Lecture 33 Flashcards

1
Q

What are the three ways that calcium can be added to plasma?

A
  1. Absorption from the digestive tract
  2. Reabsorption (mobilisation) from the bone
  3. Reabsorption at the kidneys
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2
Q

What are the two main ways that calcium can be removed from plasma?

A
  1. Calcification of bone

2. Filtration at kidneys

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3
Q

What are the main calcium sensing receptors and where are they found?

A

CaSR- found mainly in parathyroid and thyroid glands

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4
Q

How many parathyroid glands do mammals have and where are they located?

A

Mammals have 4 parathyroid glands. Dogs have 2 external glands and 2 internal

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5
Q

What is the primary cell of the parathyroid and what is secreted by them?

A

the chief cells that secrete PTH

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6
Q

Describe the relationship between plasma calcium concentrations and para-thyroid hormone secretion:

A

the relationship is sigmoidal. The system is designed to respond more drastically to hypocalcaemia

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7
Q

What are the three main renal effects of para-thyroid hormone?

A
  1. Stimulation of calcium re-absorption (predominantly influencing the distal nephron)
  2. Inhibition of phosphate re-absorption (the proximal tubule is quantitatively more important, maintains appropriate Ca:P in face of hypoglycemia)
  3. Stimulates synthesis of calcitriol (increasing hydroxylation in proximal tubule)
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8
Q

How does parathyroid hormone increase bone re-absorption?

A

PTH increases the synthesis of RANKL and decrease OPG that leads to increased action of the OC (more calcium)

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9
Q

Explain how parathyroid stimulates the conversion of vitamin D3 to active calcitrol within the kidney:

A
  1. PTH stimulates the conversion of vitamin D3 to active calcitrol in kidney
  2. Calcitrol increases calcium uptake in GIT by synthesis of calcium binding protein and Ca2+ATPase in enterocyte
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10
Q

What is the effect of calcitriol on PTH?

A

calcitriol suppresses gene transcription reducing PTH synthesis

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11
Q

What is the effect of phosphate on PTH?

A

High phosphate stimulates PTH secretion

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12
Q

How is calcitriol synthesised?

A
  1. Inactive Vitamin D comes from the diet or is produced by the skin
  2. Converted in the proximal tubule of the kidney through 1-alpha-hydroxylase (PTH is required for activation from the kidney)
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13
Q

What is the effect of calcitrol on the gastrointestinal tract?

A

Increases absorption of Ca2+ and P in the GIT

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14
Q

What is the effect of calcitrol on parathyroid glands?

A

Decreases PTH transcription

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15
Q

What is the effect of calcitrol on bone?

A

Stimulates the production of RANKL, increasing osteoclast activity

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16
Q

What is the effect of calcitrol on the kidney?

A

Increases calcium re-absoprtion within the distal tubule

17
Q

Where is calcitonin produced?

A

para-follicular (C-cells) of the thyroid

18
Q

What is the primary biological actions of calcitonin?

A

decreases re-absorption of calcium and phosphate

19
Q

What are the short term and the long-term effects of calcitonin?

A

In the short term, calcitonin decreases osteocyte osteolysis (transfer of Ca from canaliculi to ECF), leading to a decrease in Ca levels in the blood. In the long-term, calcitonin decreases bone re-absorption by inhibiting the activity of osteoclasts, causing decreased calcium and potassium.