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bruit
an audible swishing sound produced when the volume of blood or the diameter of the blood vessel changes
calculi
stones in the kidney
continence
the ability to voluntarily control emptying of the bladder or colon
cystitis
a bladder inflammation, most often with infection
elimination
the excretion of waste from the body by the GI tract (as feces) and kidneys (as urine)
external urethral sphincter
skeletal muscle that surrounds the urethra and helps to control the exit of urine
incontinence
the involuntary loss of urine or stool
internal urethral sphincter
smooth detrusor muscle of the bladder neck and elastic tissue that helps control the exit of urine
microalbuminuria
the presence of very small amounts of albumin in the urine that are not measurable with usual urinalysis procedures
nephron
the functional unit of the kidney, forms urine by filtering waste products and water from the blood
nocturnal polyuria
increased urination at night
renal threshold
the point at which the kidney is overwhelmed with glucose and can no longer reabsorb
AKA transport maximum
proteinuria
the presence of protein in the urine
uremia
the buildup of nitrogenous waste products in the blood (azotemia)
urethral meatus
the opening at the endpoint of the urethra
urgency
a sense of a nearly uncontrollable need to urinate
Regulatory function of the kidneys
maintain fluid and electrolyte balance and acid base balance through urine elimination and glomerular filtration, tubular reabsorption, and tubular secretions
by processes: filtration, diffusion, active transport, and osmosis
glomerular filtration
first process in urine formation
- as blood passes from the afferent arteriole into the glomerulus, water, electrolytes, and other particles are filtered across the glomerular membrane into the Bowman capsule to form glomerular filtrate
normal glomerular filtration rate
125 mL/min (~180L/day)
GFR is controlled by:
blood pressure and blood flow
- by selectively constricting and dilating the afferne and efferent arterioles
tubular reabsorption
the second process in urine formation
- keeps normal urine output at 1 to 3 L/day and prevents dehydration
vasopressin
increases tubular permeability to water, allowing water to leave the tube and be reabsorbed into capillaries
increases arteriole constriction which alters blood pressure (which affects the amount of fluid and particles that exit glomerular capillaries)
tubular secretion
third process of urine formation
- allows substances to move from the peritubular capillaries in reverse, across capillary membranes, and into the cells that line the tubules
hormones produced by the kidneys
renin
prostaglandins
erythropoietin
activated vitamin D
renin
aids in blood pressure control
- formed and released when there is a decrease in blood flow, blood volume, or blood pressure through the renal arterioles or when too little sodium is present in kidney blood
aldosterone
increases the reabsorption of sodium in the distal tubule of the nephron
prostaglandins
regulate intrarenal blood flow by vasodilation or vasoconstriction
erythropoietin
produced and released in response to decreased oxygen in the kidney's blood supply
- triggers RBC production in the bone marrow
vitamin D
converted to its active form in the kidney
- activated vitamin D is needed to absorb calcium in the intestinal tract and regulate calcium balance