Role of urea in concentrating urine Flashcards

1
Q

Urea excretion

A

-20-50% of urea is excreted

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2
Q

Urea in proximal tubules

A

-proximal tubules reabsorb 40-50% of filtered urea

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3
Q

Urea in descending loop of Henle

A

-concentration of urea increases because of water reabsorption

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4
Q

Urea in other areas of nephron

A

-thick segment of ascending limb of loop of Henle, distal tubule and collecting tubule are not permeable to urea

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5
Q

Ureas role in concentrating urine

A

-Na, Cl, urea helps significantly with creating hyperosmotic medullary interstitium

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6
Q

Urea in collecting tubules

A

-water reabsorption in collecting tubules resulting in urea concentration increasing creating a concentration gradient allowing urea to diffuse into medullary interstitium

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7
Q

How is urea transported into medullary interstitium?

A

**concentration gradient
-facilitated diffusion by urea transporter-1 and urea transporter-3 (UT-1 and UT-3)

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8
Q

Obligatory urine volume

A

-the least volume of urine required to excrete excess solutes/metabolic waste
**depends on the maximum urine concentrating ability of the kidneys

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9
Q

If our kidneys concentrate urine to ~1200 mOsm/L and we need to excrete 600 milliosmoles of solutes per day, what is the obligatory urine volume?

A

600/1200= 0.5 L/day

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10
Q

Drinking sea water

A

-sea water osmolarity= 1200 mOsm/L
- if you drink 1L of sea water, body needs to excrete 1200 mOsm of additional salt
-means that body needs to excrete 1L of urine because this is the maximum capacity of our kidneys to concentrate urine. BUT since the body needs to excrete waste products too, it would also require another 0.5L of urine

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11
Q

Urine specific gravity

A

-the measure of urine concentration (g/L)

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12
Q

Changes in urine specific gravity

A

-correlates with changes in urine osmolarity
BUT not a complete overlap!!

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13
Q

Difference between urine specific gravity and osmolarity

A

-urine specific gravity considers the number and molecular weight of solutes
-osmolarity only related to the number of molecules

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14
Q

Normal urine specific gravity of humans

A

1.002-1.028 g/L

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15
Q

Effects of larger molecules on urine specific gravity

A

-when larger molecules (such as antibiotics) are excreted in urine, this measurement can be mistakenly interpreted as increased concentration of urine

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16
Q

Urine concentration capacity in different species

A

-varies in different species
-high protein diet (increased urea) helps with concentrating urine (preserving water when needed) however more urea also needs to be excreted too
**when too concentrated, can result in stones

17
Q

Urine concentration capacity

A

-correlates with renal relative medullary area
>the more relative medullary area, the more concentrated urine that can be produced

18
Q

What 2 characteristics of renal blood flow in the medulla help maintain high solute concentration?

A

1.slow blood flow in vasa recta capillaries
2.Countercurrent exchanger mechanism

19
Q

Countercurrent exchanger mechanism

A

-Vasa recta is permeable to water and solutes
-when blood goes down the vertical gradient of medullary interstitium, water is pulled out of vasa recta because of concentration gradient
-when blood goes up the vertical gradient, solutes move out of the vasa recta because of concentration gradient and water moves back into vasa recta because of osmolarity
-blood enters and leaves the medulla via the vasa recta (U-shaped capillary)
-as blood moves deeper in the medulla, its osmolarity increases to match the increasing osmolarity of medulla
-Bottom of u shaped capillary= osmolarity is equal to interstitium (1200 mOsm/L)
-as blood goes up toward cortex, its osmolarity decreases to match that of surrounding interstitium (water moves back in and solutes diffuse into the interstitium)