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kidneys receive ___-most of the body's entire cardiac output
2nd
the kidneys convert _____ ____ to urine
blood plasma
the kidneys maintain the blood's ____ balance
ion
the bladder is controlled by _____ muscle
smooth
renal cortex vs. renal medulla
Renal cortex: outer part of the inside of the kidney
- blood vessels located here
Renal medulla: inside part of the inside of kidney
- conc. of urine is regulated here
what is the smallest functional unit of the kidney?
the nephron
what are the 2 components of the nephron?
vascular and tubular
what are the 2 types of nephrons, and which type is more abundant in the kidney?
cortical and juxtamedullary
cortical is more abundant (80%)
cortical glomeruli lie in the (inner/outer) cortex layer
outer
juxtamedullary glomeruli lie in the (inner/outer) cortex layer
inner
the afferent arteriole carries blood to the ____
glomerulus
where does filtrate production begin?
glomerulus
the efferent arteriole carries blood from the ____
glomerulus
supply the renal tissue, involved in exchanges with fluid in tubular lumen
peritubular capillaries
components of vascular nephron
- afferent arteriole
- glomerulus
- efferent arteriole
- peritubular capillaries
ball of capillaries where filtrate production begins
glomerulus
components of tubular nephron
- bowman's capsule
- proximal tubule
- loop of henle
- distal tube and collecting duct
collects glomerular filtrate
bowman's capsule
uncontrolled reabsorption and secretion of selected substances occur here
proximal tubule
structure that establishes osmotic gradient in renal medulla that's important in the kidney's ability to produce urine of varying concentration
loop of henle
variable, controlled reabsorption of Na+ and H2O/secretion of K+ and H+ occur here
distal tube and collecting duct
what structure is the combined vascular and tubular component of the nephron?
juxtaglomerular apparatus
this nephron structure facilitates the exchange of info and adjusts how much filtrate is produced, produces substances involved in control of kidney function, and is the region where the ascending loop of henle passes through
juxtaglomerular apparatus
what are the 3 basic renal processes of urine formation in order, and in what direction does urine flow for each of them?
glomerular filtration - glomerulus to bowman's capsule
tubular reabsorption - tubular lumen to peritubular capillaries
tubular secretion - peritubular capillaries to tubular lumen
of the 3 urine formation processes, which are selective and which are nonselective?
glomerular filtration - nonselective
tubular reabsorption and secretion - selective
what substances are not filtered out through glomerular filtration? (i.e. they stay in our bodies)
cells (e.g. RBCs) and proteins
how many layers must filtrate pass through during glomerular filtration, and what are those layers?
1. pores within endothelial cells of glomerular capillary
2. basement membrane (negative charge prevents protein leak)
3. filtration slits in inner layer of bowman's capsule
purpose of podocyte foot process
contains/controls glomerular filtrate rate
if bp increases, (more/less) plasma is filtered out
more
if bp decreases, (more/less) plasma is filtered out
less
what happens if the bp = 0?
filtrate production stops, leading to eventual kidney failure
what are the 3 pressures that affect glomerular filtration rate?
- glomerular capillary blood pressure
- plasma-colloid osmotic pressure
- bowman's capsule hydrostatic pressure
of the 3 GFR pressures, which favor/oppose filtration?
- glomerular capillary bp: favors
- plasma-colloid osmotic pressure: opposes
- bowman's capsule hydrostatic pressure: opposes
of the 3 GFR pressures, which are constant and which can be changed?
glomerular capillary bp can be changed, the other 2 stay constant
t/f: glomerular capillary bp controls GFR since the other 2 pressures don't change
t
what causes plasma-colloid osmotic pressure?
the unequal distribution of protein between plasma and glomerular filtrate
what causes bowman's capsule hydrostatic pressure?
fluid pressure by filtrate in bowman's capsule
net filtration pressure normally (favors/opposes) filtration
favors
in addition to net filtration pressure, what are the other determinants of GFR?
- glomerular surface areas available for penetration
- permeability of glomerular membrane
what are the 2 controlled adjustment methods of GFR?
autoregulation and extrinsic sympathetic control
what happens to GFR during vasoconstriction?
GFR decreases
local response within arteriolar smooth muscle wall to stretch
myogenic autoregulation
adjustments to afferent arteriolar pressure in response to salt concentration in loop of henle
tubuloglomerular feedback
how does autoregulation maintain a constant GFR across a large BP range (e.g. during exercise, stress, disease, etc.)
macula densa cells detect increased GFR and salt delivery to distal tubules (due to high BP) -> GFR decreases -> prevents unnecessary loss of water/salts to urine during exercise
autoregulation and extrinsic sympathetic control both use the same mechanism of:
changing the diameter of the afferent arteriole (vasoconstriction/vasodilation)
how would kidney stones affect GFR?
GFR would decrease because of an increase in the hydrostatic pressure in Bowman's capsule
tubular epithelium vs. capillary epithelium
tubular epithelium:
- has luminal and basolateral membrane
- forms tight junctions with adjacent tubular cells
- permeability varies along length of tubule, subject to hormonal control
capillary epithelium:
- no tight junctions between cells
- more permeable
trans epithelial transport requires that a substance pass through which 5 barriers in order?
1. luminal membrane of tubular cell
2. cytosol of tubular cell
3. basolateral membrane of tubular cell
4. interstitial fluid
5. capillary wall
describe the 2 types of tubular reabsorption
passive: movement down osmotic/electrochemical gradient (H2O)
active: requires energy (sodium, glucose, amino acids, electrolytes)
t/f: during tubular reabsorption, almost all of sodium is reabsorbed
t
where in the nephron is sodium reabsorbed? List their percentages and the function of sodium reabsorption in each region.
67% in proximal tubule - reabsorption of glucose, amino acids, water, chloride, urea
25% in loop of henle - ability to produce urine of varying concentrations/volumes, sets up concentration gradient
8% in distal and collecting tubes - regulation of ECF volume, subject to hormonal control
how does aldosterone stimulate sodium reabsorption?
by inserting additional leak channels in the luminal membrane, and additional Na/K ATPase pumps in the basolateral membrane
intracellular sodium concentration is (high/low), while interstitial sodium concentration is (high/low)
low, high
what protein facilitates the movement of H2O down its concentration gradient?
aquaporin
describe the 2 types of aquaporins
aqp1 - always open, found in proximal tubules
aqp2 - regulated by vasopressin, expressed by distal/collecting tubes
t/f: because urea is small in size, its diffusion/reabsorption is not very effective, so half of urea in the filtrate is still excreted
t
what are the 6 key substances of the raas system (in order)?
angiotensinogen, renin, angiotensin 1, ACE, angiotensin 2, aldosterone
angiotensinogen is made in the
liver
renin is released from the
kidneys
ACE is an enzyme present in the
lungs
aldosterone is released by the
adrenal cortex
renin role
converts angiotensinogen to angiotensin I
ACE role
converts angiotensin 1 to angiotensin 2
angiotensin 2 roles (4)
stimulates vasopressin, thirst, vasoconstriction, stimulates adrenal cortex to release aldosterone
aldosterone role
increases sodium reabsorption by inserting additional sodium channels and pumps
what is the ultimate purpose of the RAAS system?
to reabsorb sodium and water to restore normal values of ions, water, pressure, etc. in the body
what is the connection between hypertension and RAAS activity?
hypertension is caused by an abnormal increase in RAAS activity
what conditions stimulate the RAAS system?
low sodium, ECF volume, and arterial bp
what inhibits sodium reaborption/RAAS?
ANP and BNP (natriuretic peptides)
glucose and amino acids are (actively/passively) reabsorbed in the proximal tubule via ____
actively, sodium-dependent hsymport carriers (e.g. SGLT)
t/f: the number of SGLTs is finite, which results in a tubular maximum
t
what is the renal threshold?
300 mg/100 mL
what is the tubular maximum?
400 mg/min
describe healthy tubular reabsorption conditions of glucose
all glucose is reabsorbed, none secreted
hydrogen ions can be secreted/reabsorbed by special ____ ____ in distal/collecting tubes
intercalated cells
long loops of henle _____ the vertical osmotic gradient (VOG)
vasa recta ____ VOG
collecting tubules ____ VOG
establish, preserve, use
in what direction does K+ move during tubular secretion?
into the lumen, opposite of Na+'s direction
high plasma K+ concentration stimulates:
aldosterone from adrenal cortex
t/f: almost all K+ in urine is a result of tubular secretion
t
ECF osmolarity value
300 mOsm/L
hypotonic vs. hypertonic in terms of urine concentration
hypotonic: water excess, dilute urine
hypertonic: water lack, concentrated urine
what is the process that establishes the VOG in loop of henle?
countercurrent multiplication
isotonic osmolarity
renal cortex
filtrate after passing through the loop of henle is (concentrated/dilute)
dilute
limb that is: impermeable to sodium, highly permeable to water
descending
limb that is: actively transporting sodium into the interstitial fluid, always impermeable to water
ascending
maximum concentration in medulla
1200 mOsm/L
draw the descending and ascending loops of henle and label the following:
- cortex and medulla
- varying concentrations (e.g. 100, 300, 1200)
- movement of water and sodium in the respective limbs
.
countercurrent multiplication maintains a difference of ___ mOsm/L at every "level"
200
vasopressin
stimulated during water deficit, inserts aqp2 in luminal membrane to produce a small volume of concentrated urine, thus conserving water
how does excess alcohol consumption affect vasopressin?
vasopressin is inhibited, leading to dehydration and excess urine output
vasa recta purpose
preserves VOG while supplying blood to medulla
micturition
process of emptying the bladder from kidneys -> uterus -> bladder
what prevents back flow of urine?
increased pressure against ureters as the bladder fills
what 2 sphincters prevent the bladder from emptying continuously? differentiate the 2 in terms of type of muscle, voluntary/involuntary
internal urethral sphincter: smooth muscle, involuntary
external urethral sphincter: skeletal muscle, voluntary
internal urethral sphincter:
when the bladder relaxes -> ____
when the bladder contracts -> ____
sphincter closes, sphincter opens
t/f: the external urethral sphincter's motor neurons continuously fire and keep the sphincter closed unless the neurons are inhibited
t
initiated when stretch receptors in the bladder wall stimulate parasympathetic supply to the bladder, inhibiting the bladder's motor neurons
micturition reflex
how can you prevent the micturition reflex?
by deliberately tightening the external sphincter