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Week 12 Overview. Musculoskeletal test Turn in page 112 from syllabus and 2 puzzles (handout) Review the midterm Go over Reproductive (syllabus) Urinary System Lecture pages 310-335 Endocrine Assignment page 121 Week 13- make up tests- sign up and preparation for the endocrine presentation
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Week 12 Overview • Musculoskeletal test • Turn in page 112 from syllabus and 2 puzzles (handout) • Review the midterm • Go over Reproductive (syllabus) • Urinary System Lecture pages 310-335 • Endocrine Assignment page 121 • Week 13- make up tests- sign up and preparation for the endocrine presentation • Homework
Introduction The urinary system consists of the following organs Kidneys Ureters Bladder Urethra meatus The Urinary System
Functions • Excretion of waste products of metabolism • (nephrotoxic) • Excrete certain drugs an other substances • Control Fluid (water and electrolytes) • Maintain a constant acid-base balance
Other Functions(To protect renal function, non-excretory functions) • Secrete rennin to help regulate blood pressure • RBC production • Bone metabolism- vitamin D metabolism
Ureters • 28-35 cm long • Function: conduct urine to urine to urinary bladder • Location: they arise from the pelvis of their own kidney • c. Made of: epithelia lining • d. How they work: peristaltic contractions
Urinary Bladder • Function: to store urine • Location: in front of the • pelvis • It is a muscular sac and it can hold 300-500cc • of urine. When the nerve endings receive • stimuli that are transmitted to the reflex • centers in the spinal cord, the internal sphincter • located just above the point of insertion of the urethra • into the bladder relaxes and allows the expulsion of the • bladder contents. The external sphincter is normally under • voluntary control after the age of three years.
Function: It is a small duct that channels urine outside of the body from the bladder. • Location: • Female: it is 3-5 cm long and opens just above the vagina. The external opening is called the urethra meatus. The external sphincter is located in the middle of the urethra. The urethra serves simply as a tube through which the urine flowing from the bladder makes an exit from the body. • Male: It is about 20 cm long, originating at the bladder and traversing the length of the penis. The urethra meatus through which urine is discharged is located at the tip of the glans penis. Urethra Meatus
a. Function:It is the chief regulator of homeostasis and of the body’s internal environment. • b. Location: These are reddish-brown, bean-shaped, and highly vascular organs. Each kidney is located on each side of the spinal column and just below the diaphragm. They area usually about 12 cm long in the adult. The adrenal glands are located just above each kidney (supra-renal). The position of the liver causes the right kidney to be slightly lower than the left. The duodenum and ascending colon lie in front of the right kidney, while the spleen and descending colon lie in front of the left one. Each kidney is surrounded by fat and encapsulated in fibrous tissue (perirenal) a fat layer to protect it.
Kidney’s Anatomic Structure(three regions) • a. Cortex- (Greek for bark, outer layer) It has a granular appearance. Most of the nephron is located here. • Includes proximal convoluted and distal convoluted tubules • Glomeruli- glomerular filtration, the key to urine formation • Includes the renal columns • ( -90% of the blood filtered by the cortex) • b. Medulla • Renal pyramids, Loop of Henle • Pelvis • Major and minor calyces (cuplike structures) • It can hole 3-5
NEPHRON OF THE KIDNEY LOCATED IN THE CORTEX: This is the kidney’s functional unit. This is where the filtering process takes place. There are approximately 1,000,000 nephrons in each kidney. The nephrons are located in the cortex of the kidney. It is comprised of the glomerulus, Bowman’s capsule, proximal convoluted tubule, the loop of Henle, the distal convoluted tubule, collecting tubules, an afferent vessel, efferent vessel, and a capillary network. • The work of the nephron is the formation of urine. Basically the nephrons perform two main activities; Mechanical filtration of fluids, wastes, electrolytes, acids and bases into the tubular system and selective reabsorption and secretion of ions back to the body’s system. Urination, micturition, or voiding is the normal process of excreting urine.
Diagnostic Procedures • Catheterization- a technique in which a hollow, flexible tube is used to drain body fluids (such as urine) • Cystoscopy- examination of the bladder using an instrument called a cystoscope • IVP- intravenous pyelogram-a test that examines the urinary system using a contrast medium that can be seen on x-rays to show possible obstructions, tumors, cysts, stones, and other abnormalities. • UA- urinalysis- laboratory examination of urine for various cells and chemicals, such as red blood cells, white blood cells, infection, or excessive protein
Pathology • Anuria- without urine production • Polyuria- much urine production • Dysuria- difficult or painful urination • Nocturia- urinating at night
Nephrolithiasis- kidney stones • Nephritis- inflammation of the kidney • Nephrosis- abnormal condition of the kidney
Nephrosclerosis- hardening of the kidney • Nephroptosis- downward displacement of the kidney • Glomerulonephritis- Inflammation of the Glomeruli of the kidney
Pyelitis- inflammation of the renal pelvis • Pyelonephritis- inflammation of the pelvis of the kidney • Cystitis- inflammation of the urinary bladder
Diuresis- Removing excess fluid from the body through increased urine output • Enuresis- bedwetting • Urethrorrhea- discharge from the urethra • Oliguria- scanty urine production • Incontinence- Loss of bladder and/or bowel control
Procedures • Dialysis- the artificial process of cleaning wastes from the blood when kidneys fail • Hemodialysis- the use of a machine to clean wastes from the blood after the kidneys have failed. The blood travels through tubes to a dialyzer (DY-uh-LY-zur), a machine that removes wastes and extra fluid. The cleaned blood then goes back into the body.
Lithotripsy- crushing of stone • Nephrectomy- removal of a kidney • Nephropexy- surgical fixation of a kidney • Cystectomy- removal of the urinary bladder • Lithotomy- incision to remove a stone
Abbreviations • BUN- blood urea nitrogen • Cr- creatinine-a substance in the blood (a piece of a protein) which should be at a constant level in the blood. • IVP- intravenous pyelogram
KUB- kidney, ureter, bladder • pH- acid-base balance • UA- urinalysis • C&S- culture and sensitivity • GU- genitourinary
BPH- benign prostatic hypertrophy • TURP- transurethral resection of the prostate
GTT- glucose tolerance test • FBS- fasting blood sugar • PSA- prostate specific antigen
Medications • Diuretic • Sulfur Drugs • Cranberry Juice • Pyridium
WEEK #12 – URINARY SYSTEM ELEMENTS • (use with your textbook for CD-Rom) • Element Meaning • carcin/o cancer • cyst/o bladder • erythr/o red • glomerul/o glomerulus, little ball • gluc/o sugar • glyc/o sugar • hemat/o blood • lith/o stone/calculus • nephr/o kidney
ELEMENT MEANING • noct/o night • olig/o scanty/little • poly- many, much • py/o pus • pyel/o renal pelvis • rect/o rectum • ren/o kidney • scler/o hardening • ureter/o ureter • urethr/o urethra • ur/o urine • vesic/o bladder • -al,-ic,-ous pertaining to • -cele hernia- • -cyte cell
ELEMENT MEANING • -ectasis dilation, expansion • -edema swelling • -gram record, a writing • -graphy process of recording • -iasis abnormal condition by • -lith stone, calculus • -megaly enlargement • -oma tumor • -pathy disease • -pexy fixation • -ptosis prolapse, downward displacement
ELEMENT MEANING • -rrhaphy suture • -scope instrument to view • -scopy visual examination • -stenosis narrowing stricture • -stomy forming a new opening • -tripsy crushing • -uria urine, urination • a-, an- without, not • dys- bad, painful, difficult • poly many, much
Review- Urinary and Reproductive Test • Page 119 in syllabus
Homework • Complete pages 336-347 (book), • Interactive CD • Complete pg. 119 (syllabus) • Study for make-up test • Prepare for endocrine presentation