w2- metabolic consequences of kidney failure Flashcards

1
Q

what are the principle substrates for gluconeogenesis

A

lactate, the amino acids alanine & glutamine, and glycerol

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2
Q

what contributes to the circulating glucose during an overnight fast, late into a fast, and in the post- prandial state

A

After an overnight fast, glucose release via gluconeogenesis is about equal from liver & kidneys, although total glucose yield from liver is greater because it also performs glycogenolysis.

As fasting continues, and the contribution of liver glycogenolysis declines, the proportion of all the glucose released into the circulation coming from the kidneys increases- about equal liver and kidney In the

post-prandial state, glycogenolysis & gluconeogenesis in liver both decrease, but in kidneys gluconeogenesis increases 2x. It accounts for 60% of endogenous glucose release in the post-prandial period.

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3
Q

what would be the consequences of renal failure to arginine and NO synthesis

A

kidney synthesizes the majority of arginine and also contributes to NO synthesis

since the arginine is converted into citriline in the small intestines and then uncovered by the kidney into arginine, without the kidney all of the urea would be converted to urea by the liver

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4
Q

why would melanin and NE production be decreased in CKD

A

kidneys make tyrosine by hydroxylating phenyalanine

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5
Q

Where is ammonia in the kidney produced

A

PCT

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6
Q

what does the kidney use glutamine for

A

glutamine is made into ammonia –> used to buffer acidity and decrease uric acid stones

glutamine –> glutamate –> alpha keto

the above rxn yels alpha ketoglutarateàCo2 àbicarb to also buffer

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7
Q

what is the kidneys response to acidemia

A

increase ammonia

increase bicapb

hypertrophy due to decreased protein degredation

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8
Q

what kind of anemia is caused by CKD?

what is a TX

A

normocytic (normal MCV), normochromic (normal concentration of hemoglobin in red cells) and hypoproliferative anemia

EPO - if dont respond then add iron

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9
Q

what is the preferred energy source for the kidney

A

ammonia

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10
Q

define Cachexia

A

degrade more proteins (increased proteosome activity) than regularly and this is then complicated by anorexia and the down reg of protein synthesis

Increased by acidemia whichincreases proteasome activity

Increased by inflammation

Downregulation of protein synthesis due to insulin resistance

Result in negative nitrogen balance

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11
Q

what happens to leptin in CKD

A

increased –> limits appetite

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12
Q

ID the role of hepcidin

A

Iron availability is controlled by the liver hormone, hepcidin

Hepcidin lowers dietary iron absorption and macrophage iron recycling from senescent red cells and this is elevated in CKD

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