Renal Anatomy
Basic Renal Processes
Micturition
Water Balance
Electrolyte Balance
100

The tube that carries urine from the kidney to the urinary bladder.

Ureter

100

The process by which blood pressure forces plasma from glomerular capillaries into Bowman’s capsule

Filtration

100

The organ that stores urine before it is expelled from the body.

Urinary bladder

100

The hormone that increases water reabsorption in the collecting ducts of the kidney.

ADH(Vasopressin)

100

The primary extracellular cation responsible for maintaining fluid balance and osmotic pressure.

Sodium

200

The funnel-shaped structure in the kidney that collects urine from the major calyces before it enters the ureter.

Renal Pelvis

200

The passive movement of water across a membrane driven by a difference in solute concentration.

Osmosis

200

The nervous system division that stimulates bladder contraction during the micturition reflex.

Parasympathetic

200

The region of the brain that detects changes in blood osmolarity and stimulates thirst.

Hypothalamus

200

The hormone that increases sodium reabsorption and potassium secretion in the distal nephron.

Answer:

Aldosterone

300

The outer region of the kidney that contains glomeruli and convoluted tubules.

Cortex

300

The mechanism that concentrates urine by creating an osmotic gradient in the renal medulla using the loop of Henle.

Countercurrent

300

The skeletal muscle sphincter that allows voluntary control of urination.

External

300

The membrane proteins inserted into collecting duct cells that allow water to move across the cell membrane.

Aquaporins

300

The nephron segment responsible for reabsorbing about 25% of filtered sodium and targeted by loop diuretics.

Thick Ascending loop

400

The muscles of the bladder are responsible for the expulsion of urine

Detrussor

400

The process by which the kidneys regulate acid–base balance by removing hydrogen ions from the blood into the tubular fluid.

Secretion

400

The brainstem center that coordinates relaxation of urethral sphincters with bladder contraction.

Pontine

400

The hormone released from the adrenal cortex that increases sodium reabsorption and indirectly promotes water retention.

Aldosterone

400

The hormone released by the parathyroid glands that increases calcium reabsorption in the kidney and mobilizes calcium from bone.

Parathormone

500

The microscopic structure of the distal tubule, where the distal convoluted tubule comes into contact with the afferent arteriole, regulates filtration

Macula densa

500

The rate at which fluid is filtered from glomerular capillaries into Bowman’s capsule, commonly used to measure kidney function.

GFR

500

The sensory receptors in the bladder wall that detect bladder filling and initiate the micturition reflex.

Stretch receptors

500

The hormone released from the heart that promotes sodium and water excretion when blood volume is high.

Atrial Natriuretic Peptide (ANP)

500

The nephron segment where most magnesium reabsorption occurs through paracellular transport.

Ascending