Development Flashcards

1
Q

What are the 3 major stages of kidney development?

A
  1. Pronephros: formation of mesonephric duct
  2. Mesonephros: extends caudally, grows down
  3. Metanephros: ureteric bud forms & invades the metanephric mesenchyme
    - UB branching occurs, molecular signals from mesenchyme
    - UB makes signals to tell MM to undergo mesenchymal to epithelial transition
    (retinoic acid dependent)
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2
Q

Mesonephric duct

A

Forms from epithelization of intermediate mesoderm

Also called the Wolffian duct

Individual tubes form out of this

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3
Q

Ureteric bud

A

becomes collecting tubule, collecting duct and ureters

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4
Q

Metanephric mesenchyme

A

Becomes the podocytes, epithelial cells lining Bowman’s capsule, proximal convoluted tubule, loop of Henle, distal convoluted tubule

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5
Q

Bladder development

A

From cloaca = end of terminal hindgut

Dorsal portion becomes rectum & anal canal and ventral portion becomes bladder & UG sinus (lower UG tract)

Distal ends of mesonephric ducts absorbed into wall of bladder as trigone

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6
Q

When does kidney ascent occur?

A

Weeks 6-9

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7
Q

CAKUT

A

Congenital anomalies of the kidney and urinary tract

1:500 have one

Represent 20-30% of all anomalies identified during the prenatal period

50% childhood kidney failure worldwide is attributed to CAKUT

primary insults are thought to be environmental factors & genetic mechanisms

Includes kidney hypoplasia, dysgenesis, agenesis…multicystick kidney, horseshoe kidney, duplex kidney, VUR, hydronephrosis, obstructions

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8
Q

Renal agenesis

A

Failure of UB to reach MM, often due to disruption of local molecular signalling

Usually accompanied by ipsilateral abnormalities including small or absent bladder, ureter, vas deferens, Muellerian or seminal vesicle anomalies

Unilateral: 1/1000 births, male>female

Bilateral: 1/3000-6000, perinatal lethal due to pulm hypoplasia

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9
Q

Duplication of the urinary tract

A

Gain of function in induction or differentiation

UB divides prematurely, before invading the MM –> double kidney and/or double ureter

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10
Q

VUR

A

Vesicoureteral reflux

Retrograde passage of urine from the bladder into the upper urinary tract

1% of newborns have it

Primary = most common, strongly genetic, also can be secondary

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11
Q

Primary VUR clinical presentation: prenatal v. postnatal

A
  • *Prenatal**: ID’d by prenatal USG showing hydronephrosis; 10-40% of fetuses with antenatal hydro will be diagnosed with VUR postnatally
  • renal hypoplasia and dysplasia (scarring)
  • mostly male
  • increasing grades of reflux and renal scars identify a higher risk group for subsequent renal injury & long-term effects
  • *Postnatal**: generally diagnosed after febrile illness or UTI
  • predominantly female
  • risk of scarring increases with severity of VUR
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12
Q

Primary VUR pathogenesis

A

Most common form: anti-reflux mechanism occurs during bladder contraction by muscle compression of the intravesical ureter

incompetent closure is thought to occur due to intravesical ureter shortening: shorter submucosal tunnel permits reflux during compression

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13
Q

Secondary VUR Pathogenesis

A

Results from abnormally elevated bladder pressure

Anatomic: posterior urethral valves, 1/8000 boys, incontinence, infection, renal failure, 10-15% ESRD

Functional: neurogeneic bladder, urethral obstruction

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14
Q

Renal Coloboma Syndrome

A

Autosomal dominant

PAX2 abnormalities: affects developing eye, ear, kidney, ureteric bud, CNS

PAX2 = essential for differentiation of MM into epithelial tubules in response to inductive signals from the UB

Optho findings = from abnormal growth of periocular mesenchyme into developing eye
- severe myopia & bilateral sharply defined white excavations of optic discs

Lots of mutations/variability

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15
Q

Willms tumor = Nephroblastoma

A

Embryonic cancer of developing kidney

Most common form of childhood kidney cancer, 4th overall childhood cancer

Usual presentation: palpable abdominal mass, usually painless but may be accompanied by pain, hematuria, fever, hypertension

Usually unilateral tumor with encasing fibrous capsule; some can be bilateral & occur with other UG malformations

Cellular origin is unclear, but several genetic mutations found including tumor suppressor genes and oncogenes: WT1 (TF, tumor suppressor or oncogenic protein when overexpressed; increased risk of bilateral and recurrent dz), WTX, CTNNB1

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16
Q

Genetic Cystic kidney dz

A

Disorders of terminal epithelial differentiation

Fluid-filled cysts in the parenchyma form –> abnormal kidney structure and function

Can be inherited or acquired (esp associated with kidney carcinoma)

Can manifest at any age; can be singular or multiple cysts; can be benign

Defects in cilia/centrosome are major factors in the development of this dz

17
Q

3 types of cystic diseases:

A

ARPKD: autosome recessive polycystic kidney dz: multipe microscopic cysts mainly in distal collecting ducts

ADPKD: autosomal dominant polycystic kidney dz: bilateral renal enlargement secondary to multiple cysts; localized to primary cilia of renal epithelial cells

NPH: nephronophthisis: recessive dz, abnormal renal tubules, interstitial inflammation, fibrosis

18
Q

Anomalies in ascent:

A

They should ascend through the fork formed by the umbilical arteries

Fialure in ascent means they stay closer to the common iliac artery (too low)

They can even fuse if they ascend close to each other = horseshoe kidney

Accessory renal arteries are common & come from persistence of the embryonic vessels that formed during ascent

19
Q

Nephron number

A

Established in utero; kidney development doesn’t continue after birth

ranges from 210,000-2,700,000 per kidney

Reduction in nephron number= leading cause of renal failure in childhood

More subtle defects predispose to adult onset htn, chronic kidney dz, cardiovascular dz

20
Q

Which factors ifnluence nephron number during development?

A

Food restriction

Low protein diet

Placental insufficiency

IUGR

Vitamin A deficiency

Glucocorticoid exposure

Antibiotics – gentamicin

Genetic mutation