but not salt; loss of water concentrates urine in tube

• Ascending is permeable to NaCl but not water; Salt now higher in tube than interstitium; first passively diffuses out then near top is actively transported out

• Results in a self-perpetuating mechanism; maintaining a high salt concentration in center of kidney

Page 29: Excretory System Tony Serino, Ph.D. Clinical Anatomy Misericordia Univ.

Vasa Recta• Supply long loops of

Henle• Provide mechanism to

prevent accumulation of water in interstitial space

• Passive diffusion allows the blood to equilibrate with osmotic gradient in extracellular space

Page 30: Excretory System Tony Serino, Ph.D. Clinical Anatomy Misericordia Univ.

Counter-current Exchange

Page 31: Excretory System Tony Serino, Ph.D. Clinical Anatomy Misericordia Univ.

Tubular Secretion

• PCT and DCT both actively involved in secretion (active transport of substances from the blood to the urine)

• Both ducts play important roles in controlling amount of H+/HCO3

- lost in urine and therefore blood pH

• DCT actively controls Na+ reabsorption upon stimulation by aldosterone (controls final 2% of Na+ in urine)

Page 32: Excretory System Tony Serino, Ph.D. Clinical Anatomy Misericordia Univ.

Summary

Re-absorption

Loses water

Loses NaCl Selective Secretion & Re-absorption

Water Re-absorptionwith ADH present