Renal Physiology Lecture 1: Renal Filtration Flashcards

1
Q

How much plasma is filtered out of glomerular capillaries?

A

20% at any given time

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2
Q

Plasma that is not filtered the glomerular capillaries goes where?

A
  • Remaining plasma + blood cells & protein enters peritubular capillaries
    • Re-enters systemic circulation
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3
Q

What is the fitration fraction?

A

Proportion of plasma volume that filters into the tubule

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4
Q

What are the three filtration barriers in the Renal Corpuscle?

A
  • Glomerular capillary endothelium
  • Basal Lamina (basement membrane)
  • Epithelium of Bowman’s capsule
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5
Q

Glomerular Capillary Endothelium

A
  • Fenestrated capillaries
    • Facilitates filtration → features large gaps which facilitates filtration by allowing fluid and solutes to pass through but not large enough for proteins or blood cells
  • Pore size permits most solutes but not plasma proteins or blood cells (RBCs)
  • Pore surface negatively charged
    • Repels plasma proteins
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6
Q

Glomerular Basement Membrane (GBM, basal lamina)

A
  • Extracellular matrix
    • Acellular → not separated into cells
  • Separates glomerular capillary endothelium from Bowman’s epithelium
  • Negatively charged glycoproteins & collagen
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7
Q

Bowman’s Capsule Epithelium

A
  • Podocytes feature foot processes
    • Wrap around glomerular capillaries
    • Slits present for filtration
  • Contractile mesangial cells contribute to capillary blood flow control
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8
Q

What are the mesangial cells?

A

Mesangial cells are contractile cells that constitute the central stalk of the glomerulus. On the capillary lumen side, mesangial cells are in direct contact with the glomerular endothelium without an intervening basement membrane

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9
Q

What dictates glomerular filtration?

A

Starling Forces

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10
Q

What are the Starling Forces for glomerular filtration?

A
  • Glomerular capillary hydrostatic pressure favours filtration
    • Bowman’s capsule hydrostatic pressure normally lower and net filtration occurs
  • Protein remaining in the capillaries opposes filtration (osmotic)
    • Usually lower than glomerular hydrostatic pressure and net filtration occurs
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11
Q

hydrostatic vs. osmotic pressure

A

hydrostatic: force of fluid volume against a membrane

osmotic: protein concentration on either side of the membrane pulling water toward the region of great concentration

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12
Q

What are the three main forces of glomerular filtration?

A
  • capillary hydrostatic pressure
  • capillary colloid osmotic pressure
  • Bowman’s capsule hydrostatic pressure
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13
Q

What is GFR?

A

Glomerular filtration rate

  • volume of fluid entering Bowman’s capsule/unit time
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14
Q

What is GFR influenced by?

A
  • Net filtration pressure → based on the three forces
    • Altered by renal blood flow (RBF) and blood pressure → can drive further GFR and further filtration
  • Filtration Coefficient (Kf)
    • Total surface area for filtration → surface area of the glomerular capillaries
    • Permeability of barrier between capillaries & Bowman’s capsule
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15
Q

What results in reduced GFR?

A

reduced filtration pressure or filtration coefficient

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