Glomerular Filtration Rate and its Regulation Flashcards

1
Q

Glomerular Filtration Rate (GFR)

A

The amount of glomerular ultrafiltrate formed each minute and an indicator of kidney function

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2
Q

How is GFR expressed in cats?

A

ml/min/kg

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3
Q

What may be the first and only clinical sign of kidney disease?

A

A fall in the GFR

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4
Q

What can GFR measurement tell?

A

A key significance in patients that are in early stage of renal failure that non-azotemic (no significant increase in BUN or creatinine)

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5
Q

Nephron and GFR reduction

A

Functioning nephrons reduced to half, but GFR reduces by 25% because the remaining nephrons compensate

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6
Q

How does a substance have to be to measure GFR?

A

Must be freely filtered through the glomeruli
Neither secreted nor reabsorbed by the tubules
Nontoxic
Not metabolized by the body

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7
Q

Renal plasma clearance

A

The volume of plasma from which a substance is completely removed by the kidney in a given amount of time (usually minutes)

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8
Q

What is the result of substance that appears in urine per unit of time result?

A

The the renal filtering of a certain number of ml of plasma that contained this amount
mL/ min

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9
Q

How do you measure the plasma level of a substance?

A

By measuring the amount of that substance that’s secreted

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10
Q

What substance meets the GFR criteria?

A

Inulin- a polymer of fructose, molecular weight of 5200, injected into the body

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11
Q

GFR calculation for inulin

A

GFR= Urine inulin x volume / plasma inulin

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12
Q

What happens if a substance is filtered and reabsorbed but not secreted and what is the formula?

A

The plasma clearance rate is always less than the GFR
This cannot be used because it calculate the GFR incorrectly
Ex; glucose

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13
Q

What happens if a substance is filtered, not reabsorbed but secreted?

A

The plasma clearance rate is always greater than the GFR (hydrogen ion)– also can’t be used

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14
Q

How is kidney function usually assessed in a clinical setting?

A

By measuring the plasma creatinine concentration

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15
Q

Creatinine

A

A breakdown product of creatine phosphate in the muscle and produced at a fairly constant rate by the body

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16
Q

How is creatinine processed?

A

Freely filterable
No reabsorbed
Small amount secreted into the tubular lumen

17
Q

Why aren’t blood creatinine levels a good indicator of early stages of chronic kidney disease?

A

Because significant increase in blood creatinine only occurs following significant nephron loss

18
Q

What gives you a better GFR estimation for renal function?

A

Blood creatinine, urine creatinine and urine flow rate does

19
Q

SDMA

A

Serum levels of Symmetrc dimethylarginine
Correlates well in cats and dogs (detects kidney problems)

20
Q

How is SDMA better than Creatinine?

A

An increase of SDMA levels occur earlier than an increase in creatinine in kidney disease
Increase has been detected when as little as 25% loss of renal function has occurred

21
Q

How would a blockage in the nephron affect the Bowman’s capsule hydrostatic pressure and the GFR?

A

Tubular obstruction –> increased Bowman’s capsule hydrostatic pressure –> decease in GFR

22
Q

How would loss of water in patient suffering from diarrhea affect the plasma-colloidal oncotic pressure and GFR?

A

Loss of water due to diarrhea–> increase in plasma colloid osmotic pressure –> decrease in GFR

23
Q

How do the changes in glomerular hydrostatic pressure affect regulation of GFR?

A

Primary means for physiological regulation of GFR
Increase = increase in GFR
Decrease = decrease in GFR

24
Q

Intrinsic myogenic mechanism to maintain constant GFR rate (increased blood pressure)

A

1/ physiology increases blood pressure
2/ myogenic constrictor response in afferent arterioles
3/ contraction of the vascular smooth muscle within seconds
4/ attenuation of transmission of increased arterial pressure to the glomerular capillaries
5/ helps prevent excessive increases in renal blood flow and GFR when arterial pressure increases

25
Q

Intrinsic myogenic mechanism to maintain constant GFR rate (decreased blood pressure)

A

1/ physiology fall in blood pressure
2/ reduced blood flow to the glomerulus
3/ myogenic vasodilator response in afferent arterioles
4/ transient increase in the blood flow to the glomerular capillaries despite the fall in blood pressure

26
Q

Intrinsic tubuloglomerular feedback mechanism to maintain a constant GFR rate

A

1/ increased blood pressure
2/ increase in GFR
3/ increased flow rate in the tubule
4/ decreased absorption of NaCl
5/ increased concentration of Na and Cl in the mecula densa
6/ increased ATP and adenosine release
7/ vasoconstriction of afferent arteriole and decreased blood pressure

27
Q

What do the mechanisms do?

A

Keep the GFR constant under physiological conditions