3 The renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system Flashcards

1
Q

Describe what the Juxtaglomerular apparatus is, and its role

A

It is a structure where afferent arteriole makes contact with DCT (in the nephron of the Kidney)
- Involved in BP regulation
- Found at vascular pole of each renal corpuscle
- Made up of:
> Macula Densa (DCT), Juxtaglomerular (granular) Cells, Extraglomerular mesangial cells

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2
Q

Describe the Macula Densa, and its role

A

The macula densa is an accumulation of columnar cells within the DCT

  • They monitor Na+ concentration in the formation of urine
  • Regulate Glomerular Filtration Rate (GFR) and release of Renin from juxtaglomerular (granular) cells
  • GFR is also affected by sympathetic nerves directly innervating juxtaglomerular cells
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3
Q

What it Renin

and what is its role?

A

Renin is a proteolytic enzyme that is synthesised by granular cells (juxtaglomerular cells) in the wall of glomerular afferent arterioles

  • Renin cleaves angiotensinogen to angiotensin I

Renin’s function:
- is to raise BP via other mediators

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4
Q

Why is Renin released

A
  1. In response to decreased arterial pressure (body acts like low BP is caused by fluid loss) - there are baroreceptors in the afferent arteriole
  2. Decrease in sodium load to the distal tube (macula densa responds to [Na+])
  3. Direct stimulation by sympathetic NS
    (stress = raised BP)
    - This is mediated by B1 adrenergic receptors
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5
Q

Describe what Angiotensin-Converting Enzyme (ACE) is,

and its role

A

ACE is expressed by many tissues (kidney), but conversion largely occurs during transit through the lungs

ACE:
- convert Angiotensin I to Angiotensin II

hence, ACE inhibitors (ACEi) work to stop this function

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6
Q

Describe the role of Angiotensin II (Ang II)

A

Has many roles:

  • Constrict resistance vessels
  • Promote aldosterone release from the adrenal cortex
  • Stimulates ADH release from the posterior pituitary gland and stimulates thirst (and others)
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7
Q

Briefly describe what the Adrenal glands are + their actions

A

Adrenal glands are suprarenal glands (on the kidney), they are endocrine organs (hormone-producing)

  • Medulla makes adrenaline, noradrenaline
  • Zona glomerulosa (1st layer of cortex) makes mineralocorticoids
  • e.g. aldosterone -
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8
Q

Describe what Aldosterone (Aldo) does

A

Aldosterone targets mostly principal cells in the renal tubule distal segments
- It has multiple actions, all of which promote recovery of Na+ and osmotically obligates water from the tubule (into blood - increasing circulating volume hence the BP rise)

It takes up to 48 hours to work (peak effects)
- This is because aldosterone upregulates the expression of genes encoding Na+ channels and pumps (takes time)

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9
Q

Describe the role of Vasopressin an Anti-diuretic hormone (ADH)

A

Anti-diuretic hormone (ADH), also known as arginine vasopressin
- is released from the posterior pituitary when tissue osmolality rises OR blood volume decreases

Its principal role is in ECF volume regulation through control of renal water retention

If circulating levels are sufficiently high (e.g. haemorrhage), it can also vasoconstrict

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10
Q

SO, give the overall actions of the Renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system

(assuming BP is too low)

A

If BP is too low

  • It can be detected by baroreceptors in afferent arteriole of the nephron
  • Or Na+ decrease can be detected by Macula densa or SNS
  • Renin is released by granular cells
  • Renin converts Angiotensinogen to angiotensin I
  • Angiotensin I is converted to Angiotensin II by Angiotensin Converting Enxyme (ACE)
  • Angiotensin II then constricts blood vessels, as well promote the release of aldosterone from the adrenal cortex
    (it also stimulates ADH release from the post. pituitary - stimulates thirst)
  • Aldosterone then promotes the effect of Na+ and the accompanying water, into the blood from the tubule in the kidney (by upregulating the expression of genes for Na+ channels and pumps)

The combined effects of vasoconstriction and increased peripheral resistance + more Na+ and water =
- Corrected (higher) BP

SO, low BP = more renin = higher BP

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11
Q

Describe how many pathologies are associated with high RAA

A

These can occur chronically and acutely in response to the decrease in blood flow to the kidney.

It can occur physiologically, with normal variations in fluid intake, but can also result from pathological causes:

  • Anything that reduces cardiac output (heart failure)
  • Renal stenosis or aortic stenosis (narrowing) - produces renin-induced hypertension
  • Hypotensive shock
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12
Q

What is hypertension (HTN)

A

It is an abnormal elevation of systolic and/or diastolic blood pressure
- Repeated BP of 140/90mmHg, confirmed on ambulatory BP reading

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13
Q

Describe secondary hypertension

A

Secondary hypertension is when a specific cause for hypertension is found,
- so secondary to an underlying disease process (renal disease is seen in 5% of cases)

e.g. primary hyperaldosteronism - too much aldosterone

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14
Q

Describe essential Hypertension

A

Primary (Essential) hypertension:

  • Can be benign (slowly progressive OR
  • Malignant (rapid onset + > 180/110)

Aetiology not completely understood - genetic component
e.g. increased prevalence in Afro-Caribbean’s + those with a family history

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15
Q

Describe the activation of the Renin-Angiotensin-Aldosterone (RAAS) system as a cause of Hypertension

A

The RAAS hormonal system is a key regulator of BP.
Its activation promotes:
- vasoconstriction through Angiotensin II
- Na+ and Water retention through aldosterone

Blood renin concentrations can be elevated in hypertensive patients who are white and aged < 55 years old
- Hence, the justification for treatment for ACEi, or ARB’s

The mechanism appears to be less important in older patients + in Afro-Caribbean patients
- So, ACEi is no longer the 1st treatment

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16
Q

Describe hypotension shock

A

Hypotensive shock

A condition in which blood pressure is below the autoregulatory range for maintenance of cerebral and renal perfusion
- such that consciousness is lost and vital organ perfusion is critically impaired

17
Q

Define shock

and describe the different types

A

Shock is the reduced perfusion of tissue (low BP), which results in impaired oxygenation of tissue

There are several types:

  • Cardiogenic (pump failure)
  • Hypovolaemic
  • Distributive: Septic (widespread vasodilation +/- hypovolaemia) and anaphylactic (widespread vasodilation +/- hypovolaemia), Neurogenic (cervical + upper thoracic spinal cord injuries can produce hypotension due to loss of sympathetic tone
  • Obstructive (cardiac tamponade and tension pneumothorax)
18
Q

Define and describe hypovolaemic shock

A

Shock is due to excessive loss of Na+ containing fluid (e.g. blood, sweat),
- causing hypotension and multiorgan failure

Loss of > 20% of blood volume (around a litre) results in shock
- Massive blood loss is the most common cause

Common causes:

  • Penetrating trauma
  • GI bleeding
  • Trauma to a solid organ (spleen, liver)
  • Ruptures abdominal aortic aneurysm
19
Q

Describe shock (in general - give facts)

Also, how to work out BP

hence, which factors effect BO (low/high)

A

BP = cardicac output x Total peripheral resistance

  • therefore, low BP can be due to Low CO and/or peripheral vasodilation e.g.

Cardiogenic shock
- myocardial infarction causing loss of myocardial power (Low CO)

Endotoxic shock
- bacterial toxins cause marked peripheral vasodilation

Anaphylactic shock
- Allergic reaction, histamine release causes vasodilation and increases capillary permeability

20
Q

Describe the pathophysiology of Hypovolaemic shock

A

Decreased cardiac output (CO) - decrease in stroke volume:

Decreased L ventricular end-diastolic pressure (LVEDP)
- this is lowered by a lower volume of blood entering the blood

There is an increase in vascular peripheral resistance, as vasoconstriction is brought about by:

  • catecholamines
  • ADH
  • Ang II

This leads to a decrease in oxygen delivery to tissue (mixed venous O2 content is decreased) - shock definition

21
Q

Give some clinical findings of Hypovolaemic shock (Haemorrhagic shock)

A
  • Increase in heart rate (for increased CO) - pulse is weak
  • BP is low - confused, unconscious
  • Skin is pate (poor perfusion) and it will be cold
  • Poor kidney perfusion means low urine output (can be measured with a catheter)
  • Blood tests - show lactate (lactic acid conjugate) - poor organ perfusion - anaerobic respiration
22
Q

Describe the treatment of hypovolaemic shock

A

Replace what has been lost

  • if Na+ fluid from sweating, give fluids
  • if blood, give bloods