5 - Renal Blood Flow Flashcards
In general what does the kidney filter?
- Forms ultrafiltrate
- Filters 180L/day
- 1.5L urine
- Only filters the ECF (10.5L and 3.5L)
What are the important ions in the ECF?
Anion: Cl-
Cation: Na+
HCO3- is also important
What is the difference between osmolality and osmolarity?
Osmolality = solute per kilogram of solvent. does not depend on temp and pressure
Osmolarity = number of osmoles of solute per litre
What is the definition of the following:
- GFR
- FF
- RPF
- GFR: Rate of filtration through the glomerulues, about 125ml/min
- FF: Fraction of fluid coming through the renal tubules that reaches the kidney. GFR/RPF. Usually 20%
- RPF: Amount of fluid following through the renal arteries
What is the main difference between the cortical and juxtamedullary nephrons and the difference between ultrafiltrate and plasma?
- The cortical nephrons can autoregulate to stop the GFR going up and down
- Ultrafiltrate is the same as plasma (e.g urea, glucose, salts) apart from large proteins and cells
What is the structure of a renal corpuscle?
- Renal afferent arteriole
- Glomerular capillaries: tuft of capillaries with fenestrated endothelium and glomerular basement membrane for filtration of blood
- Renal efferent arterioles
- Bowman’s capsule: layer of epithelial cells around glomerular capillaries, continuous with membrane of PCT
- Bowman’s space: space between visceral and parietal layer of bowman’s capsule
- Mesangium: Basement membrane matrix that the capilarries are embedded in and provides them structural support. Mesangial cells maintain this matrix
- Podocytes: Specialised epithelia that have foot processes on the basement membrane of the glomerular capillaries. Narrow area between feet are slit diaphragms
- JG Apparatus
What is the juxtaglomerular apparatus?
- Macula densa, inital portion of DCT and afferent arteriole
- Renin granular cells are part of the afferent arteriole
- Macula densa detects NaCl concentration in the urine and when this is low it causes renin to be released
What are the filtration barriers in the glomerulus?
- Basement membrane is acellular, gelatinous and has a negative charge
Why do the kidneys have such a high oxygen requirement?
Over 99% of filtered substances are reabsorbed into the blood so need lots of oxygen and glucose
What type of molecules can get through the filtration membrane the easiest?
- Small, positively charged molecules
- If negatively charged have to be small to get across
Why do fluid and small molecules move from the afferent arterioles into the glomerulus?
- Higher outward forces than inward forces
Where does tubular reabsorption occur and what molecules are reabsorbed?
- Mainly in PCT
- Molecules coupled to active reabsorption of Na. e.g glucose, aa, lactate, acetate, ketones, water-soluble vitamins
- All glucose reabsorbed
- Most water reabsorbed after sodium by osmosis (obligatory water reasorption as not controlled by PCT)
What is some tubular secretion that occurs?
- H+ to maintain pH
- K+, ammonium, creatinine, urea, hormones, drugs like penicillin
What are the mechanisms the kidney has to maintain GFR across a range of arterial pressures?
- Myogenic
- Tubulo-glomerular Feedback
How does the myogenic autoregulation system respond to changes in GFR?
- Arterial wall responds to vascular wall tension. Stetch activation cation channels allow Ca in to contract
- Usually AA over EA