Development Flashcards

1
Q

common embryological origin of urinary and reproductive systems

A

intermediate mesoderm (lies lateral to paraxial mesoderm, which generates bone, muscle, and dermis)

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2
Q

kidney development order

A

pronephros -> mesanephros -> metanephros; present from cranial (pronephros) to caudal (metanephros)

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3
Q

pronephros: what is it, timeline

A

first kidney, in cervical region; develops during third week and regresses by fifth week; forms as single rod of IM, separates from IM and grows to and fuses w/ cloaca (day 26); cavitates to form pronephric duct; 4th week: pronephric duct induces IM to develop pronephric vesicles (5-7 paired segments of IM give rise to small epithelial hollow balls); these vesicles become excretory units in lower vertebrates but disappear by day 25 in mammals, while the duct never fully degenerates

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4
Q

mesonephros: what is it, timeline

A

second kidney, in upper thoracic to 3rd lumbar region (caudal to pronephros); present from third-fourth week to 5th-12th week and can form urine by the 5th week (passage of urine occurs to cloaca during weeks 10-14); regress in females, become vas deferens and efferent ducts of testes in males

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5
Q

metanephros: what is it, timeline

A

third (and final) kidney; nephrogenesis begins at week 5 and ends by week 36 (poss after birth in premie), although growth/differentiation/remodeling continues after nephrogenesis ends at week 36; functional by week 10 (produces amniotic fluid)

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6
Q

signaling of metanephric development

A

Pax2 (TF) in metanephric mesenchyme causes metanephric mesenchyme to secrete GDNF; GDNF acts on ureteric bud c-RET-GFR receptor to initiate invasion of the metanephric mesenchyme by the ureteric bud (c-RET-GFR incr Wnt 11, which has positive feedback on GDNF in metanephros); after invasion, ureteric bud undergoes branching (T stage); branching is inhibited by BMP4 (expressed in sleeve of mesenchymal cells adjacent to ureteric epithelium), which is inhibited by GREM1 at the site of uretericbudding

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7
Q

ureteric bud branching

A

first 4 bifurcations of ureteric bud generate 16 branches, which coalesce to form 3-5 major calyces; the next 4 rounds of bifurcations generate 16 branches, which again coalesce to form minor calyces; the remaining bifurcations generate the collecting ducts

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8
Q

CAKUT

A

congenital abnormalities of the kidney and urinary tract

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9
Q

kidney ascension timing

A

kidneys ascend between 6th and 10th week, and their vasculature ascends with them

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10
Q

hypoplastic kidneys

A

small kidneys w/ fewer calyces and fewer nephrons but retain a moderate degree of excretory fn (discrete renal pelvis is present)

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11
Q

cystic dysplastic kidneys

A

contain malformed tubules and small cysts but retain some excretory fn (discrete renal pelvis is present)

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12
Q

multicystic dysplastic kidney (MCDK)

A

no useful excretory fn, pelvis is absent or severely disorganized; often undergo apoptosis and reabsorption

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13
Q

Potter syndrome: etiology (3), sx (3)

A

due to oligohydraminios, which can be due to bilateral renal agenesis (20% Potter syndrome), obstruction of UT, or prolonged rupture of membranes; sx: pulm hypoplasia (this not compatible w/ postnatal life), limb deformations, Potter facies

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14
Q

ADPKD gene

A

polycystin 1 and 2; part of cilia -> mutation leads to loss of cell cycle regulation and apical-basal polarity

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15
Q

ADPKD vs ARPKD: frequency, age, cyst areas, other probs (3 in AD, 3 in AR)

A

ADPKD much more common, onset at adulthood, causes cysts in all nephron segments, and also has cysts in liver and pancreas, systemic HTN, and cerebral/aortic aneurysms; ARKPD is less common, onset in infancy/childhood, causes cysts only in CD, and also leads to biliary dysgenesis and hepatic fibrosis as well as portal and systemic HTN

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16
Q

posterior urethral valves

A

most common obstructive lesion in boys and one of the most common congenital lesions leading to CKD in kids; during urine passage the stream balloons the valves (redundant tissue) towards each other creating an obstruction

17
Q

most common obstructive lesion in boys

A

posterior urethral valves (PUV)

18
Q

bladder development: timeline, derivation

A

division of the cloaca via the urorectal septum into rectum and urogenital sinus occurs during 4th-7th week, the superior part of the urogenital sinus forms the bladder (endoderm)

19
Q

horseshoe kidney assoc w/, sx, incidence

A

assoc w/ Turner’s, incidence 1/500, us. asymptomatic but can lead to ureter obstruction (can’t fully ascend)