Regulation of EF Volume and NaCl Balance Flashcards

1
Q

What is effective circulating volume?

A

portion of ECF volume that is effectively perfusing the tissues

not a measurable or distinct compartment

about 1.7% of TBW or 1% of body weight

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2
Q

What occurs in congestive heart failure in relation to fluid compartments?

A

low ECV due to reduced CO

Na and fluid retention –> increase ECF, but still no increase in ECV

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3
Q

What are the 4 ways to counteract decreases in effective circulating volume?

A
  1. Activation of RAAS
  2. baroreceptor reflex –> sympathetic stimulation
  3. increased ADH
  4. increased renal fluid retention via altered starlings forces in the peritubular capillaries
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4
Q

What do osmoreceptors sense, and what are their 2 functions?

A

sense changes in plasma osmolality

regulate ADH and thirst

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5
Q

What are the 2 sensors affecting ADH secretion?

Which is more sensitive?

A

osmoreceptors

baroreceptors

osmoreceptors are more sensitive!

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6
Q

How much does blood pressure need to fall for ADH to rise to compensate?

A

by 20%

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7
Q

How does decreases of sensed blood volume affect ADH?

A

sensitizes the osmoreceptor-ADH system, so that smaller changes of osmolality induce larger amounts of ADH

opposite for expansion –> desensitized

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8
Q

Which type of baroreceptor specifically affects ADH?

how?

A

cardiopulmonary baroreceptors

sense pressure in atria and pulmonary arteries –> hypothalamus –> ADH

also send afferent info to brainstem w/ arterial baroreceptors

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9
Q

What do arterial baroreceptors do?

A

sense pressures in aorta and carotid arteries –> afferent to brainstem vasomotor center –> autonomic efferents regulate TPR, cardiac performance, sympathetic drive to kidney, venous compliance

(cardiopulmonary baroreceptors can do the same thing in addition to signaling hypothalmus)

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10
Q

How do problems with sodium balance manifest?

A

as altered ECF volume –> signals baroreceptors –> RAAS/SNS/ANP –> urine Na excretion affected

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11
Q

How do problems with water balance manifest?

A

plama osmolality abnormality –> osmoreceptors sense –> hypothalamic osmoreceptors –> ADH –> urine osmolality/water retention and thirst

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12
Q

What is the effect of renal sympathetic nerve stimulation?

A

decreased GFR

increased renin secretion

increased sodium reabsorption along nephron

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13
Q

What are the effects of the Renin-Angiotensin-Aldosterone system on the kidney?

A

Angiotenin II –> Na reabsorption along nephron and ADH secretion

Aldosterone –> Na reabsorption in DT and CD and lesser degree in TAL

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14
Q

What effect do ANP, BNP, and Urodilatin have on the kidney?

A

increased GFR

decreased renin

decreased aldosterone (indirect via angiotensin II and direct on adrenal gland)

decreased NaCl and water reabsorption by CD

Decreased ADH and inhibition of its action of DT and CD

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15
Q

What are the 3 main causes for renin secretion?

A
  1. Perfusion pressure in afferent arterioles
  2. sympathetic nerve activity
  3. NaCl delivery to macula densa (tubuloglomerular feedback)
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16
Q

Where is the macula densa?

A

proximal part of distal tubule

17
Q

What is the main action of ANP?

A

directly inhibits Na reabsorption in the distal parts of the nephron –> pee out more Na and H2O to lower blood volume

also inhibits renin secretion and acts on adrenal cortex to inhibit aldosterone

18
Q

How is sodium reabsorbed in the early proximal tubule?

A

isoosmotic reabsorption

apical side: co-transported w/ glucose, AAs, Pi, lactate; exchanged for H+

Basolateral side: Na/K ATPase

19
Q

Where do carbonic anhydrase inhibitors work, and what is their effect?

A

Act on the early PT

inhibit reabsorption of filtered HCO3 –> indirectly lead to decreased absorption of Na

20
Q

How is Na reabsorbed in the late proximal tubule?

A

Filtered glucose, AAs, and HCO3- have been already absorbed

Na is reabsorbed with Cl-

21
Q

How does an ECF volume contraction affect PCT reabsorption?

A

increases it

22
Q

How does an ECF volume expansion affect PCT reabsorption?

A

decreases it

23
Q

How is sodium reabsorbed in the TAL?

A

apical side: NKCC

basolateral side: Na-K ATPase

24
Q

How is Na reabsorbed in the early distal tubule?

A

apical side: Na-Cl cotransporter

basolateral side: Na-K ATPase

25
Q

Which type of cell in the collecting duct reabsorbs Na and H2O?

A

principal cells