Long term control of blood pressure Flashcards

1
Q

Which organ is responsible for long term control of blood pressure ?

A

Control of plasma volume by the kidneys

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2
Q

What are the functions of the kidney ?

A
Excretion of waste products 
Maintainace of ion balance 
Regulation of pH
Regulation of osmolarity 
Regulation of plasma volume
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3
Q

What is the effect of the renal counter current system ?

A

Creates a very high osmolarity outside the collecting duct

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4
Q

How is control over how much water is lost with urine achieved ?

A

Control over Na+ transport determines how big that osmotic gradient is
Control over the permeability of the collecting duct to water determines if water follows that osmotic gradient or not
Hence you can control how much water is lost in the urine, and how much is retained

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5
Q

Where is sodium pumped ?

A

Pumped outside of the distal tube - concentration of the solute therefore decreases significantly before it reaches the collecting duct

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6
Q

What will effect how big the conc gradient is ?

A

Modulating Na+ transport

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7
Q

What is the affect of varying the permeability of the collecting duct ?

A

Making the collecting duct very permeable to water will result in lots of water reabsorption, little urine and conserve plasma volume
Making the collecting duct very impermeable to water will result in little reabsorption, lots of urine (=diuresis) and a reduction in plasma volume

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8
Q

What are the three main hormones that regulate water reabsorption ?

A
Renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system 
Antidiuretic factor (ADH, vasopressin)
Atrial natriuretic peptide (factor) and brain natriuretic peptide (factor)
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9
Q

Where is renin produced ?

A

From the juxtaglomerular (=granule cells) of the kidney

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10
Q

What triggers renin production ?

A

Activation of sympathetic nerves to the juxtaglomerular apparatus
Decreased distension of afferent arterioles (the renal baroreflex)
Decreased delivery of Na+/Cl- through the tubule
(all of these are signs of low MAP)

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11
Q

What does renin do ?

A

Converts inactive angiotensinogen to angiotensin I
Which in turn converted by angiotensin converting enzyme to angiotensin II
-

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12
Q

How does angiotensin II stimulate release of aldosterone from the adrenal cortex ?

A

increases Na+ reabsorption in the loop of Henle

Therefore reduces diuresis and increases plasma volume

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13
Q

How does angiotensin II increase release of ADH from the pituitary ?

A

Increases water permeability of the collecting duct

Therefore reduces diuresis and increases plasma volume and increases sense of thirst

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14
Q

How does angiotensin II increase TPR ?

A

It is a vasoconstrictor

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15
Q

Where is ADH produced ?

A

Synthesised in hypothalamus

Released from posterior pituitary

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16
Q

What triggers ADH release ?

A

Decrease in blood volume (as sensed by cardiopulmonary baroreceptors and relayed via MCVS)
An increase in osmolarity of the ISF (as sensed by osmoreceptors in the hypothalamus)
Circulating angiotensin II (triggered by the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system)

17
Q

What does ADH do ?

A
Increases the permeability of the collecting duct to H2O therefore reduced diuresis and increases plasma volume 
Cause vasoconstriction (hence its alternative name, vasopressin), therefore increasing MAP
18
Q

Where is ANP and BNP produced ?

A

Produced in and released from myocardial cells in the atria and the ventricles respectably

19
Q

What triggers ANP and BNP release ?

A

Increased distension of the atria and ventricles

20
Q

What do ANP and BNP do ?

A

Increase excretion of Na+ (natriuresis)
Inhibit the release of renin
Act on MCVS to reduce MAP

21
Q

What percentage of hypertension cases are as a result of secondary (known) causes ?

A

5-10%

22
Q

What are the rational drug treatments for hypertension ?

A
Ca2+ channel blockers 
B-adrenoreceptor blockers 
Thiazide diuretics 
ACEI
Angiotensin II blockers