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How do your kidneys work? - Emma Bryce

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    It's a hot day,
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    and you've just downed
    several glasses of water,
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    one after the other.
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    Behind the sudden urge that follows
    are two bean-shaped organs
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    that work as fine-tuned internal sensors.
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    They balance the amount of fluid
    in your body,
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    detect waste in your blood,
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    and know when to release
    the vitamins, minerals,
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    and hormones you need to stay alive.
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    Say hello to your kidneys.
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    The main role of these organs
    is to dispose of waste products
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    and to turn them into urine.
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    The body's eight liters of blood
    pass through the kidneys
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    between 20 and 25 times each day,
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    meaning that together, these organs filter
    about 180 liters every 24 hours.
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    The ingredients in your blood
    are constantly changing
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    as you ingest food and drink,
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    which explains why
    the kidneys need to be on permanent duty.
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    Blood enters each kidney through arteries
    that branch and brach,
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    until they form tiny vessels that entwine
    with special internal modules,
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    called nephrons.
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    In each kidney,
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    1 million of these nephrons form
    a powerful array of filters and sensors
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    that carefully sift through the blood.
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    This is where we see just how refined
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    and accurate this internal
    sensing system is.
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    To filter the blood, each nephron
    uses two powerful pieces of equipment:
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    a blob-like structure called a glomerulus,
    and a long, stringy, straw-like tubule.
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    The glomerulus works like a sieve,
    allowing only certain ingredients,
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    such as vitamins and minerals,
    to pass into the tubule.
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    Then, this vessel's job is to detect
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    whether any of those ingredients
    are needed in the body.
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    If so, they're reabsorbed in amounts
    that the body needs,
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    so they can circulate in the blood again.
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    But the blood doesn't only
    carry useful ingredients.
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    It contains waste products, too.
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    And the nephrons have to figure out
    what to do with them.
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    The tubules sense compounds
    the body doesn't need,
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    like urea, left over from
    the breakdown of proteins,
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    and redirects them as urine
    out of the kidneys
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    and through two long sewers,
    called ureters.
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    The tubes empty their contents
    into the bladder to be discharged,
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    ridding your body of that waste
    once and for all.
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    There's water in that urine, too.
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    If the kidney detects too much of it
    in your blood,
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    for instance, when you've chugged
    several glasses at once,
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    it sends the extra liquid
    to the bladder to be removed.
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    On the other hand,
    low water levels in the blood
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    prompt the kidney to release some
    back into the blood stream,
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    meaning that less water
    makes it into the urine.
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    This is why urine appears yellower
    when you're less hydrated.
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    By controlling water, your kidneys
    stabilize the body's fluid levels.
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    But this fine balancing act
    isn't the kidney's only skill.
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    These organs have the power
    to activate vitamin D
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    to secrete a hormone called renin
    that raises blood pressure,
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    and another hormone
    called erythropoietin,
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    which increases red blood cell production.
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    Without the kidneys, our bodily fluids
    would spiral out of control.
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    Every time we ate, our blood would receive
    another load of unsifted ingredients.
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    Soon, the build up of waste would overload
    our systems and we'd expire.
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    So each kidney not only
    keeps things running smoothly.
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    It also keeps us alive.
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    Lucky then that we have two
    of these magical beans.
Title:
How do your kidneys work? - Emma Bryce
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TED-Ed
Duration:
03:55

English subtitles

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