1 / 56

Hilus

Hilus. Greatest thing in the world! . Hilus. Small area where the renal artery and nerves enter, and the renal vein and ureter exit the kidney. . Location . Concave, medial side of the kidney Opens into the renal sinus. Problems that can occur .

natala
Download Presentation

Hilus

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Hilus Greatest thing in the world!

  2. Hilus • Small area where the renal artery and nerves enter, and the renal vein and ureter exit the kidney.

  3. Location • Concave, medial side of the kidney • Opens into the renal sinus

  4. Problems that can occur • Renal artery rips and blood flows into the bladder.

  5. Concentration of Urine By: Grant and Xander

  6. Urine Concentration Mechanism • Enters through the Bowman Capsule. • 65% of water and NaCl is reabsorbed • Travels down to Loop of Henle • 15% of water is absorbed • Travels back up the Loop of Henle, Water is not permeable here. • 25% of NaCl is reabsorbed. • Travels in to Distal convoluted tubules. • Water and NaCl is reabsorbed in the collecting ducts.

  7. Cont. • The Remaining water and NaCl moves to the tip of renal pyramid. • 19% of water is and 10% of NaCl reabsorbed. • Last 1% remains as concentrated urine.

  8. Tubular Secretion By: Matt Faccenda & Jake Mauch

  9. Definition • The movement of non-filtered substances, not normally produced by the body, from the blood into the filtrate. • 1 of the major processes of urine formation

  10. Function • Regulates Body fluid pH • Solutes are secreted across the wall of the nephron into the filtrate • Occurs when the nephron cells transport solutes from the blood into the filtrate

  11. Secretion • Secretes: • Hydrogen • dopamine • Epinephrine • Morphine • Potassium • Ammonia • Secreted by Active and Passive Transport

  12. Movement • Solutes move from Capillaries to the Nephron through both active and passive transfer • Active means active transport through direct physical movement • Passive transfer is through diffusion

  13. Urinary Bladder James Kiai Collin Veldman

  14. Function and Structure • Hollow, Muscular Container that lies in the Pelvic Cavity just posterior to the symphysis pubis. • Acts like a reservoir for urine until it can be eliminated quickly at an appropriate time and place. • The walls of the Urinary Bladder are lined with Transitional Epithelium, which is surrounded by a connective tissue layer (Lamina Propria), smooth muscle layers and a fibrous adventitia. • Elimination of urine from the Urinary Bladder is called MICTURITION.

  15. LOCATION • MALES • Urinary Bladder is just anterior to the rectum • FEMALES • It is located just anterior to the Vagina and inferior and anterior to the Uterus.

  16. OTHER INFO • When no urine is present in the urinary bladder, internal pressure is about 0mm Hg. Pressure continues to rise as volume increases • Urinary Bladder was built to withstand a large volume of fluid, up to 1 L of fluid. • In order to make sure urine does not backflow into the ureter, the urinary bladder will compress.

  17. The Kidneys By: Tony Romo & Matt Bower

  18. Facts & Location • The Kidneys are bean-shaped • They are the each about the size of a tightly clenched fist. • Location: they lie behind the peritoneum on the posterior abdominal wall on each side of the vertebral column near the lateral borders of the psoas major muscles.

  19. Function Of Kidneys • The functional unit of the kidney is the nephron. • The primary function of the kidney is regulation of body fluid composition • The kidney is the organ that sorts the chemicals from the blood for either removal in the urine or return to the blood. • Chemicals that are waste products, toxins, and excess materials are permanently removed from the body

  20. Parts To The Kidney • The kidneys are organized into two major regions: an outer cortex and an inner medulla surrounding the renal sinus. • The medulla is composed of cone-shaped structures called renal pyramids

  21. Diseases • Kidney Stones • Staghorn Stones • Hematuria- blood in urine

  22. Diseases of the Kidneys By. Isabel and Sarah

  23. Inflammation of the Kidneys • Glomerulonephritis • Inflammation of the filtration membrane within the renal capsule. Causing an increase in the filtration membranes permeability. • Acute Glomerulonephritis • Occurs 1-3 weeks after sever bacterial infection “strep throat”. • Chronic Glomerulonephritis • Long term, progressive process and the filtration membrane thickens. Eventually replaced by connective tissue then kidneys become nonfunctional.

  24. Continued • Pyelonephritis • Begins as bacterial such as E. Coli that leads to infection of the renal pelvis. • It will spread to the kidneys and can destroy nephrons, corpuscles, and loop of Henley. • Reducing kidneys ability to concentrate urine.

  25. Renal Failure • Acute Renal Failure • Damage to the kidney is rapid and extensive: leads to accumulation of wastes in the blood • If renal failure is complete, death can occur in 1-2 weeks. • Chronic Renal Failure • Caused by permanent damage to some nephrons that the remaining nephrons are inadequate for normal kidney functions. • Trauma to the kidneys, tumors, and kidney stones.

  26. Kidney Stones • Hard objects usually found in the pelvis of the kidney. • The symptoms are back pain, side pain, groin pain, and blood appears in the urine. • Caused by calcium build up.

  27. GLOMERULAR FILTRATION By: Collin and Jamie

  28. Glomerular filtration is the 1st process in urine formation. • This process cleans the plasma that is inside of the blood. • It is maintained by autoregulation • The rate of filtration is normal at rest • The rate of filtration is lowered in exercise • The rate of filtration drops drastically when the body goes into shock

  29. GFR • Glomerular filtration rate is the amount of plasma (filtrate) that enters the bowman capsule per minute; equals renal plasma flow times the percent (19%; filtration fraction) of the plasma that enters the renal capsule OR: • 125 mL filtrate/ min X 0.19= 125mL filtrate/min • Measurement of GFR can indicate a degree of kidney damage.

  30. GFR CONT.. • A high plasma concentration and a lower than normal clearance value for urea indicates a reduced GFR and kidney failure. • GFR can be monitored for changes in people experiencing kidney failure.

  31. Ureters Christy Bythrow and Sierra Kennelly

  32. What are the Ureters? • Tubes connecting urine from the kidney to the urinary bladder • They are lined with transitional epithelium • Made of stratified cells that appear cube shaped when the organ is not stretched • When it is stretched it is squamous

  33. Formation • Formed when the mesonephric duct extends caudally and it eventually joins the cloaca at the point of junction • This forms the ureter

  34. Location • They extend inferiorly and medially from the renal pelvis at the renal hilum of each kidney to the urinary bladder • They enter on the posteriolateral surface of the urinary bladder • Behind the small intestines

  35. Part of the Ureters

  36. Cross-section of the Ureter

  37. Function • The hydrostatic pressure • 0mm Hg in the renal pelvis • No pressure gradient exists to force the urine through the ureters to the urinary bladder • Peristaltic contractions • Occur when the smooth muscle in the walls of the ureters contract • Velocity: 3cm per second • Forces urine through ureters • Urinary bladder • Compressing part of the ureter • Prevents backflow

  38. Disorders • Strictures • Abnormally narrow parts • Stones • Like kidney stones but located in ureters

  39. Urethra Al and P

  40. Urethra • Male • 20 cm long, 3 sections • Prostatic Urethra • Connected to the bladder • Passes through the prostate gland • Small ducts empty into the urethra • Membranous • Shortest part • Prostate  perineum • Spongy Urethra • Longest part • Extends to the end of the penis • Stratified columnar epithelium lines the urethra • Several mucus secreting glands empty into the urethra • Penis carries semen as well as urine • Female • Not used for sexual reproduction • Only urination • Internal opposed to male external • Much shorter than male

  41. Diseases • Urethritis • Infection of the urethra • Cancer of the urethra • Foreign bodies found in the urethra • Electrical wire • Hypospadias • Birth defect that causes urethra orifice to be located not on the distal end of the penis

  42. Tubular Reabsorption Courtney and Allyson

  43. Definition • Water’s nutrients leave tubules by diffusion to enter the surrounding tissue • Then, they enter the blood supply and return to circulation. • Wastes and urea are kept within the tubules to be excreted with urine.

  44. Overview • Bowman’s capsules  FILTRATE  proximal convoluted tubule  Loop of Henle  distal convoluted tubule  collecting ducts • Processes involved: simple & facilitated diffusion, active transport, symport, and osmosis

  45. Areas of Reabsorption • Reabsorption in Proximal Convoluted Tubule: responsible for majority of reabsorption, carrier proteins bind to Na+ and other substances • Reabsorption in the Loop of Henle: H2O moves out of nephron by osmosis • Reabsorption in Distal Convoluted Tubule: under hormonal control and depends on the condition of the body, urine is produced

  46. Non-Kidney Related Diseases By Matt Gergely…And Madison Gonzalez…kind of…

  47. Cystitis • Inflammation of bladder • Infection from bacteria • About 30% of women will contract in lifetime • Catheters

More Related