Glomerular filtration Flashcards

1
Q

What does the glomerulus restrict the passage of into Bowman’s capsule

A

Blood cells and proteins

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2
Q

How many litres of filtrate does the glomerulus filter per day

A

180l

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3
Q

How many times is the plasma filtered per day

A

65 times

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4
Q

How and what do endothelial cells filter

A

The flat cells with large nuclei have circular fenestrations in contact with each other - these keep out blood cells and platelets

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5
Q

How does the basement membrane of the glomerulus filter the incoming fluid

A

A continuous, main barrier, consists of glycoproteins, laminin, collagen and fibronectin, negatively charged - filtration is therefore based on size and charge of the molecule

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6
Q

How do epithelial cells interact with the filtrate?

A

Trabeculae (columns of connective tissue) with pedicels interdigitating between them creating slit pores into Bowman’s capsule - Site for maintenance of the structural barrier and phagocytosis

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7
Q

What is the equation for glomerular filtration rate

A

Kf(Pcap + OncoticPbc) - (Pbc + OncoticPcap)

Kf is the filtration co-efficient -
Pcap = hydorstatic pressure in capillary
Oncotic P = oncotic pressure
bc = Bowman’s capsule

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8
Q

How do the oncotic and hydrostatic pressures change along the glomerular capillary

A

Pbc = remains constant as fluid moves on to the proximal tubule - 20mmHg
OncoticPcap = Increases as fluid levels drop but protein conc remains constant = 30mmHg
Pcap starts >60mmHg but drops due to loss of fluid - 60mmHg
Net filtration pressure = 10mmHg

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9
Q

How does the action of the afferent arteriole regulate renal blood flow/GFR through changes in mean arterial blood pressure

A

See changes in Pcap
But: when MABP rises - afferent arteriole contracts smooth muscle and constricts - This reduces renal blood flow and lowers Pcap/GFR
When there’s a decrease the opposite process occurs

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10
Q

What is the average GFR

A

125ml/min

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11
Q

What is the myogenic theory behind the control by the afferent arteriole

A

Property of smooth muscle - when arterial BP rises this stretches the afferent arteriole leading to its constriction therefore increasing afferent arteriole resistance

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12
Q

What is the tubuloglomerular feedback theory behind GFR control

A

Macula densa cells found in the thick ascending limb that runs past its own glomerulus - look at rate of flow - able to release vasoactive chemicals - respond depending on increased or decreased BP - increased release of vasoconstrictors or dilators

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