Regulating Blood Water Content (WJEC GCSE Biology)
Revision Note
Regulating Blood Water Content
The regulation of blood water content involves maintaining water and salt concentrations within the blood; this is an example of homeostasis
This is vital to prevent harmful changes occurring to cells of the body as a result of osmosis
The kidneys regulate the water content of the blood by removing water from the body in the urine
The volume of urine varies depending on the blood water content
When blood water content is high a large volume of dilute urine is produced
When blood water content is low a small volume of concentrated urine is produced
The colour of urine can be an indicator of concentration:
Dilute urine is usually pale in colour because it contains a lot of water in relation to solutes
Concentrated urine is darker in colour because it contains little water in relation to solutes
Role of ADH
Higher Tier Only
The control of water reabsorption by the tubules is an example of negative feedback
Water reabsorption is controlled by the hormone ADH, which affects the permeability of the tubules to water
Low blood water content
If the water content of the blood is too low:
The brain detects the decreased water content of the blood
The pituitary gland in the brain releases more ADH
ADH causes the kidneys tubules to reabsorb more water
The kidneys produce a small volume of concentrated urine
ADH and low blood water content diagram
When blood water content is low the brain releases more ADH; this causes increased water reabsorption by the kidneys
High blood water content
If the water content of the blood is too high:
The brain detects high blood water content
The pituitary gland releases less ADH
ADH causes the kidneys to reabsorb less water
The kidneys produce a large volume of dilute urine
ADH and high blood water content diagram
When blood water content is high the brain releases less ADH; this causes decreased water reabsorption by the kidneys
You've read 0 of your 5 free revision notes this week
Sign up now. It’s free!
Did this page help you?