Lesson 8 Flashcards

1
Q

Describe the structure of a nephron

A
  • The glomerulus: where happens the filtration
  • Different tubules and collecting ducts: where urine is secreted
    o Proximal tubule
    o Loop of Henle
    o Distal tubule
    o Collecting ducts
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2
Q

Which characteristics are important to undergo renal excretion?

A
  • ionized forma at physiological pH
  • Low lipid solubility
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3
Q

Which compounds are eliminated through glomerular filtration and why?

A

Water, electrolytes and other endogenous compound are excreted in this way. The limit in term of molecular weight is 66000 in order to avoid the elimination of proteins

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4
Q

Which transporters are necessary for the tubula excretion?

A

ABC drug transporters (P-gp and MRP).
SLC drug transporters (OAT, OCT, MATE) -> minor role

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5
Q

What is a victim drug?

A

A drug administered at the same time of another one with a higher affinity to the transporters. It’s no longer able to be excreted so it remain in the blood and may create toxicity

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6
Q

Give some examples of drugs that undergo tubular excretion

A
  • Antidiabetic drug metformin
  • Antineoplastic drug methotrexate
  • Weak acid (penicillin, salicylates, phenobarbital, glucoronoconjugates and sulphoconjugates
  • Weak basis (morphine)
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7
Q

Despite glomerular filtration and tubular secretion, the renal clearance of a xenobiotic may be relatively low, why?

A

due to the occurrence of important reabsorption mechanisms:
- Active or facilitated reabsorption, occurs in proximal tubules and involves in almost all cases electrolytes (Na+/K+), sugars, aminoacids, lactate, vitamins…
- Passive reabsorption: mainly occurs in both distal tubules and collecting ducts, according to chemical lipophilicity, pKa and urinary pH, etc.

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8
Q

Which factors affect renal clearance?

A
  • Higher plasma concentration, higher renal clearance
  • The more a given compound is lipophilic, the more it is excreted
  • The extent of plasma protein binding: if they’re bound, they’re excreted in a longer time.
    This is less important for drug excreted through tubular excretion
  • The extent of drug ionization, Pka and pH.
    The pH of urine depends on the diet, omnivorous and carnivorous have urine with pH around 5.5-6.5, herbivores (and probably vegans) have a pH around 7-8. Weak acids are best reabsorbed in animals with acid urine, and weak bases are normally absorbed better in a basic environment.
  • Renal diseases: the associated reduction in the rate of glomerular filtration and tubular secretion will prolong the body persistence of drugs. Adjustments in drug dosages is necessary.
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9
Q

Definition of renal clearance

A

Renal clearance is the volume of plasma completely cleared by the kidneys via the urine per unit of time.

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