Loop of Henle Flashcards

1
Q

How are lipid soluble and nonpolar substances reabsorbed in the tubules?

A

The active transport of Na which causes the transport of water creates a concentration gradient that forces lipid soluble substances across the membrane

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2
Q

What is absorbed in the proximal tubule?

A
  • 65-75% of NaCl and water

- 100% of nutritionally important substances (glucose, AA’s, FA’s)

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3
Q

Why is the fluid that leaves the proximal tubule still isotonic with the plasma, despite the reabsorption of substrates?

A
  • Because the substrate reabsorption always has equivalent water movement with it, keeping the concentrations the same
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4
Q

Where are the proximal and distal tubules of all nephrons located anatomically within the kidney?

A

The Cortex

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5
Q

What are the two types of nephrons? What is the difference between them?

A
  • Cortical nephrons and juxtamedullary nephrons
  • Juxtamedullary nephrons have a longer loop of Henle that penetrates deeper into the medulla than the short loops of the cortical nephrons
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6
Q

What is the maximum concentration of urine the human kidney can produce? How does it compare to plasma concentration? What is the minimum urine concentration?

A

1200-1400 mOsm/L

  • Around 4x more concentrated than plasma

30-50 mOsm/L

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7
Q

Describe the permeability of the descending and ascending limbs of the loop of Henle

A

Descending: freely permeable to water, relatively impermeable to NaCl

Ascending: Impermeable to water, actively transports Na & Cl ions out of the tubule lumen into the interstitium

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8
Q

What is the mechanism that occurs in the loop of Henle of juxtamedullary nephrons called?

A

Counter-current multiplier mechanism

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9
Q

Describe the steps of by which the counter current mechanism is established in the loop of Henle

A
  1. The active transport pumps in the ascending limb move Na & Cl into the interstitium, until a limiting conc. gradient of 200 (300 interst., 100 tubule)
  2. Water in the descending limb follows salt to the interstitium, increasing conc. from 300 - 400
  3. Water moves from tissue into vasa recta (doesn’t dilute interstitium)
  4. Higher concentration of fluid flowing into the ascending limb allows more NaCl into interstitium, maintaining a conc. gradient of 200 (becomes 400 inter., 200 tubule)
  5. Once established the interstitium gradient goes from 300 at the top to 1200 at the bottom.
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10
Q

By what mechanism do drugs like frusemide inhibit the counter current mechanism? What is the consequence of this inhibition?

A
  • They inhibit the active transport of Na out of the ascending limb
  • Results in only isotonic urine being produced
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11
Q

What does the countercurrent mechanism acheive?

A
  • Diluted urine enters the distal tubule
  • About 15-20% of the initial filtrate is removed from the loop of Henle
  • Established concentration gradient in the interstitium
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12
Q

Compared to plasma, how concentrated is the filtrate that enters the distal tubule after traversing the loop of Henle in a juxtamedullary nephron?

A
  • Hypotonic to plasma, due to NaCl removal
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13
Q

Why is it that the vasa recta don’t just reabsorb the solute that is actively transported into the interstitium?

A

Because they are arranged in hairpin loops which slows blood flow, so any solutes reabsorbed into the blood have time to diffuse back into the interstitium

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14
Q

What is the purpose of the countercurrent mechanism in the loop of Henle?

A

To reabsorb water

  • Without it only large volumes of isotonic urine would be produced, which would greatly increase water requirements
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15
Q

What are the functions of the vasa recta?

A
  • Provide oxygen to the medulla

- Reabsorb water from the interstitium

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16
Q

What is the main site of water regulation in the nephron? How is it regulated?

A
  • The collecting duct

- Its permeability is under hormonal control, by ADH (vasopressin)