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urinary system
(redirected from genitourinary system)

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urinary system

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The human urinary system. At the bottom, the complete system in outline; on the left, the arrangement of blood vessels connected to the kidney; at the top right, a detail of the network of vessels within a kidney.

System of organs that removes nitrogenous waste products and excess water from the bodies of animals. In vertebrates, it consists of a pair of kidneys, which produce urine; ureters, which drain the kidneys; and (in bony fishes, amphibians, some reptiles, and mammals) a bladder that stores the urine before its discharge. In mammals, the urine is expelled through the urethra; in other vertebrates, the urine drains into a common excretory chamber called a cloaca, and the urine is not discharged separately.



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In addition to this assessment, a phys cal examination, a detailed assessment the genitourinary system, functional assessment, and evaluation of environmental barriers (such as changes in living conditions, clothing, location of toile and/or nighttime access to toilet) need be performed.
Chapter 5 discusses special topics, including infectious diseases (eg, HIV infection, hepatitis B), the integumentary system (eg, thermal injury), the genitourinary system (eg, obstetrics, renal failure), oncology, and psychology and psychiatry (eg, grief process, death and dying).
Among those of the 834 who had died prior to 1990, problems with the kidneys and genitourinary system were the most frequent causes of death, accounting for just over 24 percent of all the deaths, a proportion substantially greater than in the general population.
 
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