Water losses from the body
Water and mineral ions are lost from the body.
| Excretory organ | Substances lost | Control |
|---|---|---|
| Lungs | Water (in exhaled air) | No control |
| Skin | Water, ions, urea (in sweat) | No control |
| Kidney | Water, ions, urea (in urine) | Controlled (regulated by the body) |
Osmotic changes and cells
Water can enter or leave animal cells by osmosis.
If body cells lose or gain too much water by osmosis they do not function efficiently.
If body cells gain too much water, they can swell and burst
If body cells lose to much water they can shrivel up.
Therefore, it is important to maintain water levels in the body.
Function of kidneys
The kidneys have two main functions:
1. Filter the blood to produce urine
2. Maintain water balance in the body.
Filtering the blood by the kidneys to produce urine.
Each kidney contains about 1 million nephrons which act as filtering units.
As the blood passes through the kidney its filtered to remove excess substances.
| Substances filtered out of the blood by the kidneys | Not filtered out of the blood by the kidneys |
|---|---|
| Glucose | Blood cells |
| Amino acids | Protein |
| Mineral ions | |
| Urea | |
| Water |
After filtration, selective reabsorption occurs to reabsorb useful substances such as glucose, some ions and water. Substances that are not reabsorbed are excreted from the body in the urine.
Data analysis
This is a summary based on the data in the table below
1.Glucose is completely reabsorbed (present before, absent after).
2.Some ions are reabsorbed (amount decreases).
3.Urea is not reabsorbed and is excreted (higher concentration in urine). Concentration increases because water is reabsorbed, so urea concentration will increase.
| Substance | Concentration in blood before filtration (arbitrary units) | Concentration in urine after filtration (arbitrary units) |
|---|---|---|
| Glucose | 90 | 0 |
| Ions | 60 | 20 |
| Urea | 30 | 45 |
The data may also be presented using a bar chart or other data format. You will also need to draw conclusions on the data.
Nitrogen balance and deamination
When we eat foods containing protein, the proteins are digested using protease enzymes to form amino acids.
The amino acids are absorbed into the blood from the small intestine.
Excess amino acids undergo a process called deamination in the liver to form ammonia. Ammonia is toxic, so it is converted to urea for excretion.
Deamination is the removal of the amino group from an amino acid. See the image below.
Hormonal control of water
Receptors in the hypothalamus of the brain detect the water content of the blood.
If the blood is too concentrated the pituitary gland will secrete Anti diuretic hormone (ADH) into the blood.
ADH will travel in the blood to the kidney tubules where it makes them more permeable to water, so more water is reabsorbed.
This means a smaller volume of more concentrated urine is produced.
This feedback mechanism is controlled by negative feedback.
If the blood is too dilute, the pituitary gland secretes less ADH, so less water is reabsorbed in the kidney tubules, so a larger volume of more dilute urine is produced.
Kidney failure treatments
When the kidneys fail, urea builds up in the blood, which is toxic. Water and ion balance becomes uncontrolled. There are two main treatment options:
1.Kidney dialysis
2.Kidney transplant
Kidney Dialysis.
Dialysis is used when the kidneys fail to remove:
Urea
Excess ions
Excess water
It works by diffusion across a partially permeable membrane.
Dialysis fluid contains:
Dialysis fluid:
Contains normal concentrations of glucose and ions
Contains no urea
This ensures:
Urea diffuses out of blood
Glucose does NOT diffuse out of the blood (no concentration gradient)
Correct ion balance maintained
How dialysis works
1.Blood flows from patient into dialysis machine
2.Blood flows past dialysis fluid
3.Blood and dialysis fluid are separated by partially permeable membrane
4.Urea diffuses from blood into the dialysis fluid
5.Useful substances (glucose) remain in blood
6.Clean blood returned to patient
See the image below
In the diagram below the dialysis machine has been simplified to make it easier to see.
Concentration of glucose in the dialysis fluid is equal to the blood, so glucose will not diffuse out of the blood.
Concentration of urea is greater in the blood than the dialysis fluid, so the urea will diffuse from the blood into the dialysis fluid, where it is taken away.
| Advantages to dialysis | Disadvantages to dialysis |
|---|---|
| No major surgery | Time consuming, each session is approx 4 hours and several sessions per week are needed |
| Can be used immediately | Expensive long term |
| No donor needed | Strict diet and fluid limits |
Kidney Transplants
A kidney transplant is a treatment for organ failure. This is where a failed organ is replaced with a donor organ.
For kidneys, the new kidney is surgically inserted into the body.
There is a risk that the recipient’s immune system may reject the new donor organ because it will have different antigens to the receipient’s own cells.
The risk of rejection can be reduced by:
1.Tissue typing (finding a close match)
2.Using immunosupressant drugs which suppress the immune system. However, this can increase the risk of the receipient developing an infection.
| Advantages of a kidney transplant | Disadvantages of kidney transplant |
|---|---|
| No more dialysis sessions needed | There is a risk of organ rejection |
| More normal lifestyle | Risk of surgery |
| More cost effective long term | Need immunosuppressant drugs which increase the risk of infections |
Practice Questions
1.Explain why cells must maintain the correct water content.
2.Describe what happens to excess amino acids in the liver.
3.Describe how kidney dialysis removes urea from the blood.
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