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Excretory system PDF

81 Pages·2010·11.437 MB·English
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T H E A M A Z I N G H U M A N B O D Y EXCRETORY SYSTEM LORRIE KLOSTERMAN EExxttccrreettoorryySSyysstteemm22PP__..iinndddd 11 The Amazing Human Body: Excretory System-27492 0077//0044//22000099 1122::2200 PPMM CPL409-14 / 4255 Marshall Cavendish Benchmark 99 White Plains Road Tarrytown, New York 10591 www.marshallcavendish.us Text copyright © 2010 by Marshall Cavendish Corporation All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or utilized in any form or by any means electronic or mechanical including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without permission from the copyright holders. All websites were available and accurate when this book was sent to press. Editor: Karen Ang Publisher: Michelle Bisson Art Director: Anahid Hamparian Series Design by: Kay Petronio Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Klosterman, Lorrie. Excretory system / by Lorrie Klosterman. p. cm. — (The amazing human body) Includes bibliographical references and index. Summary: "Discusses the parts that make up the human excretory system, what can go wrong, how to treat those illnesses and diseases, and how to stay healthy"—Provided by publisher. ISBN 978-0-7614-4485-5 1. Excretory organs—Juvenile literature. 2. Excretion—Juvenile literature. 3. Feces—Juvenile literature. 4. Urine—Ju- venile literature. I. Title. QP159.K66 2010 612.4'6—dc22 2008037261 This book is not intended for use as a substitute for advice, consultation, or treatment by a licensed medical practitioner. The reader is advised that no action of a medical nature should be taken without consultation with a licensed medical practitioner, including action that may seem to be indicated by the contents of this work, since individual circumstances vary and medical standards, knowledge, and practices change with time. The publisher, author, and medical consultants disclaim all liability and cannot be held responsible for any problems that may arise from use of this book. Front cover image: A colored X ray of the kidneys Title page: Kidney cancer cells Back cover: A microscopic view of glomeruli in the kidneys = A microscopic view of the surface of the bladder. Photo research by Tracey Engel Front cover photo: David Becker/Getty Images The photographs in this book are used by permission and through the courtesy of: Alamy: Scenics & Science, 10; Phototake, 26; Bartee Photography, Inc./Phototake, p. 36. Custom Medical Stock Photo: Educational Images Ltd., 24. Getty Images: 3D4Medical.com, 12, 18, 29, 46; Nucleus Medical Art, Inc., 14, 15, 54; Dr. Richard Kessel & Dr. Randy Kardon, 16; Dr. Kessel & Dr. Kardon/Tissues & Organs, 21; Ralph Hutchings, 28; Dr. Dennis Kunkel, 40; David Becker, 47; Tim Boyle, 56; Jeanene Scott, 59. Photo Researchers, Inc.: James Cavallini, 4; Volker Steger, 23; SPL, 35 (both); BSIP, 38; John Bavosi, 42, 50; Stephen J. Krasemann, 45; Sam Ogden, 49; AJPhoto / Hôpital Américain, 53; Sheila Terry, 67. Phototake: ISM, 20; Craig Zuckerman, 43. Shutterstock: Sebastian Kaulitzki, 6; Christina Richards, 7; Antonio Munoz Palomares, 8; Christopher Edwin Nuzzaco, 30; cardiae, 31; Christina Richards, 34; Jim Barber, 41; gresei, 58; Robyn Mackenzie, 60; Elena Elisseeva, 61; mark cinotti, 63; Andi Berger, 64; Thomas M. Perkins, 65; Anetta, 68. SuperStock: Image Source, 19, 52. Visuals Unlimited, Inc.: Dennis Kunkel Microscopy, Inc., 17, 33. Printed in Malaysia 123456 PATHED_SWIMSHADYS_CD_ L709-216 / 3203 4c #150 neg EExxttccrreettoorryySSyysstteemm22PP__..iinndddd 22 The Amazing Human Body: Excretory System-27492 0055//0055//22000099 77::4400 AAMM CPL509-6 / 4255 CONTENTS CHAPTER 1  What Is the Excretory System? . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 CHAPTER 2  The Parts of the Excretory System . . . . . . . 13 CHAPTER 3  How the Excretory System Works . . . . . . . . 27 CHAPTER 4  Problems with the Excretory System . . . . . 39 CHAPTER 5  Caring for Your Excretory System . . . . . . . . . 57 GLOSSARY . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .70 FIND OUT MORE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 72 BIBLIOGRAPHY . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 74 INDEX . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 75 EExxttccrreettoorryySSyysstteemm22PP__..iinndddd 33 The Amazing Human Body: Excretory System-27492 0077//0044//22000099 1122::2200 PPMM CPL409-14 / 4255 EExxttccrreettoorryySSyysstteemm22PP__..iinndddd 44 The Amazing Human Body: Excretory System-27492 0077//0044//22000099 1122::2299 PPMM CPL409-14 / 4255 1 What Is the Excretory System? EE very day, when you get hungry or thirsty, your body is telling you that it needs something. Hunger is your body’s way of saying that it needs more food to use as fuel. That fuel keeps you alive and active. Thirst is a signal that your body needs more moisture inside. Without the proper amount of moisture, the billions of cells that make up your body cannot survive. In fact, drinking fluids is more important to survival than eating food. Most people could live for many days, or even a few weeks, without food. But nobody can survive for more than a few days without water. The excretory system, which is sometimes called the urinary system, is made up of several organs (shown in yellow). 5 EExxttccrreettoorryySSyysstteemm22PP__..iinndddd 55 The Amazing Human Body: Excretory System-27492 0077//0044//22000099 1122::2200 PPMM CPL409-14 / 4255 EXCRETORY SYSTEM This diagram shows some of the parts of the digestive system (pink). Waste material from the foods you eat and drink are processed and eliminated by your digestive system. 6 EExxttccrreettoorryySSyysstteemm22PP__..iinndddd 66 The Amazing Human Body: Excretory System-27492 0077//0044//22000099 1111::3300 AAMM CPL409-14 / 4255 What Is the Excretory System? Even though foods and beverages are so important, not every last bit of a meal, or sip of a drink, gets used once it is inside the body. Instead, there is leftover waste. The body’s waste materials are familiar to everyone. Things go into our bodies, and things come out. T WO KINDS OF WA STES  All sorts of words are used to talk about the waste that our bodies make. Solid waste is called feces. To defecate means to get rid of the solid waste. The process of doing that is defecation. Liquid waste from the body is called urine. To urinate means to get rid of liquid waste. The process of doing that is urination. Urine is a form of liquid waste, and is made up of chemicals and substances that have been removed by organs called kidneys. 7 EExxttccrreettoorryySSyysstteemm22PP__..iinndddd 77 The Amazing Human Body: Excretory System-27492 0077//0044//22000099 1122::2200 PPMM CPL409-14 / 4255 WHERE FOOD AND DRINKS GO Many people believe that solid waste carries the bits of food and drink to all parts comes from the foods we eat, while liquid of the body—wherever the blood goes. That waste comes from is how a meal fuels the beverages we drink. body’s needs. That is not true. All However, there are cer- things we swallow tain parts of food that our go into the digestive bodies cannot break into system. After pass- pieces very well. That ma- ing the throat, they terial is called fiber. It gets go into the stom- pushed along the intes- ach, and then into tines until it reaches the the intestines. Along end. There, it collects until that journey, foods Your body processes and uses all of the food the person feels the urge and drinks you consume during the course and beverages are to rid of it by defecating. of the day. Some parts of the food and drinks mixed with strong are used to nourish your body, while some is At that point, the waste is excreted as waste. chemicals made by called feces. If a person the stomach and intestines. Those chemi- stops eating for a few days, feces are no cals, called digestive enzymes, break up longer made. what we have swallowed into pieces that Liquid waste, or urine, is very different. are far too small to see with the naked The internal organs that create urine are eye. The pieces then work their way out not part of the digestive system. Kidneys of the intestines and into nearby blood continue to make urine all the time, even if vessels. The blood within the vessels a person stops eating and drinking. EExxttccrreettoorryySSyysstteemm22PP__..iinndddd 88 The Amazing Human Body: Excretory System-27492 0077//0044//22000099 1111::3300 AAMM CPL409-14 / 4255 What Is the Excretory System? Feces and urine are made and eliminated, or removed, in two very different ways. Feces are made in the digestive tract. That tract is the long pathway through which foods and beverages travel after you have swallowed them. The beginning of the digestive tract is the mouth. The end is the anus. In between those two are the portions of the tract called the stomach and intestines. In those places, food and beverages are changed into microscopic bits that our bodies can use for energy. But some of what we swallow makes the journey along the digestive tract without being used. It reaches the end and collects as waste. Whenever a person feels the need to defecate, the waste—feces—is released into the toilet. Urine is made very differently from solid waste. Odd though it may seem, urine is made from blood. Urine is mostly water—as is blood—but urine has several kinds of chemicals that the body does not need. The water and chemicals are taken out of blood by a pair of organs called the kidneys. These remarkable organs are able to cleanse the blood that passes through them, and create a liquid waste—urine. All day and all night the kidneys are at work making urine. Another organ in the body, the bladder, stores the urine for up to several hours. As the bladder gets full, a person feels the need to urinate. Urine flows out of the bladder through a tube that opens to the outside of the body, between a person’s legs. YOUR PERSONAL PLUMBING  Getting rid of feces and urine is just as important as taking in food and water. It is like keeping house. You need to bring in supplies for the household, and you also have to get rid of trash. The body has internal organs that do these jobs. Getting rid of solid waste is one job of the digestive system (the digestive tract, plus other organs that are important in breaking foods into bits). Getting rid of liquid waste is one job of 9 EExxttccrreettoorryySSyysstteemm22PP__..iinndddd 99 The Amazing Human Body: Excretory System-27492 0077//0044//22000099 1122::2200 PPMM CPL409-14 / 4255

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