Formation of Urine Flashcards

1
Q

Where are 80% of the glomeruli found?

A

In cortex

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2
Q

What does sensory mechanism in the macula densa and juxtaglomerular apparatus do?

A

Senses changes in blood in sodium and chloride conc

Stimulates release of renin

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3
Q

How does blood enter the kidneys? What does this divide into?

A

Via the renal artery, divides to smaller arteries and finally arterioles

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4
Q

What are the arterioles in contact with?

A

Functional units of the kidneys –> nephrons

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5
Q

What happens in the nephrons?

A

Where blood filtration and urine formation takes place

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6
Q

Where is filtered blood then collected into?

A

Series of large veins –> leaves via renal vein

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7
Q

Where is urine collected?

A

In collecting ducts, leaves via ureter

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8
Q

Where does glomerular filtration take place?

A

Bowman’s capsule

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9
Q

How does blood enter the Bowman’s capsule? What then happens to this blood?

A

Via afferent arteriole

Passes through ball of capillaries called the glomerulus

Leads via efferent arteriole

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10
Q

What is the size of the afferent arteriole compared to the efferent?

A

Afferent much wider –> blood hydrostatic pressure in these capillaries is higher than normal

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11
Q

What is effect of high hydrostatic pressure in glomerulus?

A

Drives water and solutes (glucose, amino acids, urea, creatinine) from blood through filtration membrane

This forms glomerular filtrate

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12
Q

Where does filtrate then pass after exiting the glomerulus?

A

It flows into a duct in the nephron called the renal tubule

The first part of this tubule is the proximal convoluted tubule

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13
Q

What occurs in the proximal convoluted tubule?

A

Reabsorption occurs

Water and solutes are driven through the epithelial cells that line the tubule into the extracellular space. They are then taken up by the peritubular capillaries

(Na+, water, Cl-, urea, glucose, amino acids)

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14
Q

Why is Na+ reabsorption important?

A

Creates osmotic pressure that drives water and electrical gradient that drives Cl-

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15
Q

How is Na+ levels in the epithelial cells kept low? What is result of this low level?

A

Due to Na+/K+ pump

This creates conc gradient that allows Na+ diffusion from tubular fluid into cell

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16
Q

How is Na+ absorbed?

A

By symporter proteins that also bind glucose etc

17
Q

What is a symporter?

A

An integral membrane protein that is involved in the transport of many differing types of molecules across the cell membrane

Is a type of cotransporter

18
Q

How else does reabsorption occur (other than symporters)?

A

Via paracellular route through tight junction between epithelial cells

19
Q

What is also occurring at the same time as reabsorption?

A

Tubular secretion

20
Q

What is tubular secretion?

A

Active secretion of additional waste (drugs, H+ etc) from blood to join tubular fluid

21
Q

Where do processes of reabsorption and secretion continue?

A

Loop of Henle, distal convoluted tubule

22
Q

What is main function of loop of Henle?

A

Create and maintain an osmotic gradient in the medulla that enables collecting ducts to concentrate urine at a later stage

23
Q

What does descending limb of loop of Henle do?

A

Water exits tubule via osmosis so filtrate gets more concentrated

24
Q

What does ascending limb of loop of Henle do?

A

Actively pumps Na+ out (urine becomes more diluted, water)

25
Q

What does the collecting duct receive?

A

Tubular fluid from several nephrons

26
Q

What is the main function of the collecting duct?

A

Concentrate urine and conserve water

Made possible by the osmolarity gradient generated by loop of Henle (as it gets saltier deep in the medulla, the filtrate loses more water as it flows down the collecting duct)

27
Q

What control is the collecting duct under?

A

Hormonal control so it can adjust amount of water reabsorbed