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Water content of the blood normal

Water content of the blood HIGH. Water content of the blood LOW. Too much water drunk. Too much salt or sweating. Brain produces More ADH. Brain produces Less ADH. Water content of the blood normal. Low volume of water reabsorbed by kidney. High volume of water

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Water content of the blood normal

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  1. Water content of the blood HIGH Water content of the blood LOW Too much water drunk Too much salt or sweating Brain produces More ADH Brain produces Less ADH Water content of the blood normal Low volume of water reabsorbed by kidney High volume of water reabsorbed by kidney Urine output HIGH Urine output LOW (small volume of Concentrated urine) (large volume of dilute urine)

  2. Click on the screen icon below to run the tutorial (then click the mouse button to make it play through)

  3. All land animals need to conserve water. This is because the external environment is usually drier than the internal environment of the animal’s body. Thus, water will tend to diffuse away from the body. There is also a need to excrete waste products such as urea, which is dissolved in water. This creates a problem! In mammals, the kidneys are responsible for both excretion of urea and osmoregulation (the control of body fluid concentration). So, the kidney must balance the need to excrete with the need to conserve water, in other words it must produce a small volume of highly concentrated urine.

  4. The operating unit of the kidney is called the nephron. • There are about 1 million nephrons in each of the 2 kidneys. • Each nephron comprises 5 segments: • Glomerulus • Proximal (first) convoluted tubule • Loop of Henle • Distal (second) convoluted tubule • Collecting duct • The Loop of Henle allows mammals to produce urine which is more concentrated than body fluids…...

  5. Cortex Medulla Ureter The nephrons are packed into the kidney: the glomeruli and convoluted tubules in the cortex, the loops and collecting ducts extending into the medulla. All the collecting ducts eventually join up to form the ureter, emptying urine into the bladder and away!

  6. Cortex Water leaves - ion concentration in filtrate increases Chloride ions out (sodium follows) -ion concentration in filtrate decreases Increasing concentration Medulla Filtrate reaches maximum concentration

  7. Cortex Collecting duct • Several nephrons empty into one collecting duct. • The collecting duct passes through the progressively more concentrated medulla, losing water by osmosis. This water is reabsorbed by the capillaries. • This water is conserved, and a highly concentrated urine is produced. Increasing concentration Water reabsorbed into vasa recta, urine becomes more concentrated Medulla To ureter

  8. Beaver Human The length of the loop of Henle is related to the environment that the animal lives in. A longer loop will conserve more water, so animals in drier environments have longer loops. Desert Rat

  9. Now test yourself (if the test doesn’t appear straight away, click on ‘Reload’) Be warned - this test requires you to understand everything that goes on in the nephron Not for the faint-hearted!

  10. This powerpoint was kindly donated to www.worldofteaching.com http://www.worldofteaching.com is home to over a thousand powerpoints submitted by teachers. This is a completely free site and requires no registration. Please visit and I hope it will help in your teaching.

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