Physiology of Micturition & Assessment of Renal Function, Urea, Creatinine and GFR Flashcards
When is it important to assess renal function?
Renal disease - rate of decline of GFR gives inication of prognosis - renal disease causes damage to nephrons and therefore reduces nephron function
Many drugs are removed by filtration - excretion decreases when GFR decreases meaning drug concentration in the plasma can reach toxic levels
Describe plasma clearance tests
Measure the ability of the plasma to clear various substances
Clearance concerns the volume of plasma cleared and not a quantity of substance removed from the plasma
What is the equation for the plasma clearance of X?
Ux = urine concentration of X
V = Urine flow rate
Px = Plasma concentration of X
What molecule is often used for plasma clearance tests?
Inulin
In clinical practice, inulin is no longer used, because too cumbersome, 51Cr-EDTA has been used instead, a suitable radioactive substance that is handled by the kidney in the same way as inulin.
What makes inulin an effective measurer of GFR?
Freely filtered at the glomerulus
Not reabsorbed or secreted
Not metabolised by the kidney
Doesn’t interfere with normal renal function
How does secretion and reabsorption alter clearance rate?
Reabsorbed - lower clearance rate
Secreted - higher clearance rate
What is GFR in a normal man
GFR in “normal” man = 125mls/min. The magnitude correlates with surface area, but values in women are » 10% lower, even after correction for surface area. GFR declines by »1ml/min/year after 30
GFR is too complex and expensive to measure, it takes several hours and an injection of isotope 51 Cr EDTA - what is the clinical replacement?
Plasma creatinine (a breakdown product of muscle creatine)
What is the big caution associated with using creatinine as a marker of GFR?
Plasma creatinine decreases as GFR increases
BUT
It is not a linear equation
The GFR can halve before there is an increase in creatinine
Creatinine plasma concentration is therefore taken into account alongside other variables to make up the estimated GFR
What factors affect serum creatinine?
Muscle mass: athletes vs malnutrition
Dietary intake: creatine supplements vs vegetarians
Drugs: Some lead to spurious increases as does ketoacidosis.
What is normal GFR?
Normal GFR is approximately 100mls/min/1.73m2
What is the clearance of glucose?
0 since it is normally reabsorbed
How much urea is reabsorbed?
50%
What substance is used to measure real plasma flow (RPF)?
PAH - para-amino-hippuric acid - it is freely filtered at the glomerulus and remaining plasma is secreted. Over 90% of the PAH is removed from the plasma in one transmit of the kidney
Renal plasma flow is about 660 mls/min
In this table - when filtration increases reabsorption also increases
When excretion increases - secretion also increases