Kidneys Flashcards
What is osmoregulation?
The homeostatic control of the water potential of the blood.
An optimum concentration of water and salts is maintained to ensure a constant water potential of blood plasma and tissue fluid.
What is the structure of the kidney?
Fibrous capsule - outer membrane for protection.
Cortex - lighter coloured region made up of renal capsules, convoluted tubules and blood vessels.
Medulla - darker coloured inner region made up of loops of Henle, collecting ducts and blood vessels.
Renal pelvis - cavity that collects urine into the ureter.
Ureter - tube carries urine to bladder.
Renal artery - supplies blood to kidney via aorta.
Renal vein - returns blood via vena cava.
What is the nephron?
A narrow tube up to 14mm long, closed at one end, with two twisted regions separated by a long hairpin loop.
Each nephron is made up of the renal (bowman’s) capsule, proximal convoluted tubule loop of Henle, Distal convoluted tubule, collecting duct.
What is the renal capsule?
The closed end at the start of the nephron.
Cup-shaped and surrounds a mass of blood capillaries - the glomerulus.
The inner layer is made up of podocytes.
What is the PCT?
A series of loops surrounded by blood capillaries.
Its walls are made of epithelial cells which have microvilli.
The DCT is the same, but has less capillaries.
What is the loop of Henle?
A long hairpin loop that extends from the cortex into the medulla of the kidney and back again.
It is surrounded by blood capillaries.
What is the collecting duct?
A tube into which a number of DCTs from a number of nephrons empty.
It is lined by epithelial cells and becomes increasingly wide as it empties into the pelvis of the kidney.
What are the blood vessels of the nephron?
The afferent arteriole is a tiny vessel that arises from the renal arteriole and supplies the nephron with blood.
It enters the renal capsule of the nephron to form the glomerulus.
This is a branched knot of capillaries from which fluid is forced out of the blood.
They recombine to form the efferent arteriole - a tiny vessel that leaves the renal capsule.
What are the efferent arterioles?
It has smaller diameter than the afferent so causes an increase in blood pressure in the glomerulus. They carry blood away from the renal capsule and later branches to form blood capillaries.
This is a concentrated network of capillaries that surrounds the PCT, the loop of Henle, and DCT, from where they reabsorb mineral salts, glucose and water.
The capillaries merge together into venules, that merge into the renal vein.
How does the nephron cause osmoregulation?
The formation of glomerular filtrate by ultrafiltration.
Reabsorption of glucose by the PCT.
Maintenance of gradient of sodium ions in the medulla by the loop of henle.
Reabsorption of water by the DCT and collecting ducts.
How does ultrafiltration form glomerular filtrate?
The diameter of the afferent arteriole is greater than the efferent arteriole,so there is a build up of hydrostatic pressure within the glomerulus.
So glucose, water and mineral ions are squeezed out of the capillary to form the glomerular filtrate.
Blood cells and proteins cannot pass as they are too large.
What is the movement of filtrate out of the glomerulus resisted by?
By the: capillary epithelial cells.
Connective tissue and epithelial cells of the blood capillary.
Epithelial cells of the renal capsule.
The hydrostatic pressure of the fluid in the renal capsule space.
The low water potential of the blood in the glomerulus.
What are the modifications to reduce the barrier to the flow of filtrate through the glomerular capillaries?
The inner layer of the renal capusle is made up of podocytes.
These cells have spaces between them which allows filtrate to pass beneath them and through gaps between their branches.
The endothelium of the glomerular capillaries has spaces 100nm wide between its cells. Fluid can again pass between, not through, the cells.
What is the reabsorption of glucose by the PVT?
In the proximal convoluted tubule nearly 85% of filtrate is reabsorbed back into the blood.
Ultrafiltration removes small molecules.
Some, such as urea, are wastes, but most are useful so are reabsorbed.
How are the epithelial cells the proximal convoluted tubules have adapted to reabsorb substances into the blood?
Microvilli to provide a large surface area to reabsorb substances from the filtrate.
Infoldings at their bases to give a large surface area to transfer reabsorbed substances into blood capillaries.
A high density of mitochondria to provide ATP for active transport.