Pssst... we made flashcards to help you review the content in this episode! Find them on the free Crash Course App! Download it here for Apple Devices: apple.co/3d4eyZo Download it here for Android Devices: bit.ly/2SrDulJ
My final in Anatomy 2 is on the urinary system and my professor really rushed the lectures on it so as always I came to crash course for help and as ALWAYS I was saved. I thought I hated this system but now (as with all the other systems I thought I hated at first, yes endocrine, I'm looking at you) I think its really cool and that's all thanks to crash course. So thank you for existing and for helping me make it to the next step in my medical career. Nursing school here I come !
Thank you Crash Course for existing and saving my semester! I find it amazing that you do so much just to help students understand concepts, asking for nothing in return. Thank you again!
I wish this video talked about the hormonal influences in much more detail. Like more than just a note about the renin-aldosterone-ADH mechanism. But great series though.
+DaCamponTwee There are many components to studying anatomy. One resource I discovered which successfully combines these is the Anatomy Blueprint Pro (google it if you're interested) without a doubt the most useful course i've heard of. Check out this awesome website.
Tasting urine used to be quite common up into the early 21 century. It was an easy method to see if someone has diabetes or not. If they do, the urinary system will do anything to remove the glucose in the blood, resulting in the patient peeing an awful lot and the urine tasting sweet.
+BBBuilds12 Would've actually been funny if you skipped the explanation and just said "urine" instead of you're in. Also, laughing at your own joke....
AMAZING SERIES. These videos are so helpful! Thanks to you it's so much easier learning the different systems of the bodies (rather than READING all the info)... You absolutely MADE MY DAY with the joke at 0:05 , quoting "The Dude"!
Thank you crash course, for making part 2 on the urinary system materia. This material is very difficult to understand but at least this video helps me even a little.
Technically Hank Doctors don't study pee Medical Scientists like me do. Doctors go over it in school but usually in a hospital the nurse or doctor will collect the pee and send it down to the lab for analysis. Most of the urine that comes into the lab will have a quick chemical test, if anything comes up on that test it is examined microscopically and if the Medical Scientists are at a complete lack of words for what is going on (be it either an unidentified crystal or unrecognizable WBC then it will be forwarded to the local Pathologist who will analyze it and tell the doctor what's going on. Your presentation was otherwise flawless with accurate science and proper terms. Good job, and looking forward to next weeks presentation. -DJS Medical Laboratory Scientist (ASCP)
after I watched a video discussing the urinary system I understood the process of glomerular filtration, where blood is filtered in small thread balls filled with clomerized blood. the higher pressure in the blood must push more plasma out of the capillaries into the glomerulaldehyde. The problem is that the kidneys can only handle so much filtrate at one time, so they must maintain a constant rate of fluid within them. This is known as the glomerular filtration rate, or how much blood passes through the glomerular eye every minute. Antidiuretic hormone or ADH, which is secreted by the pituitary gland post to help the body retain water and stay hydrated. The part of the nephron that reabsorbs water, as water descends, has to move easily through the cells from the filtrate into the blood. specialized protein channels in the membrane called aquaporates that are on the apical or filtrate facing side and the basal or capillary facing side of cells. In contrast, collecting duct landing cells only have aquaporants on the basal side, so not usually much reabsorption occurs there. But ADH triggers those cells to move their stored aquaporan to the apical side, which allows more water to be excreted from the urine. As discussed below, urine enters the thin but muscular urethra by passing through the internal urethral sphincter. the automatic nervous system keeps it awake whenever the body does not urinate. Impulses triggered by stretch receptors go to the pool and other higher brain centers that provide the body with a conscious palate that the body must urinate. Most of these activate the pontine storage area which prevents urination by inhibiting parasympathetic activity and increasing sympathetic output. Of course, the longer you hold it, the more the bladder fills, and eventually the urge to urinate becomes too strong to ignore, at which point the Pontine Mixturation Center goes into action overriding the previous command and opens up the midsection so the body can finally clink.
thank you so much for making these videos, it helps summarize the big picture renal Function. I can return the favor clarifying some language: urinarion is the process of producing urine, technically we are urinating every moment of every day. Micturation is the procession of excreting urine from the body…
Do crashcourse have videos on disease and pharmacology on hypertension, angina pectoris and other types of diseases? Love all the other videos, and it helps alot with meds studies! :)
One time at a summer camp, it was 120 degrees (in Kansas) and I was at a rifle shooting class and I left early cause I finished everything. I had drank all my water and the water at the range was warm and slimey, and the range was really far from any other sources of water and I collapsed on the way back to camp and woke up 10 minutes later. I "zombied" back to camp and drank like 3 liters of water and like .8 liters of Gatorade and I was peeing every 4 minutes and if I waited any longer my bladder would become unbearably painful like one of the worst pains I've ever felt
Also I learned the truth about how the process of urination works. Often we don't realize how something really works until it stops working. I have an autonomic nervous system disorder. So my bladder would just decide that now is the time. Lol. And I could not override it. I went for a time where it decided every 15 minutes for hours on end was the time. I was basically disabled. I always had assumed that going potty was a matter of gravity. We voluntarily opened the hatch and gravity did the rest. Nope. It's a contraction. And it is pushed out. At times I felt like I was fighting a war. And sometimes I won. Sometimes not. Sometimes my ANS would just be off by a few seconds. Like I'm just 10 feet from the toilet, can't you wait just a few more seconds? My bladder says: nah close enough.
Out of curiosity, while you were fighting this (or perhaps if you still are), did you end up using adult diaper-like undergarments? Or were you left to just cross your fingers and hope you could make it? I'm studying to be a veterinary technician, and I know that one of the things we do for dogs is offer a type of hormone replacement therapy. There are also a couple of different drugs we can offer to clients to help reduce their pets' incontinence. Did they have any kind of medication that they offered you to help out with your autonomic nervous system disorder? Thanks for sharing your experience. :D I'm studying the urinary system and this is pretty interesting to me.
+Aaron Simon it seems the only medications they offered were for frequency and they didn't seem to help much. I used some products, mostly just feminine hygiene type things but I preferred not to because the fight was so difficult that it was too tempting to just always let it go. I would become too dependent. So if at all possible I chose to keep up the fight. Sometimes I was literally out of breath by the time I got to the restroom. It is better mostly because of surgery to remove an abscess that seemed to aggravate it. I think the pain of it set off my ANS to constantly try to empty. Also I'm on some meds for other ANS issues involving smooth muscle pain that has made a big difference. Amitriptyline has made a big difference in that and my gastric pain.
Hats off for your enviable adaptive capability! As a former OCD patients and a medical student who has finished more than half of the med school journey by now, I hold the belief that every health flaw that a human happens to have in his body is counterbalanced by another one that he might not have realised or that has been masked by the suffer of the flaw. I used to have severe obsessive compulsive disorder (OCD) that has not settles down almost completely until about 1-2 years ago after a relatively long period of suffer and endurance that critically jeopardized my academic future. I was despairing regarding the possibility of its being cured ever in my life, but then it did. I then realised that it has added much to my personality, notably my patience, adaptability skills and maybe even more that is yet to be found out. I remember that I have read some literature that patients with OCD tend to have high-pitched observing abilities and tends to be smarter as well (which I don't approve of it completely XD ). The same goes for you Misty. The way you are dealing with your problem reflects masked compensatory features that you are somewhat privileged to have over other non-affected individuals. It is sort of micro-evolutionary processes that are happening behind the scenes somewhere in our body, notably the brain (the plasticity of our brains). Can I ask if the condition you have has a specific name that you may happen to know it? Thanks a lot for sharing your interesting story :)
Vidio ini menjelaskan bagaimana sistem kemih mengatur produksi urin, dengan mempertahankan laju aliran glomerulus, menjelaskan bagaimana anatomi menyimpan dan menggeluarkan urin dari uretra dan peran sistem saraf dalam mengendalikan tindakan buang air kecil
Is it just me that sets the playback speed to 0.5 because I can't catch a complete line and cope with the information presented! It's useful and it sounds funny too! I hope I destroy tomorrow's exam. I mean ace it!
Im here because im studying nanotech and im infatuated with nanofiltration,The fact that our bodies has a very very tedious filtration system is astounding and will not cease in its astonishment with time!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! #BIOMIMCRY
thank you for the explanation about urine, this video is very helpful. Urology tests can help detect many diseases based on the color, smell, clarity, and chemical composition of the sample. Urine also contains more than 3000 different chemical compounds, and increases in various concentrations. And it can tell us a lot about what's going on in the body.
done reproductive system. tomorrow having class about urinary system and this video is a good way for my basic first. MEDICINE rulezz. thanks Hank green! biggest fan of you and crashcourse really :)
I've watched a video about urinary system material part 2, this video material can really help to understand urinaria sytem .. the video is very good and interesting, thank you very much ..
Thank you for this video. So in the second video (video part 2) we explain how the urinary system regulates urine production, by maintaining the glomerular flow rate. The first process of urine formation is filtration or filtering. Filtration occurs in the malpighian bodies which consist of the glomerulus and Bowman's capsule. The glomerulus filters water, salts, glucose, amino acids, urea, and other wastes to pass through Bowman's capsule. The results of this filtration produce primary urine. The second process of urine formation is reabsorption. Reabsorption occurs in the proximal tubule of the nephron, the loop of Henle, the distal tubule, and the collecting tubule. water, glucose, amino acids, sodium, and other nutrients are reabsorbed into the bloodstream in the capillaries that surround the tubules. The third process is secretion. Hydrogen ions, potassium ions, calcium ions and ammonia are removed at this stage, as are some drugs. This is so that the chemical composition of the blood remains balanced and normal.
thanks for the making video. this video talked about hormonal influences in much more detail, like more than just a note about the renin-aldosterone-ADH menchanism
After I watched the video I found out the function of urinating or often called peeing. urine is usually about 95 percent water, slightly acidic - with a pH.The bladder wall of the bladder consists of three layers: OUTER MEMBRANE, INNER MUCOSA, DETRUSE.
Pssst... we made flashcards to help you review the content in this episode! Find them on the free Crash Course App!
Download it here for Apple Devices: apple.co/3d4eyZo
Download it here for Android Devices: bit.ly/2SrDulJ
Who needs a lecturer when you have Hank?
I do, and I want Hank to be my lecturer
I know I don't
Hank gives lectures
He got a haircut
Thought his hair was awful last episode and BOOM
Guess so
@Jens Harald his hair is perfectly fine, thank you very much! >:[
Came to say that
Respect the drip
Kieran
My final in Anatomy 2 is on the urinary system and my professor really rushed the lectures on it so as always I came to crash course for help and as ALWAYS I was saved. I thought I hated this system but now (as with all the other systems I thought I hated at first, yes endocrine, I'm looking at you) I think its really cool and that's all thanks to crash course. So thank you for existing and for helping me make it to the next step in my medical career. Nursing school here I come !
I appreciated the swinging male representation of the urinary tract at 5:32.
swiiingiiiinnn iiiin the wiiiind
It's accurate anatomy
XD
I spent lots of hours with you today, Hank. I deeply appreciate all of the knowledge you generously share.
Thank you Crash Course for existing and saving my semester! I find it amazing that you do so much just to help students understand concepts, asking for nothing in return. Thank you again!
well im pretty sure he makes money doing this. but hank is a pretty dope dude regardless
I wish this video talked about the hormonal influences in much more detail. Like more than just a note about the renin-aldosterone-ADH mechanism. But great series though.
I love these videos. Living beings are so complex and fascinating and sometimes a little scary.
+DaCamponTwee
Yeah, if only we could be more like them.
Indeed. Thanks to God that is so.
+DaCamponTwee There are many components to studying anatomy. One resource I discovered which successfully combines these is the Anatomy Blueprint Pro (google it if you're interested) without a doubt the most useful course i've heard of. Check out this awesome website.
Meanwhile I'm here because I don't pay attention in class
especially the eye video... *shivers*
I had a stomach surgery on Friday, and of course the nurses track my urination while I'm recovering. My high score was 800 ml.
Tasting urine used to be quite common up into the early 21 century. It was an easy method to see if someone has diabetes or not. If they do, the urinary system will do anything to remove the glucose in the blood, resulting in the patient peeing an awful lot and the urine tasting sweet.
If you quit peeing you're in trouble.(urine trouble). Get it? Hahaha. I'm sorry I had to.
😏
......
+BBBuilds12 Would've actually been funny if you skipped the explanation and just said "urine" instead of you're in. Also, laughing at your own joke....
One part of me says facepalm, the other says lmao, i think that's a win for you
😑
You may have actually saved my degree haha. Seriously though, thank you so much! Your videos make revision so much easier and way more fun.
1. Thank you for the Lebowski reference. 2. Noticed the haircut between part I and part II.
part 2 really helps me to study biomedical, the explanation is very detailed it's just that the language is limited but it's easy to understand
AMAZING SERIES. These videos are so helpful! Thanks to you it's so much easier learning the different systems of the bodies (rather than READING all the info)...
You absolutely MADE MY DAY with the joke at 0:05 , quoting "The Dude"!
CrashCourse's animations blow me away every time. And the Big Lebowski references are awesome!
"You could have heart failure" with such happy tone made me laugh a lot xD
"Join me, as we journey to the world of pee":- Hank, 2015
5:31 Really, CrashCourse? It had to sway in the breeze?
changing the speed to 0.5 = drunk professor :P
I NEVER THOUGHT TO DO THAT THANK U. I didn't like watching Hank's videos when I was in high-school because of how fast I thought he went.
You just increased my quality of life by 1,000,000 %
IT’S FREAKIN HILARIOUS
Hahaha. Awesome.
Thank you crash course, for making part 2 on the urinary system materia. This material is very difficult to understand but at least this video helps me even a little.
Your videos have helped me so much this semester but I fell in love when you referenced Lebowski ❤️
Loved the 'The Big Lebowski' reference :p
I have learned a lot about the urinary system and this video really helps me to want to learn more, thank you..
teaching me what my two hr lecture cant
what is a kidney stone? Could crash course do a video on that please? 😊
Ohhh...okay. Thanks!!!😄
...
i am STONED that you dont know, srry i couldn't hold that pun
Ted ed
You are the best bio and chem teacher in world
this is a good video after listening to it can increase knowledge about the urinary system part 2
Technically Hank Doctors don't study pee Medical Scientists like me do. Doctors go over it in school but usually in a hospital the nurse or doctor will collect the pee and send it down to the lab for analysis. Most of the urine that comes into the lab will have a quick chemical test, if anything comes up on that test it is examined microscopically and if the Medical Scientists are at a complete lack of words for what is going on (be it either an unidentified crystal or unrecognizable WBC then it will be forwarded to the local Pathologist who will analyze it and tell the doctor what's going on.
Your presentation was otherwise flawless with accurate science and proper terms. Good job, and looking forward to next weeks presentation.
-DJS Medical Laboratory Scientist (ASCP)
MLT here (but going back to school for MLS soon) and we've seen some naaaaaasty urines eh?
Thank you for sharing kind person.
hank probably knows that
@@sergiomadrigalmora9454 Hank knows all. Hank is God. Hank for President
BEST VIDEOS FOR LEARNING... LEARNING IS FUN THIS WAY!!
I have a test on monday and this saved me!! Thank you HANK!!!
I was given the task by my lecturer to watch this video, the video is very useful and can add insight
Kidney sellers left the chat 🤣🤣🤣🤣
Never liked biology better until crash course! I love the animation and your sense of humour! Hope all these videos will help me ace my biology 🤣
Dropping Knowledge like a boss
I really don't think any host could have made this less awkward. It was totally just another day at work talking to the camera. Just fantastic.
after I watched a video discussing the urinary system I understood the process of glomerular filtration, where blood is filtered in small thread balls filled with clomerized blood. the higher pressure in the blood must push more plasma out of the capillaries into the glomerulaldehyde. The problem is that the kidneys can only handle so much filtrate at one time, so they must maintain a constant rate of fluid within them. This is known as the glomerular filtration rate, or how much blood passes through the glomerular eye every minute. Antidiuretic hormone or ADH, which is secreted by the pituitary gland post to help the body retain water and stay hydrated. The part of the nephron that reabsorbs water, as water descends, has to move easily through the cells from the filtrate into the blood. specialized protein channels in the membrane called aquaporates that are on the apical or filtrate facing side and the basal or capillary facing side of cells. In contrast, collecting duct landing cells only have aquaporants on the basal side, so not usually much reabsorption occurs there. But ADH triggers those cells to move their stored aquaporan to the apical side, which allows more water to be excreted from the urine. As discussed below, urine enters the thin but muscular urethra by passing through the internal urethral sphincter. the automatic nervous system keeps it awake whenever the body does not urinate. Impulses triggered by stretch receptors go to the pool and other higher brain centers that provide the body with a conscious palate that the body must urinate. Most of these activate the pontine storage area which prevents urination by inhibiting parasympathetic activity and increasing sympathetic output. Of course, the longer you hold it, the more the bladder fills, and eventually the urge to urinate becomes too strong to ignore, at which point the Pontine Mixturation Center goes into action overriding the previous command and opens up the midsection so the body can finally clink.
lol my teacher has been going over this unit for a month and I understood more in this video than any class I've attended
Thank you. This video explains in a way that we really understand and the pictures are clear and easy for us to understand
thank you, this video really helped me learn about the urinary system and urinary system organs
I really like the way of explaining it so it's quickly understood and very detailed how to explain how urine is formed
The early Big Lebowski reference really helped me focus. Good job I found this on a Friday because I don’t enrol on Shabbat
these videos help out so much with my A&P classes.
thank you so much for making these videos, it helps summarize the big picture renal Function. I can return the favor clarifying some language:
urinarion is the process of producing urine, technically we are urinating every moment of every day. Micturation is the procession of excreting urine from the body…
thank you, for the video and lesson on how the urinary system regulates urine production and about the anatomy of storing or excreting water.
Do crashcourse have videos on disease and pharmacology on hypertension, angina pectoris and other types of diseases? Love all the other videos, and it helps alot with meds studies! :)
thank you this video really helped me as a nursing student, regarding how urine works in the body
Literally saving my grades in Anatomy and Physiology
super hero of anatomy
The animation is BEYOND great
Video membahas tentang
Warna Urine, Konsentrasi urine, Penghambat urine, Perbedaan kantung urine laki laki & perempuan,
One time at a summer camp, it was 120 degrees (in Kansas) and I was at a rifle shooting class and I left early cause I finished everything. I had drank all my water and the water at the range was warm and slimey, and the range was really far from any other sources of water and I collapsed on the way back to camp and woke up 10 minutes later. I "zombied" back to camp and drank like 3 liters of water and like .8 liters of Gatorade and I was peeing every 4 minutes and if I waited any longer my bladder would become unbearably painful like one of the worst pains I've ever felt
from the video that has been explained, explaining the urinary system, the factors that affect urine, are quite understandable
First the Strong Mad and now The Dude references, I can't! These are great!!!
Also I learned the truth about how the process of urination works. Often we don't realize how something really works until it stops working. I have an autonomic nervous system disorder. So my bladder would just decide that now is the time. Lol. And I could not override it. I went for a time where it decided every 15 minutes for hours on end was the time. I was basically disabled. I always had assumed that going potty was a matter of gravity. We voluntarily opened the hatch and gravity did the rest. Nope. It's a contraction. And it is pushed out. At times I felt like I was fighting a war. And sometimes I won. Sometimes not. Sometimes my ANS would just be off by a few seconds. Like I'm just 10 feet from the toilet, can't you wait just a few more seconds? My bladder says: nah close enough.
Out of curiosity, while you were fighting this (or perhaps if you still are), did you end up using adult diaper-like undergarments? Or were you left to just cross your fingers and hope you could make it?
I'm studying to be a veterinary technician, and I know that one of the things we do for dogs is offer a type of hormone replacement therapy. There are also a couple of different drugs we can offer to clients to help reduce their pets' incontinence. Did they have any kind of medication that they offered you to help out with your autonomic nervous system disorder?
Thanks for sharing your experience. :D I'm studying the urinary system and this is pretty interesting to me.
+Aaron Simon it seems the only medications they offered were for frequency and they didn't seem to help much. I used some products, mostly just feminine hygiene type things but I preferred not to because the fight was so difficult that it was too tempting to just always let it go. I would become too dependent. So if at all possible I chose to keep up the fight. Sometimes I was literally out of breath by the time I got to the restroom. It is better mostly because of surgery to remove an abscess that seemed to aggravate it. I think the pain of it set off my ANS to constantly try to empty. Also I'm on some meds for other ANS issues involving smooth muscle pain that has made a big difference. Amitriptyline has made a big difference in that and my gastric pain.
Hats off for your enviable adaptive capability! As a former OCD patients and a medical student who has finished more than half of the med school journey by now, I hold the belief that every health flaw that a human happens to have in his body is counterbalanced by another one that he might not have realised or that has been masked by the suffer of the flaw. I used to have severe obsessive compulsive disorder (OCD) that has not settles down almost completely until about 1-2 years ago after a relatively long period of suffer and endurance that critically jeopardized my academic future. I was despairing regarding the possibility of its being cured ever in my life, but then it did. I then realised that it has added much to my personality, notably my patience, adaptability skills and maybe even more that is yet to be found out. I remember that I have read some literature that patients with OCD tend to have high-pitched observing abilities and tends to be smarter as well (which I don't approve of it completely XD ). The same goes for you Misty. The way you are dealing with your problem reflects masked compensatory features that you are somewhat privileged to have over other non-affected individuals. It is sort of micro-evolutionary processes that are happening behind the scenes somewhere in our body, notably the brain (the plasticity of our brains). Can I ask if the condition you have has a specific name that you may happen to know it?
Thanks a lot for sharing your interesting story :)
From this video we finally get knowledge about the actual excretion of urine
"If you've ever gone on a bender you may have experienced the pleasure of having to pee every five minutes."
Yeah, I've been there.
Thank you very much, the content is very useful. Can be used as a medium of learning for me🥰
Homedude has single handedly saved my physiology grade
"It totally ruined the Dude's rug which really tied the room together, man."
Like the reference
thank you for making this video because it is easy to understand for students who are studying this material
I've watched materials on urination, this video is very good and helpful, thank you
I really like the animations in this one. Right around 5:35, is pretty great for a laugh.
Vidio ini menjelaskan bagaimana sistem kemih mengatur produksi urin, dengan mempertahankan laju aliran glomerulus, menjelaskan bagaimana anatomi menyimpan dan menggeluarkan urin dari uretra dan peran sistem saraf dalam mengendalikan tindakan buang air kecil
Is it just me that sets the playback speed to 0.5 because I can't catch a complete line and cope with the information presented!
It's useful and it sounds funny too!
I hope I destroy tomorrow's exam. I mean ace it!
Thank you doctor just if you can explain more slowly because I’m trying to understand every word you said
'Only humans study pee' - tell that to my beagle 🤣In all seriousness, cheers muchly for these videos. Absolute gods-send during A&P
thank you from this video I can find out how urinev works and it's very clear in explaining the stages, this is really great to watch
I've watched materials on urination, this video is very good and helpful to studying, thank you!
you literally explained three lectures in less than 10 mins! I love you lol
Have you guys ever thought of doing a pharmacology series? I'd love to be able to learn about medicines and treatments
I think they have it. check in their channel
Thank you for the Lebowski references, I needed a giggle during finals week!
Internal urethral sphincter is the best punk band name I've ever heard of,
thanks Hank!
Im here because im studying nanotech and im infatuated with nanofiltration,The fact that our bodies has a very very tedious filtration system is astounding and will not cease in its astonishment with time!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
#BIOMIMCRY
This video make anyone else have to pee?
Jepp
+drink15 Nah, I already went before watching.
+drink15 i do, it really PISSES me off :)
+drink15 Actually, no.
yep i had to pause it 5 mins in
This video can help find out how the urinary system regulates urine production , tysm
thank you for the explanation about urine, this video is very helpful.
Urology tests can help detect many diseases based on the color, smell, clarity, and chemical composition of the sample.
Urine also contains more than 3000 different chemical compounds, and increases in various concentrations. And it can tell us a lot about what's going on in the body.
this video is very helpful, it's much easier to understand about the urinary system...
I am so donating once I graduate
this video is very good and the explanation is very clear to help learning human body anatomy
I've watched this video, this video really helps us to know about the urinary system, thankyou
the material and the way of explanation is very good👍
done reproductive system. tomorrow having class about urinary system and this video is a good way for my basic first. MEDICINE rulezz. thanks Hank green! biggest fan of you and crashcourse really :)
Videonya sangat membantu, saya lebih memahami materi ini. Terimakasih 🙏🙏
Are the bladders @5:35 to be scaled? (Are female bladders usually larger than male bladders?)
I've watched a video about urinary system material part 2, this video material can really help to understand urinaria sytem .. the video is very good and interesting, thank you very much ..
I have my GCSE Biology exam tomorrow and ive never understood any of this shit until now!! Thankyou so much- you've saved my ass....
Not about pee...
This video is very helpful to more easily understand the urinary system
Thank you for this video.
So in the second video (video part 2) we explain how the urinary system regulates urine production, by maintaining the glomerular flow rate. The first process of urine formation is filtration or filtering. Filtration occurs in the malpighian bodies which consist of the glomerulus and Bowman's capsule. The glomerulus filters water, salts, glucose, amino acids, urea, and other wastes to pass through Bowman's capsule. The results of this filtration produce primary urine. The second process of urine formation is reabsorption. Reabsorption occurs in the proximal tubule of the nephron, the loop of Henle, the distal tubule, and the collecting tubule. water, glucose, amino acids, sodium, and other nutrients are reabsorbed into the bloodstream in the capillaries that surround the tubules. The third process is secretion. Hydrogen ions, potassium ions, calcium ions and ammonia are removed at this stage, as are some drugs. This is so that the chemical composition of the blood remains balanced and normal.
thanks for the making video. this video talked about hormonal influences in much more detail, like more than just a note about the renin-aldosterone-ADH menchanism
this video is very useful for me, and also helps me to better understand the urinary system
Great videos!! Thank youuu!! Really save my semester but bcs im not really good at english , i have watched this over and over.
I like this video because it's good for students to watch and good for learning
I've learned a lot about the uninary system and it help me to want to study it more
B30
5:01
5:31
6:28
Thanks Hank and crew!
After I watched the video I found out the function of urinating or often called peeing. urine is usually about 95 percent water, slightly acidic - with a pH.The bladder wall of the bladder consists of three layers: OUTER MEMBRANE, INNER MUCOSA, DETRUSE.
"as far as I know, Only humans study pee" xD never thought of that lol
I will understand this material, with this video it will help me to learn to understand