1/2 Filtration and quantitation of Transport Flashcards
How much of the cardiac output do the kidneys receive?
25% of the Cardiac Output
What is the difference between cortical and juxtamedullary nephrons?
Cortical nephrons (90%):
-have short loops
-efferent arterioles form peritubular caps
Juxtamedullary nephrons (10%):
-long loops of henle
-Efferent arterioles form peritubular caps. and vasa recta
How much of the entering afferent plasma is filtered into Bowman’s space?
20% of the plasma entering the afferent arteriole is filtered
Explain the structure of the kidneys capillary membrane
(blood vessel)
- capillary endothelial cells (700 angstrom holes)
- Basement Membrane
- allows water and small molecules less than 15 A to pass
- contains fixed negative charged that selectively filter small proteins - podocytes
- foot processes form filtration slits 250 angstroms in diameter
- diaphragms have pores of 40X140 angstroms
Where is the juxtaglomerular apparatus?
What are the two most important cells in this region?
- JG apparatus: region where DT of nephron comes in close contact with afferent and efferent arterioles
- macula densa (in DT) and Juxtaglomerular Cells (afferent/efferent)
What is the function of macula densa cells?
- monitor renal fluid composition, in particular the NaCl concentration
- located in distal tubule
What is the function of Juxtaglomerular cells?
- Produce renin and help to control constriction of the afferent and efferent arterioles
- they line the afferent and efferent arterioles
What expression are all kidney calculations derived from?
Excretion rate = filtration rate - reabsorption rate + secretion rate
What is defined as the excretion rate of any compound, x?
UxV
Ux= [x in urine] mg/ml
V=urine flow rate (ml/min)
GFR corresponds to the clearance of the a compound with what properties?
- freely filtered
- not reabsorbed or secreted
- not metabolized or produced by the kidney
- Does not alter GFR
-inulin and creatinine are two examples of compounds like this
RPF can be measured using a compound with what properties?
- Freely filtered
- very efficiently (ideally completely) secreted
- not reabsorbed
eg, PAH
What is defined as the filtration rate for any compound?
(GFR X Px) = filtration rate of x (mg/min)
Px = [x in the plasma] (mg/ml)
What is a typical Glomerular Filtration Rate? (GFR)
-120 ml/min (he said remember this)