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Physiology
L22 - Renal physiology
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Created by
Mackenzie Enns
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Cards (62)
What percentage of resting cardiac output is delivered to the kidney?
~
25%
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What does filtrate contain?
Almost everything found in
plasma
except
proteins
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What is urine?
Processed
filtrate
containing unneeded substances
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How much filtrate is formed per day?
Roughly
180
L
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How much urine leaves the body daily?
Less than 1% (
1.5 L
)
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What percentage of filtrate is reabsorbed?
More than
99%
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What are the three processes for urine formation?
Glomerular filtration
Tubular reabsorption
Tubular secretion
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What is glomerular filtration?
Produces
cell-
and
protein-free
filtrate
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What occurs during tubular reabsorption?
Returns
99%
of substances from filtrate to blood
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What is tubular secretion?
Moves
substances
from blood to filtrate
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What is the primary force in glomerular filtration?
Glomerular hydrostatic pressure
(HPgc)
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What does the filtration membrane prevent?
Filtration of
blood cells
and
large proteins
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What is the net filtration pressure (NFP) formula?
NFP =
outward
pressures -
inward
pressures
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If HPgc is 55 mm Hg, OPgc is 30 mm Hg, and HPcs is 15 mm Hg, what is NFP?
10
mm Hg
10 \text{ mm Hg}
10
mm Hg
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What is the typical glomerular filtration rate (GFR)?
120-125
ml/min
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What factors is GFR directly proportional to?
Net
filtration pressure
, surface area,
permeability
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How does afferent arteriole diameter affect GFR?
Wider diameter
increases
GFR, narrower
decreases
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What are the intrinsic controls of GFR regulation?
Myogenic
mechanism
Tubuloglomerular
feedback
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What happens during the myogenic mechanism?
Afferent arteriole
constricts with
increased blood pressure
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What do macula densa cells respond to?
Filtrate NaCl concentration
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What is the response to high filtrate NaCl?
Release of
vasoconstrictor
chemicals
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What is the role of the juxtaglomerular apparatus (JGA)?
Regulates
glomerular filtration rate
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What are the extrinsic controls of GFR regulation?
Sympathetic nervous system
Renin-angiotensin-aldosterone
mechanism
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How does the sympathetic nervous system affect GFR?
Increases
vasoconstriction
, decreasing GFR
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What triggers the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone mechanism?
Decrease in
systemic
blood pressure or
volume
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What is the ultimate goal of the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone mechanism?
Increase
systemic blood pressure
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What does aldosterone do in this mechanism?
Increases
Na+
and
H2O
reabsorption
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What does angiotensin II cause?
Peripheral vasoconstriction
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What increases sympathetic activity in the body?
Norepinephrine
and epinephrine
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What do norepinephrine and epinephrine activate?
Adrenergic receptors
(
⍺1-type
)
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What is the effect of adrenergic receptor activation on systemic arterioles?
Causes
vasoconstriction
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What happens to total peripheral resistance when vasoconstriction occurs?
Total
peripheral
resistance
increases
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How does vasoconstriction affect systemic blood pressure (BP)?
It increases systemic BP
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What is the effect of vasoconstriction on afferent arterioles in the kidneys?
It decreases blood flow to
nephron
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What is the result of decreased blood flow to the nephron?
Decreased
glomerular filtration rate (GFR)
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How does decreased GFR affect urine output?
It
decreases urine output
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What is the purpose of redirecting blood flow to vital organs?
To maintain
organ function
during low
BP
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What is the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone mechanism?
Sequence of hormones released due to low
BP
Increases systemic BP by:
Increasing
Na+
and H2O reabsorption (aldosterone)
Causing peripheral vasoconstriction (
angiotensin II
)
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What triggers the release of renin from juxtaglomerular cells?
Low systemic
BP
or blood volume
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What are the three pathways that activate juxtaglomerular cells to release renin?
Sympathetic nervous system
,
macula densa cells
,
reduced stretch
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