SAQs 2012 Flashcards
1
Q
Outline the mechanisms by which the kidney maintains potassium homeostasis.
A
Structure:
- Normal physiological levels
- Filtration
- Reabsorption
- Secretion
Normal levels:
- 3.5-5
- Important for cellular function, esp cardiac cells.
filtration:
- Freely filtered by glomerulus
- glomerular filtrate 180L/day x ~4mmol = 720mmol k filtered
Reabsorption:
- Mostly reabsorbed in PCT (55%), via solute drag (paracellular)
- This proportion is fixed (note proportion, not amount)
- TAL ~30% via paracellular route and active Na/K/2Cl cotransporter.
Secretion:
- Variable, therefore this is the way that it’s altered.
- Principal cells of late distal tubules and cortical collecting ducts
- Depending on [K+], tubular cells either secrete or reabsorb K.
- 2 steps:
- –> 1. Uptake of K from interstitium via basolateral Na/K ATPase (ACTIVE)
- –> 2. K passively diffuses into tubular fluid via apical K channels (from cell into filtrate).
Determinants of K excretion:
- Increased K in ECF:
- This stimulates the Na/K ATPase, therefore increasing activity, promoting excretion of potassium. - Aldosterone
- Aldosterone also stimulates Na/K ATPase activity, therefore causing increased potassium secretion.
increased concentration of [K+] causes depolarisation of zona glomerulosa cells in the adrenal gland, causing release of Aldosterone into the blood. - Distal tubular flow rate:
- increased flow results on increase potassium secretion.
- Because movement of K outside the principal cells is passive (through the luminal K channel), if there is an increase in the flow rate in the lumen, then the gradient between them is increased, so more potassium leaves the cell. - Acidosis:
- Decreases the effectiveness of the basal Na/K pump, therefore decreases potassium excretion.