Glomerular filtration Flashcards

1
Q

List the three basic renal processes.

A

Filtration
Reabsorption
Secretion

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2
Q

What % of the plasma volume passing through the glomerulus at any given time is filtered

A

20%

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3
Q

What is the blood filtering component of a nephron

A

Renal corpuscle

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4
Q

20% of the plasma volume passing through the glomerulus at any given time is filtered, what happens to the other 80%

A

passes via the efferent arterioles into the peritubular capillaries and then to the renal vein

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5
Q

Plasma makes up what % of blood volume

A

55%

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6
Q

Glomerular filtration rate > ?mls/min

A

> 90

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7
Q

Glomerular filtration is dependant on the balance between what forces

A

Hydrostatic forces (pushing fluid out capillary, i.e. favouring filtration)

and

Oncotic forces (favouring fluid into capillary, i.e. favouring reabsorption)

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8
Q

What is starling’s hypothesis

A

that the fluid movement due to filtration across the wall of a capillary is dependent on the balance between the hydrostatic pressure gradient and the oncotic pressure gradient across the capillary

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9
Q

Glomeruli are permeably selective on what solutes they allow cross the glomerular filtration barrier - what are some of the things considered

A

Molecular size
Electrical charge
Molecular shape

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10
Q

The fenestrated capillaries making up each glomerulus prevents filtration of what cells into the glomerulus

A

Blood cells - RBC/WBC etc

only allows plasma to get through

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11
Q

Why is glomerular capillary pressure higher than most other capillaries in the body

A

because the afferent arterioles making up the glomerulus is short and wide and so little resistance to flow so blood arriving has high hydrostatic pressure

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12
Q

Afferent arterioles are one of the final divisions of each segmental artery supplying the kidney, what do the afferent arterioles form

A

capillary network, i.e. the glomerulus

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13
Q

Efferent arterioles of the glomerulus are unlike the afferent arterioles - how?

A

long and narrow so offers a high post-capillary resistance

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14
Q

At the glomerular capillaries, the high capillary pressure means what starling’s force is favoured

A

hydrostatic pressure favouring filtration exceeds the oncotic pressure

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15
Q

Explain why normally only filtration occurs at the glomerular capillaries

A

because glomerular capillary pressure always&raquo_space; colloid osmotic pressure gradient due to proteins in plasma (i.e. oncotic pressure)

so filtration always favoured

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16
Q

Factors affeting GFR

A

Glomerular capillary pressure

17
Q

Glomerular capillary pressure is dependent on

A

afferent and efferent arteriolar diameter and therefore the balance of resistance between them

18
Q

Afferent and efferent arteriolar diameter is extrinsically controlled by what 3 things

A

Sympathetic nerves –> constrict them

Catecholamines –> constrict them

Angiotensin II –> constrict efferent arterioles at low conc of angiotensin II at both at high conc.

19
Q

If resistance is increased in afferent arteriole of the glomerulus, what does this mean for blood flow to other organs

A

increased blood flow to other organs

20
Q

If renal blood flow is decreased, what do the efferent arterioles do in response to this to maintain GFR

A

increase their resistance so decreasing their diameter therefore increasing hydrostatic pressure to favour filtration and increase GFR

21
Q

If resistance of afferent arterioles were decreased further (they already are low resistance), what does this mean for

  • glomerular capillary pressure
  • GFR
A

Glomerular capillary pressure increases so GFR increases

22
Q

GFR can be maintained over what range of mean arterial BP

A

60-160mmHg

23
Q

Below 60mmHg, what happens to GFR

A

Filtration rate decreases

24
Q

If mean arterial BP increased, what would be the intrinsic response of the glomerulus to maintain GFR

A

afferent arteriolar constriction, preventing pressure rise from being transmitted to glomerular capillaries

25
Q

Renal vasculature has an intrinsic ability to adjust its resistance (i.e. change its diameter) in response to changes in what in order to keep BF and GFR essentially constant, i.e, renal autoregulation

A

arterial BP

26
Q

If a severe haemorrhage were to happen, what implication does this have on GFR

A

systemic vasoconstriction would override autoregulation of renal blood flow and therefore GFR in order to liberate blood for more important organs in that moment

27
Q

100% plasma volume entering the afferent arteriole of the glomerulus, 20% of this filters into the PCT, how much of this is reabsorbed/excreted

A

19% reabsorbed into peritubular capillaries and returns to systemic circulation

28
Q

180 litres of plasma is filtered through the kidneys a day, how much of this is actually excreted as urine

A

1-2l

29
Q

Glomerular capillaries lie between what 2 arterioles to form a vascular network

A

afferent and efferent

30
Q

Explain why normally only reabsorption occurs at the peritubular capillaries

A

Because oncotic pressure exceeds hydrostatic pressure in the peritubular capillaries so always favours reabsorption
-since the other 80% blood not filtered into the tubule remains in the afferent arteriole and subsequently the peritubular capillary so it will have high conc. of plasma proteins than in the tubule so will exert increased oncotic pressure

31
Q

Why is the peritubular capillary pressure very low compared to capillary pressure in the glomerulus

(peritubular capillaries carry blood away from glomerulus)

A

Because there’s a large frictional resistance along the length of the peritubular capillary (ie. efferent arteriole) while glomerular capillaries always favour filtration into the tubule

32
Q

Function and afferent and efferent arterioles

A

Carry blood to and away from the glomerulus respectively

33
Q

Constriction of the afferent arterioles has two effects:

A

increases the vascular resistance which reduces renal blood flow (RBF),

and it decreases the pressure downstream from the constriction, which reduces the GFR

34
Q

Constriction of the efferent arterioles has 2 effects:

A

also increases the vascular resistance so it reduces RBF.

The pressure within the glomerular capillaries may increase so the net result is an increased filtration fraction (ratio of GFR to RBF) but GFR overall still decreases as RBF is decreased

35
Q

Filtration fraction is the ratio of

A

GFR to RBF

36
Q

If you have high resistance, does hydrostatic pressure upstream/downstream increase or decrease

A

Upstream - increase

Downstream - decrease