Over many years, this process of glomerulosclerosis, once again, diminishes the nephron's ability to filter the blood and leads to chronic kidney disease.
Normally, calcium filters from the blood into the glomerulus of the kidney but is then reabsorbed back into the blood by the nephron so that it isn't lost.
This excessive extracellular matrix leads to glomerulosclerosis, hardening and scarr, and diminishes the nephron's ability to filter the blood - over time leading to chronic kidney disease.
To make this exchange as efficient as possible, some organisms have evolved specialized exchange surfaces like the alveoli in the lungs or root hairs and plants, or the nephrons and kidneys.
Aldosterone is secreted in response to elevated levels of renin, and it's role is to bind to receptors on two types of cells along the distal convoluted tubule of the nephron.
The glomerular filtrate is not the same consistency as urine, as much of it is reabsorbed into the blood as the filtrate passes through the tubules of the nephron.
And this is called forced diuresis and it essentially overwhelms the proximal convoluted tubule of the nephron with so much fluid that it's unable to effectively reabsorb solutes, including phosphate.
These two make their way to the nephron of the kidney, and at this point in the proximal convoluted tubule, phosphate usually gets reabsorbed back into the blood via sodium-phosphate cotransporters.