Lecture 20 - Renal Regulation of Ion Concentrations Flashcards
Describe the distribution of potassium ions in the body.
L20 S4-5
Extracellular:
- 4.2 +/- 0.3 mEq/L
- increases can lead to cardiac arrhythmia, fibrillation, or arrest
- kidneys precisely regulate extracellular potassium
- ~2%
Intracellular:
- 140 mEq/L
- ~98%
Where in the nephron is potassium reabsorbed and secreted?
L20 S10
Reabsorbed:
- proximal tubule
- ascending limb of Henle
Secretion:
- late tubule
- collecting duct
Describe the mechanism by which high potassium intake regulates potassium excretion.
L20 S14
- high potassium intake increases plasma potassium concentration
- high potassium concentration directly increases secretion of potassium into collecting tubules by increasing flow rate
- high potassium also increases the secretion of aldosterone which also increases secretion of potassium into collecting tubules
- these lead to increased potassium excretion
What effect does an increased sodium intake have on potassium excretion.
L20 S18-20
- increased plasma sodium reduces aldosterone secretion while increasing GFR and proximal tubule sodium reabsorption
- both increased GFR and increased proximal tubular flow rate increase distal tubular flow rate
- decreased aldosterone and increase distal tubular flow rate effectively cancel each other out in regards to potassium secretion/excretion
Describe the mechanism through which decreased extracellular calcium is corrected for
- decreased calcium concentration increased parathyroid hormone secretion
- increased parathyroid secretion increases renal calcium reasorption, calcium release from bone, and vitamin D3 activation
- vitamin D3 activation increases intestinal reabsorption
- all of these increase calcium concentration
Describe the process of phosphate excretion.
L20 S27
- phosphate is reabsorbed at a max rate of .1mM/min
- PTH increases phosphate concentrations while decreasing reabsorption resulting in increased excretion
How do principal cells effect potassium regulation?
L20 S33
Secretion:
- sodium-potassium-ATPase pump in basolateral domain
- passive diffusion through into lumen
Controls of secretion:
- activity of sodium-potassium-ATPase pump
- electrochemical gradients
- permeability of luminal membrane
Factors stimulating secretion:
- increased extracellular potassium (increases pump activity increases aldosterone levels)
- increased aldosterone level
- increased tubular flow rate