Since the urine can not be passed, toxins that normally are
removed via the urine will build up in the blood.
Not exact matches
The human body has inbuilt detoxification mechanisms, designed to
remove toxins from our body
via our bowels,
urine, breath and perspiration.
To aggravate the situation, when your blood sugars are too high, your kidneys will try to
remove some of the glucose
via urine.
Unlike other NSAIDs, naproxen is
removed from the body of dogs
via bile and stools instead of through the kidneys in
urine.
The body has two handy ways of regulating pH when its buffers aren't enough to do the job: by shuffling off extra H + ions into the
urine, or by
removing more CO2
via the lungs (one of the reasons that you breathe more rapidly when you exercise is to
remove excess CO2 from your blood).