How does filteration occur in the kidney?

Inside the kidneys there are millions of nephrons which filter the blood. They do this by having blood build up a high pressure in the glomerulus (a ball of capillaries) so that the small molecules (e.g. water, glucose urea and ions) are forced through into the Bowman’s capsule while the blood cells and proteins stay. This mixture is no called glomerial filtrate and has been filtered by ultra filtration. This flows down the first coiled tubule where all the glucose is reabsorbed (using active uptake), as are the required salts. Water is then reabsorbed at the loop of henle, and also at the second coiled tubule. It then heads down the collecting duct into the ureter. This flows down into the bladder. (the urea and excess ions are not absorbed.

VA
Answered by Vedika A. Biology tutor

4186 Views

See similar Biology GCSE tutors

Related Biology GCSE answers

All answers ▸

What is meant by the term osmosis?


Explain the difference between a receptor and an effector using examples.


How do enzymes work and what would be the effects of an increasing temperature on an enzyme controlled reaction?


How does transcription work?


We're here to help

contact us iconContact ustelephone icon+44 (0) 203 773 6020
Facebook logoInstagram logoLinkedIn logo

© MyTutorWeb Ltd 2013–2025

Terms & Conditions|Privacy Policy
Cookie Preferences