Loop of Henle Flashcards
What is the major site for reabsorption?
Proximal tubule
What percentage of Na reabsorption occurs at the proximal tubule?
65-75%
Does any protein get through filtering into the renal tubule?
- Some protein does get through
- Particular albumin, about 30g of protein/day which is 0.5% of the total amount presented at the glomerulus
- All completely reabsorbed by a Tm carrier mechanism in proximal tubule
Many drugs are nonpolar and so highly lipid soluble so removal of water in proximal tubule creates concentration gradients for their reabsorption (meaning would never be able to get rid of them). How is this fixed so they can be excreted?
- But liver metabolises them to polar compounds to reduce their permeability and facilitate their excretion
What is the osmocity of the fluid that leaves the proximal tubule?
Is isosmotic with plasma, ie, 300mOsmoles/L
What are the two kinds of nephrons?
Cortical nephron
Juxtamedullary nephrons
What is a juxtamedullary nephron?
Nephron whose renal corpuscle is near the medulla, and whose proximal convoluted tubule and its associated loop of Henle occur deeper in the medulla than the other type of nephron, the cortical nephron
What is a cortical nephron?
Cortical nephrons (the majority of nephrons) start high in the cortex and have a short loop of Henle which does not penetrate deeply into the medulla
What is a special system essentially for water balance?
Loops of Henle of juxtamedullary nephrons
What allows the kidneys to produce concentrated urine in times of water deficit?
A special system essential for water balance is attributable to the loops of Henle of juxtamedullary nephrons
What is the maximum concentration of urine that can be produced?
1200-1400mOsmoles/L
(4x more conentrated than plasma)
How much more concentrated is the maximum concentration of urine than plasma?
4x
What is the concentration of all the waste product that must be excreted each day (Urea, sulphate, phosphate and other waste products and non-waste ions (sodium and potassium))?
About 600mOsmoles/L, which therefore requires a minimum obligatory water loss of 500ml
What is the minimum urine concentration that can be produced?
30-50mOsmoles/L
(10x more diluted than plasma)
How much more diluted is the minimum concentration of urine than plasma?
10x
How are the kidneys able to produce urine of varying concentrations?
Loops of Henle of juxtamedullary nephrons act as counter-current multipliers:
- Counter current meaning fluid flows down the descending limb and up the ascending limb
- Critical characteristics of loops which make them counter-current multipliers are
- The ascending limb of loop of Henle actively co-transports Na and Cl ions out of the tubule lumen into the interstitium, the ascending limb is impermeable to water
- Descending limb is freely permeable to water but relatively impermeable to NaCl
What are critical characteristics of Loops of Henle that makes them counter-current multipliers?
- The ascending limb of loop of Henle actively co-transports Na and Cl ions out of the tubule lumen into the interstitium, the ascending limb is impermeable to water
- Descending limb is freely permeable to water but relatively impermeable to NaCl