Renal Clearance Flashcards

1
Q

What is the functional unit of the kidney?

A

Nephron

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2
Q

What are the main parts of the nephron?

A

Glomerulus (filters blood)

Tubules (reabsorbs water and filtered solutes and tubular secretion)

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3
Q

What are the two forms of reabsorption that occurs in the tubules?

A
  1. Active reabsorption (transporters)
  2. Passive reabsorption
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4
Q

What are the excretory role of the kidney?

A
  1. Regulates fluid, electrolyte, and acid-base balance
  2. Removes metabolic waste products & foreign chemicals from blood for urinary excretion
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5
Q

How does blood move in the glomerulus?

A

Blood from afferent arteriole brings blood to glomerulus and fluids and electrolytes (filtrate) are pushed into glomerulus (proteins and cells do not leave the blood)

10% of afferent flow is pushed into the glomerulus, the remainer leaves in the efferent arteriole

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6
Q

What is reabsorption?

A

Movement of susbstances out of the renal tubules and back into the blood capillaries

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7
Q

What is Secretion?

A

Movememt of substances out of the blood and into the renal tubules

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8
Q

Can protein bound drug be excreted by the kidneys?

A

No, drug bound to protein cannot be excreted by the kidneys

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9
Q

Are lipophillic drugs easily excreted by the kidneys?

A

No, they are usually eliminated by the liver

Polar drugs are usually excreted by the kidneys

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10
Q

Review slide 11 for renal clearance equation

A
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11
Q

What factors affect glomerular filtration?

A
  1. Molecular size (smaller drugs have greater glomerular filtration)
  2. Plasma protein binding (more binding = less glomerular filtration)
  3. Glomerular integrity and total number of functioning nephrons
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12
Q

What is the most common marker for GFR?

A

Serum creatinine

Creatinine is a byproduct of Creatine (accumulation of Creatinine is indicative of reduced GFR)

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13
Q

What nephron model allows Creatinine clearance to be a marker of GFR?

A

Intact Nephron Hypothesis

  1. Loss of either glomerular or tubular function means loss of whole nephron function
  2. All-or-nothing
    a. All renal excretory processes decline in parallel
    b. So loss of a functional nephron is reflected in GFR

ex. If GFR is 20% or normal, then renal clearance is 20%

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14
Q

What drugs tend to be secreted into the tubules?

A

Drugs that are charged, neutral, or lipophillic can be secreted into the tubules

Transporters are located on both apical and basolateral membranes (can be saturated or inhibited)

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15
Q

What types of drugs are reabsorbed by the kidneys?

A

Transporter mediated:
Endogenous compunds like amino acids, fatty acids, glucose, lactose, vitamins, minerals

Passive reabsorption:
Filtered lipophillic drugs

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16
Q

What physiological factors affect tubular reabsorption?

A
  1. Urine concentration (water reabsorption increases drug concentration in remaining volume, improving concenetration gradient)
  2. Urine Flow (applies to drugs that undergo significant reabsorption): higher urine flow = less drug reabsorbed
  3. Urine pH (ionized drug is more likely to escape reabsorption, unionized drug is more likely to be reabsorbed)
17
Q
A