Everything about Renal Pyramid totally explained
Renal pyramids (or
malpighian pyramids) are cone-shaped
tissues of the
kidney. The
renal medulla is made up of 8 to 18 of these conical subdivisions. The broad
base of each pyramid faces the
renal cortex, and its
apex, or
papilla, points internally. The pyramids appear striped because they're formed by straight parallel segments of
nephrons.
Additional images
Image:Illu kidney2.jpg|Frontal section through the kidney
The base of each pyramid originates at the corticomedullary border and the apex terminates in a papilla, which lies within a minor calyx.
made of parallel bundles of urine collecting tubules
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