Organs in the Urinary System
[edit] Kidneys And Their Structure

The kidneys are a pair of bean shaped, reddish brown organs
about the size of your fist. They are covered by the renal capsule,
which is a tough capsule of fibrous connective tissue. Adhering to the
surface of each kidney is two layers of fat to help cushion them. There
is a concaved side of the kidney that has a depression where a renal
artery enters, and a renal vein and a ureter exit the kidney. The
kidneys are located at the rear wall of the abdominal cavity just above
the waistline, and are protected by the ribcage. They are considered
retroperitoneal, which means they lie behind the peritoneum. There are
three major regions of the kidney, renal cortex, renal medulla and the renal pelvis.
The outer, granulated layer is the renal cortex. The cortex stretches
down in between a radially striated inner layer. The inner radially
striated layer is the renal medulla. This contains pyramid shaped
tissue called the renal pyramids, separated by renal columns. The
ureters are continuous with the renal pelvis and is the very center of
the kidney.
1. Renal pyramid 2. Interlobar artery 3. Renal artery 4. Renal vein 5.
Renal hylum 6. Renal pelvis 7. Ureter 8. Minor calyx 9. Renal capsule
10. Inferior renal capsule 11. Superior renal capsule 12. Interlobar
vein 13. Nephron 14. Minor calyx 15. Major calyx 16. Renal papilla 17.
Renal column
The renal veins are veins that drain the kidney. They connect
the kidney to the inferior vena cava. Because the inferior vena cava is
on the right half of the body, the left renal vein is generally the
longer of the two. Unlike the right renal vein, the left renal vein
often receives the left gonadal vein (left testicular vein in males,
left ovarian vein in females). It frequently receives the left
suprarenal vein as well.
The renal arteries normally arise off the abdominal aorta and
supply the kidneys with blood. The arterial supply of the kidneys are
variable and there may be one or more renal arteries supplying each
kidney. Due to the position of the aorta, the inferior vena cava and
the kidneys in the body, the right renal artery is normally longer than
the left renal artery. The right renal artery normally crosses
posteriorly to the inferior vena cava. The renal arteries carry a large
portion of the total blood flow to the kidneys. Up to a third of the
total cardiac output can pass through the renal arteries to be filtered
by the kidneys.
The ureters are two tubes that drain urine from the kidneys
to the bladder. Each ureter is a muscular tube about 10 inches (25 cm)
long. Muscles in the walls of the ureters send the urine in small
spurts into the bladder, (a collapsible sac found on the forward part
of the cavity of the bony pelvis that allows temporary storage of
urine). After the urine enters the bladder from the ureters, small
folds in the bladder mucosa act like valves peventing backward flow of
the urine. The outlet of the bladder is controlled by a sphincter
muscle. A full bladder stimulates sensory nerves in the bladder wall
that relax the sphincter and allow release of the urine. However,
relaxation of the sphincter is also in part a learned response under
voluntary control. The released urine enters the urethra.
Urinary Bladder
The urinary bladder is a hollow, muscular and distendible or
elastic organ that sits on the pelvic floor (superior to the prostate
in males). On its anterior border lies the pubic symphysis and, on its
posterior border, the vagina (in females) and rectum (in males). The
urinary bladder can hold approximately 17 to 18 ounces (500 to 530 ml)
of urine, however the desire to micturate is usually experienced when
it contains about 150 to 200 ml. When the bladder fills with urine
(about half full), stretch receptors send nerve impulses to the spinal
cord, which then sends a reflex nerve impulse back to the sphincter
(muscular valve) at the neck of the bladder, causing it to relax and
allow the flow of urine into the urethra. The Internal urethral
sphincter is involuntary. The ureters enter the bladder diagonally from
its dorsolateral floor in an area called the trigone. The trigone is a
triangular shaped area on the postero-inferior wall of the bladder. The
urethra exits at the lowest point of the triangle of the trigone. The
urine in the bladder also helps regulate body temperature. If the
bladder becomes completely void of fluid, it causes the patient to
chill.
Urethra
Female urethra (labeled at bottom right.)
Male Sphincter urethrae muscle - The male urethra laid open on its
anterior (upper) surface. (Region visible, but muscle not labeled.)
The urethra is a muscular tube that connects the bladder with
the outside of the body. The function of the urethra is to remove urine
from the body. It measures about 1.5 inches (3.8 cm) in a woman but up
to 8 inches (20 cm) in a man. Because the urethra is so much shorter in
a woman it makes it much easier for a woman to get harmful bacteria in
her bladder this is commonly called a bladder infection or a UTI. The
most common bacteria of a UTI is E-coli from the large intestines that
have been excreted in fecal matter. Female urethra
In the human female, the urethra is about 1-2 inches long and opens in the vulva between the clitoris and the vaginal opening.
Men have a longer urethra than women. This means that women tend to
be more susceptible to infections of the bladder (cystitis) and the
urinary tract.
Male urethra
In the human male, the urethra is about 8 inches (20 cm) long and opens at the end of the penis.
The length of a male's urethra, and the fact it contains a number of bends, makes catheterisation more difficult.
The urethral sphincter is a collective name for the
muscles used to control the flow of urine from the urinary bladder.
These muscles surround the urethra, so that when they contract, the
urethra is closed.
- There are two distinct areas of muscle: the internal sphincter, at the bladder neck and
- the external, or distal, sphincter.
Human males have much stronger sphincter muscles than females,
meaning that they can retain a large amount of urine for twice as long,
as much as 800mL, i.e. "hold it".
Nephrons
A nephron is the basic structural and functional unit of the kidney.
The name nephron comes from the Greek word (nephros) meaning kidney.
Its chief function is to regulate water and soluble substances by
filtering the blood, reabsorbing what is needed and excreting the rest
as urine. Nephrons eliminate wastes from the body, regulate blood
volume and pressure, control levels of electrolytes and metabolites,
and regulate blood pH. Its functions are vital to life and are
regulated by the endocrine system by hormones such as antidiuretic
hormone, aldosterone, and parathyroid hormone.
Each nephron has its own supply of blood from two capillary regions
from the renal artery. Each nephron is composed of an initial filtering
component (the renal corpuscle) and a tubule specialized for
reabsorption and secretion (the renal tubule). The renal corpuscle
filters out large solutes from the blood, delivering water and small
solutes to the renal tubule for modification.
Glomerulus
The glomerulus is a capillary tuft that receives its blood supply
from an afferent arteriole of the renal circulation. The glomerular
blood pressure provides the driving force for fluid and solutes to be
filtered out of the blood and into the space made by Bowman's capsule.
The remainder of the blood not filtered into the glomerulus passes into
the narrower efferent arteriole. It then moves into the vasa recta,
which are collecting capillaries intertwined with the convoluted
tubules through the interstitial space, where the reabsorbed substances
will also enter. This then combines with efferent venules from other
nephrons into the renal vein, and rejoins with the main bloodstream.
Afferent/Efferent Arterioles
The afferent arteriole supplies blood to the glomerulus. A group of specialized cells known as juxtaglomerular cells
are located around the afferent arteriole where it enters the renal
corpuscle. The efferent arteriole drains the glomerulus. Between the
two arterioles lies specialized cells called the macula densa. The juxtaglomerular cells and the macula densa collectively form the juxtaglomerular apparatus. It is in the juxtaglomerular apparatus cells that the enzyme renin
is formed and stored. Renin is released in response to decreased blood
pressure in the afferent arterioles, decreased sodium chloride in the
distal convoluted tubule and sympathetic nerve stimulation of receptors
(beta-adrenic) on the juxtaglomerular cells. Renin is needed to form
Angiotensin I and Angiotensin II which stimulate the secretion of
aldosterone by the adrenal cortex.
Glomerular Capsule or Bowman's Capsule
Bowman's capsule (also called the glomerular capsule)
surrounds the glomerulus and is composed of visceral (simple squamous
epithelial cells) (inner) and parietal (simple squamous epithelial
cells) (outer) layers. The visceral layer lies just beneath the
thickened glomerular basement membrane and is made of podocytes which
send foot processes over the length of the glomerulus. Foot processes
interdigitate with one another forming filtration slits that, in
contrast to those in the glomeruluar endothelium, are spanned by
diaphragms. The size of the filtration slits restricts the passage of
large molecules (eg, albumin) and cells (eg, red blood cells and
platelets). In addition, foot processes have a negatively-charged coat
(glycocalyx) that limits the filtration of negatively-charged
molecules, such as albumin. This action is called electrostatic
repulsion.
The parietal layer of Bowman's capsule is lined by a single layer of
squamous epithelium. Between the visceral and parietal layers is
Bowman's space, into which the filtrate enters after passing through
the podocytes' filtration slits. It is here that smooth muscle cells
and macrophages lie between the capillaries and provide support for
them. Unlike the visceral layer, the parietal layer does not function
in filtration. Rather, the filtration barrier is formed by three
components: the diaphragms of the filtration slits, the thick
glomerular basement membrane, and the glycocalyx secreted by podocytes.
99% of glomerular filtrate will ultimately be reabsorbed.
The process of filtration of the blood in the Bowman's capsule is
ultrafiltration (or glomerular filtration), and the normal rate of
filtration is 125 ml/min, equivalent to ten times the blood volume
daily. Measuring the glomerular filtration rate (GFR) is a diagnostic
test of kidney function. A decreased GFR may be a sign of renal
failure. Conditions that can effect GFR include: arterial pressure,
afferent arteriole constriction, efferent arteriole constriction,
plasma protein concentration and colloid osmotic pressure.
Any proteins that are roughly 30 kilodaltons or under can pass
freely through the membrane. Although, there is some extra hindrance
for negatively charged molecules due to the negative charge of the
basement membrane and the podocytes. Any small molecules such as water,
glucose, salt (NaCl), amino acids, and urea pass freely into Bowman's
space, but cells, platelets and large proteins do not. As a result, the
filtrate leaving the Bowman's capsule is very similar to blood plasma
in composition as it passes into the proximal convoluted tubule.
Together, the glomerulus and Bowman's capsule are called the renal
corpuscle.
Proximal Convoluted Tubule (PCT)
The proximal tubule can be anatomically divided into two segments:
the proximal convoluted tubule and the proximal straight tubule. The
proximal convoluted tubule can be divided further into S1 and S2
segments based on the histological appearance of it's cells. Following
this naming convention, the proximal straight tubule is commonly called
the S3 segment. The proximal convoluted tubule has one layer of
cuboidal cells in the lumen. This is the only place in the nephron that
contains cuboidal cells. These cells are covered with millions of
microvilli. The microvilli serve to increase surface area for
reabsorption.
Fluid in the filtrate entering the proximal convoluted tubule is
reabsorbed into the peritubular capillaries, including approximately
two-thirds of the filtered salt and water and all filtered organic
solutes (primarily glucose and amino acids). This is driven by sodium
transport from the lumen into the blood by the Na+/K+ ATPase in the
basolateral membrane of the epithelial cells. Much of the mass movement
of water and solutes occurs in between the cells through the tight
junctions, which in this case are not selective.
The solutes are absorbed isotonically, in that the osmotic potential
of the fluid leaving the proximal tubule is the same as that of the
initial glomerular filtrate. However, glucose, amino acids, inorganic
phosphate, and some other solutes are reabsorbed via secondary active
transport through cotransport channels driven by the sodium gradient
out of the nephron.
Loop of the Nephron or Loop of Henle
The Nephron Loop or Loop of Henle.
The loop of Henle (sometimes known as the nephron loop) is a
U-shaped tube that consists of a descending limb and ascending limb. It
begins in the cortex, receiving filtrate from the proximal convoluted
tubule, extends into the medulla, and then returns to the cortex to
empty into the distal convoluted tubule. Its primary role is to
concentrate the salt in the interstitium, the tissue surrounding the
loop.
- Descending limb
- Its descending limb is permeable to water but completely
impermeable to salt, and thus only indirectly contributes to the
concentration of the interstitium. As the filtrate descends deeper into
the hypertonic interstitium of the renal medulla, water flows freely
out of the descending limb by osmosis until the tonicity of the
filtrate and interstitium equilibrate. Longer descending limbs allow
more time for water to flow out of the filtrate, so longer limbs make
the filtrate more hypertonic than shorter limbs.
- Ascending limb
- Unlike the descending limb, the ascending limb of Henle's loop is
impermeable to water, a critical feature of the countercurrent exchange
mechanism employed by the loop. The ascending limb actively pumps
sodium out of the filtrate, generating the hypertonic interstitium that
drives countercurrent exchange. In passing through the ascending limb,
the filtrate grows hypotonic since it has lost much of its sodium
content. This hypotonic filtrate is passed to the distal convoluted
tubule in the renal cortex.
Distal Convoluted Tubule (DCT)
The distal convoluted tubule is similar to the proximal convoluted
tubule in structure and function. Cells lining the tubule have numerous
mitochondria, enabling active transport to take place by the energy
supplied by ATP. Much of the ion transport taking place in the distal
convoluted tubule is regulated by the endocrine system. In the presence
of parathyroid hormone, the distal convoluted tubule reabsorbs more
calcium and excretes more phosphate. When aldosterone is present, more
sodium is reabsorbed and more potassium excreted. Atrial natriuretic
peptide causes the distal convoluted tubule to excrete more sodium. In
addition, the tubule also secretes hydrogen and ammonium to regulate
pH. After traveling the length of the distal convoluted tubule, only 3%
of water remains, and the remaining salt content is negligible. 97.9%
of the water in the glomerular filtrate enters the convoluted tubules
and collecting ducts by osmosis.
Collecting ducts
Each distal convoluted tubule delivers its filtrate to a system of
collecting ducts, the first segment of which is the connecting tubule.
The collecting duct system begins in the renal cortex and extends deep
into the medulla. As the urine travels down the collecting duct system,
it passes by the medullary interstitium which has a high sodium
concentration as a result of the loop of Henle's countercurrent
multiplier system. Though the collecting duct is normally impermeable
to water, it becomes permeable in the presence of antidiuretic hormone
(ADH). As much as three-fourths of the water from urine can be
reabsorbed as it leaves the collecting duct by osmosis. Thus the levels
of ADH determine whether urine will be concentrated or dilute.
Dehydration results in an increase in ADH, while water sufficiency
results in low ADH allowing for diluted urine. Lower portions of the
collecting duct are also permeable to urea, allowing some of it to
enter the medulla of the kidney, thus maintaining its high ion
concentration (which is very important for the nephron).
Urine leaves the medullary collecting ducts through the renal
papilla, emptying into the renal calyces, the renal pelvis, and finally
into the bladder via the ureter. Because it has a different embryonic
origin than the rest of the nephron (the collecting duct is from
endoderm whereas the nephron is from mesoderm), the collecting duct is
usually not considered a part of the nephron proper.
Renal Hormones
1. Vitamin D- Becomes metabolically active in the kidney. Patients
with renal disease have symptoms of disturbed calcium and phosphate
balance.
2. Erythropoietin- Released by the kidneys in response to decreased tissue oxygen levels (hypoxia).
3. Natriuretic Hormone- Released from cardiocyte granules located in
the right atria of the heart in response to increased atrial stretch.
It inhibits ADH secretions which can contribute to the loss of sodium
and water. |