Module 2 Lecture 4 Flashcards

1
Q

What are the three key processes of urine formation? please LABEL the DIAGRAM

A

Glomerular filtration, tubular reabsorption and tubular secretion

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2
Q

What is involved in glomerular filtration?

A

filters the blood
–> produces a cell-and protein-free
filtrate

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3
Q

What is involved in tubular absorption?

A

Selectively moves substances from the filtrate back into the blood to reclaim what the body needs –> anything that is not reabsorbed becomes urine

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4
Q

What is involved in tubular secretion?

A

selectively adds
substances from the blood into the
filtrate –> anything that is secreted
becomes urine

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5
Q

What are some key processes of urine formation?

A
  • the kidney filters about 180 L of blood each day, less than 1% of body weight but consume 20-25% of all oxygen at rest
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6
Q

How is filtrate and urine different?

A

filtrate is plasma without proteins, while urine contains excess solutes, ions and metabolic waste

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7
Q

Glomerular function in detail (pls label)

A

Hydrostatic pressure forces fluids & solutes

through a membrane, “simple mechanical filters”

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8
Q

What are the 3 layers of the filtration membrane?

A
  • Capillary endothelium
  • Basement membrane
  • Podocyte foot processes
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9
Q

What is the outward pressures in the glomerular filtration

A

Outward pressures
• Hydrostatic pressure in glomerular capillaries (glomerular
blood pressure forces fluid out of capillary)
• Osmotic oncotic/protein pressure in Bowman’s capsule
space (this is zero as proteins don’t really enter capsule)

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10
Q

What is the inward pressures in the glomerular filtration

A

Hydrostatic pressure in Bowman’s capsule space (filtrate
in capsule draws fluid into capillary)
• Osmotic oncotic/protein pressure in glomerular capillaries
(proteins in blood draw fluid into capillary)

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11
Q

What does net filtration pressure favour?

A

net filtration pressure favours and outward pressure and therefore fluid is forced out of capillary

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12
Q

What is glomerular filtration rate measured in?

A

Glomerular filtration rate (GFR) is the volume of filtrate formed
each minute by the kidneys

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13
Q

What is GFR directly proportional to?

A

Net filtration pressure

• Filtration membrane permeability and total SA for filtration

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14
Q

What is step 2 (tubular r re-absorption)

A

Reabsorption selectively
reclaims tubule contents &
returns it to blood

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15
Q

What occurs in tubular re-absorption

A
• Reabsorption of almost all
substances is coupled to
active sodium reabsorption
– Basolateral membrane:
Na+/K+ ATPase pump
– Apical membrane: secondary
active transport/cotransport
carriers or facilitated diffusion
– Water reabsorption:
aquaporins act as water
channels (regulated by ADH in
collecting duct)
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16
Q

What occurs in tubular secretion?

A
Secretion selectively moves
substances from blood into
filtrate – waste products that
‘escaped’ filtration
E.g. H+, excess K+, creatinine, urea,
uric acid, certain drugs & metabolites
bound to plasma proteins
- Urine eventually excretes both filtered
(& not reabsorbed) & secreted
substances
17
Q

OVERALL tubular re absorption and secretion? (LABEL)

A
Each tubule segment is
responsible for reabsorbing
and/or secreting different
solutes
• Some are regulated by hormone
action
• Maintains an osmotic gradient in
the medullary interstitial space