Submitted by AutoModerator t3_10f9ei8 in askscience
TONewbies t1_j4vyk2a wrote
Why did we evolve to remove liquid waste from our genitals instead of it being removed from our anus or have the urethra nearer the anus?
TheHumbleShaft t1_j4wnruw wrote
I believe it's because those wastes in the genitals often include sodium and potassium, or spare electrolytes and the idea is that the body rids itself of those electrolytes through the kidneys, and water follows because of osmotic pressure. If that happened through the anus, the large intestine would likely take up a large portion of that water and put it back into the recirculation and would also absorb the electrolytes due to diffusion so there would be minimal filtration and you would die of electrolyte imbalance.
In regards to urethra being near the anus, I think they're relatively close but you don't want them too close because feces is rife with bacteria and the urethra is an excellent environment for bacteria to multiply (dark, warm, moist) and you'd have near constant UTIs which could lead to kidney infection and damage. Some women actually deal with that fairly regularly, and is why women should always wipe from front to back after a bowel movement.
Pro-Karyote t1_j4yhl5f wrote
I remember one an IM attending discussing anuric/oliguric patients with ESRD on dialysis. He jokingly called the GI tract “the biggest nephron.”
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