Lecture 3 - Kidney Clearance & Function Flashcards
What is the equation for urinary excretion (considering all the processes that occur within the nephron)
Excretion = (Filtration - Reabsorption) + Secretion
What does a decrease in GFR and an increase in GFR mean clinically for a patient?
What are the reasons for why a decrease in GFR may occur?
Why may kidney function not fall signiciantly until significant damage has already occured?
- Decrease in GFR means kidney function has worsened.
- Increase in GFR means kidney function has improved
- 1) Decline in number of nephrons 2) Decline in GFR within individual nephrons
- When kidney function starts to decline, nephrons may hypertrophy so kidney function may not fall significantly until serious damage has occurred.
What is “renal clearance”? (C)
What is the equation to calculate renal clearance?
- Renal clearance is the ability of the kidney to remove a substance from plasma and excrete it, and replace with cleared plasma (in mL/min)
- Cx = ([U]x x V)/[P]x.
- C is also GFR providing substance follows filtrate without being altered by kidney (i.e.: it is not reabsorbed, secreted etc)
What is used as a marker of RBF and why?
- PAH (para-aminohippurate)
- It is completely 100% filtered by the glomerulus, and completely 100% removed from kidneys via tubular secretion. Therefore the rate at which the kidneys clear PAH reflects RBF
Go over questions on slide 11 + slides 17-19 to make sure you have understanding of renal clearance calculations.
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How does age affect GFR? (in young vs elderly)
- Nephron finishes development in 35th-36th week of development, premature and LBW infants often have lower nephron numbers.
- By Birth GFR = 20ml/min, normal GFR by roughly 18 months
- GFR starts declining after 30 Y.O, by 6-7ml/min per decade. Compensatory hypertrophy occurs for loss of functioning nephrons.
- Thinning of cortex + decline in cortex volume resulting in decreased GFR past age of 40.
How does pregnancy affect GFR & kidney size?
- GFR increases roughly 50% (to 130-180mL/min)
- Kidney size increases roughly 1cm
- Nephron number the same
What should a substance be in order to measure GFR?
Why is inulin (which is all of these) not used?
1) Produced at a constant rate
2) Freely filtered across the glomerulus
3) Not reabsorbed in the nephron
4) Not secreted into the nephron
Inulin requires continous I.V administration to maintain a steady state, and requires catheter and timed urine collections
If Inulin is not used to measure GFR, what other substances can be used?
What are the limitations of these markers?
1) 51 Chromium-EDTA - timed injection w/blood samples 2,3 & 4 hours afterwards. However, 10% lower clearance than inulin (possibly reabsorbed). Used in children or where indication of renal function is required.
2) Creatinine - endogenous substance, end product of muscle breakdown, measured in urine and serum over 24 hours. However, overestimates GFR by 10-20% as it is secreted into the nephron and is cumbersome (have to carry a bottle of urine).
What factors affect serum creatinine in an individual, and therefore the estimation of GFR using it as a marker?
- High muscle mass = high serum creatinine
- High meat intake = high serum creatinine
- Young, black, male = higher serum creatinine
- Creatinine supplement use = high serum creatinine
- Reduced muscle mass (i.e.: due to age) = low serum creatinine
- Old, female, hispanic = low serum creatinine
- Vegetarian = low serum creatinine
Although, serum creatinine is relatively stable in most individuals