Lecture 16- Urinary 1 Flashcards
Describe the anatomy of a kidney:
- Renal cortex
- Renal medulla (in it tubes)
- Renal Pelvis
- Renal artery (the blood vessel supplying and vein taking it out -large proportion of blood going to the kidney from each heartbeat)
- Renal vein
- Ureter
- the dots are glomerulus
Describe the anatomy of a nephron:
- Glomerulus=glomerulus= in cortex, round, made up of capillaries, arteriole from renal artery going onto the glomerulus then divides into capillaries then the capillaries join together and form another arteriole= the efferent one
- Afferent/efferent arterioles (around the glomerulus, start of the up and down tubules)
- Juxtaglomerular apparatus(specialised cells)
- Proximal tubule (the one closest to the glomerulus)
- Loop of Henle (special part of the tubule goes all the way deep to the medulla)
- Peritubular capillaries (vasa recta) (around the whole tubules= supplied by the afferrent arterioles, way of getting blood to the tubules and taking things away)
- Distal tubule- the one after Henle
- collecting duct (goes down from cortex to the medulla)
What does the glomerulus do?
-lining cells of the capillaries= can open and close the leakage of capillaries, depending if it is stimulated or not, so glomerulus can be very leaky or not
-filtrates
What makes up the glomerular membrane (3 components)?
- Endothelium (glomerular capillary)
- Basement membrane
- Inner layer of Bowmans capsule (podocytes)
- things have to get through these to get to the blood
podocytes= more leakage or less leakage
Which substances always leak through out of the system out of the system into the bowman’s?
-H2O, nutrients, urea and other wastes
Which substances never leak through out of the system out of the system into the bowman’s?
- blood proteins and cells= blood cells
- they can’t pass through no blood cells, too large unless there is damage in the glomerulus,
How much cardiac output goes to the kidneys?
25%
How much plasma that goes to the kidneys is filtered?
20% of plasma entering glomerulus is filtered
-not all the blood going to the kidney is being filtered at this point
What is glomerular capillary pressure?
-affects how much leakage
more pressur in the glomerular capillaries= increase in glomerular filtration
-if you get excited, sympathetic sytem= increase in blood pressure and after a while= you produce more urine= hence why people have to pee after sex9
How does afferebt arteriole pressure affect the glomerular filtration rate?
- have to consider what is happening to the afferent arteriole
- contraction= less pressure= less filtration
What is mucula densa and what does it do?
-part of the juxtaglomerular apparatus
an area of closely packed specialized cells lining the wall of the distal tubule at the point of return of the nephron to the vascular pole of its parent glomerulus
- decerase in blood pressure= lower GFR= lower concentration of Cl and Na ions in the filtrate
- The macula densa can sense this decrease and trigger an autoregulatory response to further increase reabsorption of ions and water in order to return blood pressure to normal.
- ecretes a locally active (paracrine) vasopressor which acts on the adjacent afferent arteriole to decrease glomerular filtration rate (GFR), as part of the tubuloglomerular feedback loop
What is juxtaglomerular apparatus?
- microscopic structure in the kidney, which regulates the function of each nephron.
- function in regulating renal blood flow and glomerular filtration rate. The three cellular components of the apparatus are the macula densa of the distal convoluted tubule, smooth muscle cells of the afferent arteriole and juxtaglomerular cells.
What is the tubuloglomerular feedback?
juxtagomerular apparatus
flow here will be due to the glomerular filtration rate, the cells will respond to change in flow in that area, can affect the podocytes, more leakage or not, and effect on afferent arteriole can change the filtration
so the change in flow in the tubule modifies what happens in the glomerulus
-loop of henle, starts close to the glomerulus and ends close to it
= useful, can regulate the blood flow there, depending on how much filtration is going on
What is the effect of arterial pressure on GFR?
What does podocyte contratcion do?
when they contract= more leakage, not contracted= less leakage