Urinary Concentration Mechanisms Flashcards

1
Q

how does ADH signaling work?

A

binds to G protein coupled V2 receptor
G protein activates adenylate cyclase which makes cAMP which activates PKA
PKA phosphorylations result in aquaporin and urea transporter insertion

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2
Q

what is the urine concentration excretion requirement?

A

600mOsmoles/day

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3
Q

what is max antiduresis?

A

0.5 L of 1200mOsmole urine

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4
Q

what is max diuresis?

A

10L of 60 mOsm urine

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5
Q

what is the gradient between the tubule and interstitial in the loop of henle?

A

200 mOsm

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6
Q

how does the counter current multiplier system work?

A

water is removed from thin descending tubule and Na is removed from the thick ascending tubule to make the tubular fluid/interstitial fluid the correct concentration to maintain the 200mOsm concentration gradient

  • concentration of thin descending tubule and interstitial match–>thick ascending is 200 more
  • concentration of collecting duct matches the concentration of interstitial fluid
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7
Q

what are osmotic diuretics?

A

presence of poorly reabsorbed osmolytes cause tubules to retain water, which increases urine flow (glucose, mannitol, isosorbide)

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8
Q

what can osmotic diuretics be used for?

A

stalled/failing kidneys to increase urine flow

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9
Q

what is syndrome of inappropriate ADH release?

A

high ADH with inappropriate water conservation

results in hypotonic volume expansion

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10
Q

what are the symptoms of syndrome of inappropriate ADH release?

A

hyponatremia
hyposmotic plasma
hyperosmotic urine
increased Na excretion

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11
Q

how is inappropriate ADH release treated?

A

fluid restriction
hypertonic NaCl administration
ADH antagonists

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12
Q

what is diabetes insipidus?

A

lack of ADH control resulting in uncontrolled water loss

hypertonic volume contraction

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13
Q

what are symptoms of diabetes insipidus?

A

polydipsia
polyuria
elevated plasma Na and osmolality

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14
Q

what is central diabetes insipidus?

A

central defect in ADH defect

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15
Q

what is nephrogenic diabetes insipidus?

A

renal defect in responding correctly to ADH

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16
Q

how can you distinguish between the two types of diabetes insipidus?

A

administration of ADH
central DI will respond
nephrogenic will not

17
Q

what is the treatment for central DI?

A

ADH analog that is more selective for V2 receptors

18
Q

what is the treatment for nephrogenic DI?

A

nonloop diuretic
decreased salt intake
NSAIDs- inhibit prostaglandin inhibition of ADH and Na reabsorption