anatomy of the urinary system

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Anatomy of the Urinary System

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Anatomy of the Urinary System. Structures. Kidneys: located under back muscles, behind parietal peritoneum, above the waistline, right slightly lower than left Internal structure: Cortex: outer layer Medulla: inner portion Pyramids: triangular sections of medulla. Kidney…con’t - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Anatomy of the Urinary System

Anatomy of the Urinary System

Page 2: Anatomy of the Urinary System

Structures

• Kidneys:

• located under back muscles, behind parietal peritoneum, above the waistline, right slightly lower than left

• Internal structure:

• Cortex: outer layer

• Medulla: inner portion

• Pyramids: triangular sections of medulla

Page 3: Anatomy of the Urinary System

• Kidney…con’t• Papilla: narrow

innermost end of pyramid

• Pelvis: expansion of upper end of ureter, inside the kidney

• Calyces: division of the renal pelvis

Page 4: Anatomy of the Urinary System

Microscopic Structures• Nephron: functional unit of kidney• 1. Renal Corpuscle: • Bowman’s capsule with glomerulus• Glomerulus: network of blood capilliaries

• 2. Renal Tubule: • Proximal convoluted tubule: first segment• Loop of Henle: extension of prox. Tubule;

consists of descending limb, loop and ascending limb

Page 5: Anatomy of the Urinary System

Renal Tubule…con’t• Distal convoluted tubule: extension of

ascending Loop of Henle

• Collecting Tubule: straight extension of distal tubule

Page 6: Anatomy of the Urinary System

Ureters

• Long narrow tube with expanded ends in the kidney (renal pelvis)

• Lined with mucous membrane

• Drains urine from kidney to urinary bladder

Page 7: Anatomy of the Urinary System

Urinary Bladder

• Elastic muscular organ, capable of great expansion

• Lined with mucous membrane arranged with rugae

• Stores urine before voiding

• Voiding

Page 8: Anatomy of the Urinary System

Urethra

• Narrow tube from urinary bladder to exterior urinary meatus

• Lined with mucous membrane

• Passage for urine from bladder to meatus

• Passage of semen from the body

Page 9: Anatomy of the Urinary System

Functions

• 1. Producing and Excreting Urine

• 2. Regulates chemicals in the blood– Electrolytes, acid base balance

• 3. maintains fluid balance

• 4. Regulate blood pressure through secretion of renin

Page 10: Anatomy of the Urinary System

Formation of urine

• 3 processes:

• 1. Filtration: continually in renal corpuscle,

• glomerular blood pressure causes water and dissolved substance to filter out of glomeruli into bowman’s capsule,

• normal rate is 125 ml/min

Page 11: Anatomy of the Urinary System

• 2. Reabsorption: movement of substances out of renal tubules into blood in the peritubular capillaries;

• Water, nutrients, and ions are reabsorbed

• Water is reabsorbed by osmosis from proximal tubules

Page 12: Anatomy of the Urinary System

• 3. Secretion: movement of substances into urine in the distal and collecting tubules

• Hydrogen ions, potassium ions, and certain drugs are secreted by active transport

• Ammonia is secreted by diffusion

Page 13: Anatomy of the Urinary System

Control of Urine Volume

• Posterior Pituitary hormone: ADH, which decreases urine, by making collecting tubules permeable to water

• If no ADH is present, collecting tubules are practically impermeable to water

• Adrenal Cortex: aldosterone, important in controlling reabsorbtion of sodium

Page 14: Anatomy of the Urinary System

Abnormal amounts of Urine

• Anuria: absence of urine

• Oliguria: scant amounts of urine

• Polyuria: excessive amounts of urine

Page 15: Anatomy of the Urinary System

Micturation

• Urination/Voiding

• Sphincter control:

• Internal urethral sphincter: involuntary, located at the bladder exit

• External urethral sphincter: voluntary, located just below the neck of the bladder

• Most learn voluntary control between 2 and 3 years of age

Page 16: Anatomy of the Urinary System

Emptying Reflex

• Initiated by stretch reflex in bladder wall

• Bladder wall contracts

• Internal sphincter relaxes

• External sphincter relaxes and bladder is emptied

Page 17: Anatomy of the Urinary System

Disorders

• Urinary Retention: urine produced, bladder wont empty

• Urinary Suppression: no urine produced, but bladder will empty

• Incontinence: Voiding involuntarily– Causes: spinal injury, stroke– Retention may cause cystitis

Page 18: Anatomy of the Urinary System

Disorders con’t

• Obstructive Disorders

• Renal Calculi (kidney stones) block ureters, intense pain, renal colic

• Neurogenic bladder: paralysis or abn functioning of bladder, prevents normal flow of urine out of the body

• Tumors: renal cell carcinoma & Bladder cancer: Characterized by blood in urine

Page 19: Anatomy of the Urinary System

UTI’s

• Often caused by gram negative bacteria• Escherichia coli (E. coli) causes about 80% of

UTIs in adults. These bacteria are normally present in the colon and may enter the urethral opening from the skin around the anus and genitals. Women may be more susceptible to UTI because their urethral opening is near the source of bacteria (e.g., anus, vagina) and their urethra is shorter, providing bacteria easier access to the bladder.

Page 20: Anatomy of the Urinary System

UTI’s con’t

• Other bacteria that cause urinary tract infections include Staphylococcus saprophyticus (5 to 15% of cases), Chlamydia trachomatis, and Mycoplasma hominis.

• Men and women infected with chlamydia trachomatis or mycoplasma hominis can transmit the bacteria to their partner during sexual intercourse, causing UTI

Page 21: Anatomy of the Urinary System

• Uretritis: inflammation of the urethra

• Cystitis: inflammation or infection of the bladder

• Pyelonephritis: inflammation of the renal pelvis and connective tissues of the kidney: acute(infectious) or chronic (autoimmune)

Page 22: Anatomy of the Urinary System

Glomerular disorders

• Nephrotic syndrome: • Proteinuria: protiens in urine• Hypoalbuminemia: low plasma protiens

(albumin) levels• Edema: tissue swelling caused by loss of

water from plasma as a result of hypoalbuminemia

• Acute glomerulonephritis: caused by delayed immune response to streptococcal infection

Page 23: Anatomy of the Urinary System

Chronic Glomerulonephritis

• Slow inflammatory condition caused by immune mechanisms and often leads to renal failure.

Page 24: Anatomy of the Urinary System

Renal Failure• Acute: abrupt reduction in kidney function

that is usually reversible

• Chronic: slow progressive loss of nephrons, caused by a variety of underlying diseases (BUN increases, GFR decreases, creatinine increases

Page 25: Anatomy of the Urinary System

Chronic Renal Failure

• Stage 1: some nephrons lost

• Compensation by enlargement of remaining

• BUN is kept normal

• GFR drops (up to 75%)

• Often asymptomatic, may last for years

Page 26: Anatomy of the Urinary System

Stage 2• Renal insufficiency: Kidney no longer

compensates for loss of nephrons

• Remaining cant handle urea load

• BUN increases dramatically

• Kidneys ability to concentrate urine is impaired: polyuria and dehydration occur

Page 27: Anatomy of the Urinary System

Stage 3

• Called “uremia” or “uremic syndrome”• High blood urea• BUN very high• Caused by loss of kidney function• GFR low=oliguria: edema and

hypertension result• Dialysis or kidney transplant required or• Death occurs