endocrine impacts on kidney function Flashcards

1
Q

describe renal structure and function

A
  • contains hundreds to thousands of small functional units called nephrons
  • a nephron is basically a small tubule with a vascular component
  • prinicple role is to filter out and excrete the bad stuff whilst preventing loss of useful stuff and water
  • 3 components to function: filtration,, selective resporption and secretion
  • kidney functions depends on the number of availible nephrons
  • there is a functional reserve so it may take >70% nephron loss to see impact
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2
Q

describe how filtration and resoption of the kidneys

A
  • ultrafiltration occurs between the capillaries of the golmerulus and bowmans capsule
  • is filtration under pressure, pressure increase caused by having narrower afferent arteriole
  • filtration depends on molecule size and charge
  • how much plasma gets filtered is glomerular filtration rate (GFR) which depends on renal blood flow/pressure and number of availible nephrons
  • most resportion occurs in the proximal convoluted tubule
  • epithelial cells linin tubule have microvilli at the luminal surface, folds at the capillary surface and many mitochondria
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3
Q

list substances the body wants to excrete. retain?

A

excrete:
- nitrogenous waste (urea and creatinine)
- phosphorus
- potassium

retain:
- water
- electrolytes
- glucose
- protein
- urea

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4
Q

explain how urine is concentrated vs dilute

A
  • medullary conentration gradient depends on different permeability in different parts of the nephron, associated vascular network, urea, and loop of henle collecting ducts
  • collecting ducts are final stage of water resportion
  • hormones influence retention/excretion (ADH and RAAS)
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5
Q

what is osmotic diuresis? what causes it

A

increased urination due to the presence of certain substances in the body
caused by glucose in tubule acting as osmolyte, drawing water into the tubule by osmosis, = greater urine production
- also caused by salts, or therapeutic diuretics

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6
Q

what is azotaemia

A
  • increased blood levels of urea or creatinine
  • coud be due to not enough blood being filtered or not enough nephrons to do the job
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7
Q

what is urine specific gravity

A
  • a measure of concentration of urine
  • if filtrate neither concentrated or dilute, should be between 1.008-1.012
  • we expect dehydrated, poor renal flow cases to have concentrated urine
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8
Q

what is diabetes insipidus

A
  • something is stopping the action of ADH (not being made or action being blocked)
  • ADH acts on the part of the nephron between the most dilute to the final urine concentration
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9
Q

summarise renal function

A
  • glomerulus filters the plasma, cells and proteins do not pass into the filtrate
  • PCT then reabsorbs the useful stuff
  • the loop of henle concentrates the tissue fluid of the medulla
  • water passes by osmosis from the filtrate into the medulla
  • the amount of water reabsorbed is controlled by ADH at collecting ducts
  • Na and water can be further conserved through aldosterone action in distal nephron
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10
Q

what is PTH and how is the kidney involed

A

primary hyperparathyroidism: excessive PTH promote renal calcium retention and phosphate loss

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