renal assessment and micturition Flashcards

1
Q

How is renal function assessed

A

eGFR

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2
Q

What is GFR

A

Sum of all filtration by all functioning nephrons so the progression of renal disease would show a decreased GFR

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3
Q

Why do you need to be careful when prescribing drugs and antibiotics to people with renal disease

A

The drugs are excreted via filtration and when the GFR falls, so does the excretion of the drug so the drug concentration in the plasma may rise which would cause toxicity

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4
Q

How is eGFR measured

A

Plasma clearance test (not how much is found in the urine) - give a dosage of inulin and give it time to spread within the plasma and equiblirate and then over time period sample simultaneously urine and plasma and then do the equation to find eGFR

Creatinine clearance is routinely used as well

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5
Q

Why is inulin used in plasma clearance test for measuring eGFR

A

100% is excreted - 0% reabsorption and it is not secreted either

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6
Q

What substances have highest clearance

A

Substances which are secreted because their plasma concentration will decrease while their quantity in urine will increase

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7
Q

What is the normal GFR

A

125mls/min

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8
Q

Does GFR decline with age

A

It declines 1ml/min/year after 30

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9
Q

What factors affect serum creatinine

A

Muscle mass
Diet - creatine supplements and meat intake
Drugs - some can lead to increases and so can ketoacidosis

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10
Q

What is the clearance of glucose

A

0 due to it being fully reabsorbed

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11
Q

What is the clearance of urea

A

50% since it is only 50% reabsorbed

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12
Q

What is para-amino-hippuric acid (PAH) and what is it used to measure

A

It is an organic anion which is used to measure real plasma flow (RPF)

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13
Q

Why is PAH used to measure renal blood flow

A

It is freely filtered at the glomerulus and the PAH which isn’t filtered and is in the plasma, gets secreted into the tubule so the clearance is high at 90% in one transit of the kidney

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14
Q

What is normal renal plasma flow

A

660mls/min

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15
Q

What is the clearance of penicillin

A

Very high due to it being secreted from the plasma into the tubule as well

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16
Q

What causes urine to flow from the kidney to the ureters and then to the bladder

A

Peristaltic contraction of the smooth muscle of the ureters

17
Q

Why do ureters enter the bladder at an oblique angle

A

prevents reflux of urine

18
Q

What is the detrusor muscle

A

smooth muscle of the bladder which is arranged in spiral, longitudinal and circular bundles

19
Q

What is responsible for the emptying of the bladder during micturition

A

The detrusor muscle contracting

20
Q

What is the internal urethral sphincter

A

The smooth muscle at the bladder neck at the start of the urethra where it acts as sphincter when relaxed

21
Q

What is the external urethral sphincter

A

True sphincter made up of skeletal muscle which is under voluntary control

22
Q

Describe the anatomical position of the bladder

A

Lies in the midline posterior to the pubic bone
It is anterior to the reproductive system and the rectum
It is superior to the urethra and prostate

23
Q

What epithelium lines the bladder

A

Transitional epithelium (uroepithelium)

24
Q

does a urethral obstruction cause a bilateral problem or unilateral

A

bilateral

25
Q

does a ureteric obstruction cause a bilateral problem or unilateral

A

Unilateral

26
Q

What is the normal range of urine production in a day

A

750-2500mls

27
Q

At what volume in the bladder is there an increased urgency to urinate

A

400-500mls

28
Q

What controls micturition (motor innervation specifically)

A

Parasympathetic supply from the pelvic nerves which causes contraction of detrusor muscle which increases the pressure of the bladder leading to micturition (S2-4)

Scattered sympathetic supply by the hypogastric nerves which inhibits the contraction of the bladder and keeps the internal urethral sphincter closed (main function is to prevent reflux of semen into the bladder during ejaculation (L1-3)

Somatic motor neurons (pudendal nerves) - innervate the skeletal muscle that forms the external urethral sphincter which keeps it closed even against bladder contractions

29
Q

What happens when the hypogastric nerve gets cut with relation to micturition

A

Increased frequency as the hypogastric nerve inhibits the detrusor muscle and keeps the internal urethral sphincter closed

30
Q

What controls micturition (sensory innervation)

A

Stretch receptor afferent nerves from the bladder which sense how full the bladder is - as the bladder fills it sends discharges in afferent nerves to the spinal cord and then via interneurons it causes

Excitation of parasympathetic outflow
Inhibition of sympathetic outflow
Inhibition of somatic motor neurons to external sphincter
Tells the sensory cortex that there is a sensation of fullness

31
Q

How is delay in micturition accomplished

A

Descending pathways from many brain centres like the cortex and brainstem

They inhibit parasympathetic (control over detrusor contraction)
stimulate somatic nerves to the external sphincter

32
Q

How is voluntary initiation done

A

parasympathetic system is stimulated and somatic motor neurons are inhibited

33
Q

What is the effect of relaxation of pelvic floor muscles during voluntary urination

A

Creates a downwards tug on the detrusor muscle to initiate contraction

34
Q

After urination what empties the female urethra

A

gravity

35
Q

After urination what empties the male urethra

A

Contractions of the bulbocavernosus muscle

36
Q

What is the mild mass reflex

A

Initiation of voiding by pinching or stroking thighs - this is commonly seen in some paraplegic patients

37
Q
A