Physiology 441 - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 40
About This Presentation
Title:

Physiology 441

Description:

Physiology 441 The Urinary System, Chp. 14 Text: Human Physiology (Sherwood), 6th Ed. Julie Balch Samora, MPA, MPH jbsamora_at_hsc.wvu.edu 293-3412, Room 3145 – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:34
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 41
Provided by: hscWvuEd
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Physiology 441


1
Physiology 441
  • The Urinary System, Chp. 14
  • Text Human Physiology (Sherwood), 6th Ed.
  • Julie Balch Samora, MPA, MPH
  • jbsamora_at_hsc.wvu.edu
  • 293-3412, Room 3145

2
The Urinary System
  • The Kidneys (form the urine)
  • Renal Pelvis (into which urine is drained)
  • Ureters (carry to urinary bladder)
  • Bladder (stores urine)
  • Urethra (tube which allows elimination of urine
    to external environment)

3
www.health.uab.edu/show.asp?durki65499
4
(No Transcript)
5
The Nephron
  • The functional unit of the kidney
  • Each nephron has two components
  • Vascular component
  • Tubular component
  • Renal cortex- outer region (granular)
  • Renal medulla- inner region, made up of triangles
    (renal pyramids)

6
(No Transcript)
7
Vascular Part of the Nephron
  • The glomerulus- (a ball of capillaries) filters
    H2O and solute from blood
  • Afferent arterioles (come from renal artery)- one
    supplies each nephron and delivers blood to
    glomerulus
  • Efferent arterioles (come from glomerular
    capillaries)- unfiltered blood leaves glomerulus
  • Peritubular capillaries- supply renal tissue with
    blood (exchanges w/ tubules)

8
Tubular Part of the Nephron
  • Bowmans capsule- collects glomerular filtrate
  • Proximal tubule- uncontrolled reabsorption and
    secretion of selected substances
  • Loop of Henle establishes an osmotic gradient
    in order to concentrate urine to appropriate amt
  • Distal tubule- controlled reabsorption and
    secretion occur here
  • collecting duct (tubule)- variable, controlled
    reabsorption of Na and H2O, and secretion of K
    and H (fluid leaving here is urine-enters renal
    pelvis)

9
(No Transcript)
10
Juxtaglomerular apparatus (JGA)
  • The ascending limb of Henle passes through a fork
    formed by the afferent and efferent arterioles of
    the same nephron.
  • The vascular and tubular cells at this juncture
    are both specialized to form the JGA.

11
Distal tubule
Proximal tubule
Collecting duct
Juxtaglomerular apparatus
Efferent arteriole
Afferent arteriole
Bowmans capsule
Glomerulus
Artery
Vein
Cortex Medulla
Peritubular capillaries
Loop of Henle
To renal pelvis
Overview of Functions of Parts of a Nephron
Fig. 14-3, p. 504
12
Location of Nephron Matters!
  • All nephrons originate in the cortex, but where
    glomeruli lie and length of loops of henle
    designate type of nephron
  • Cortical (80) - glomeruli in outer cortex-
    hairpin loops barely reaches medulla
  • Juxtamedullary (20) - glomeruli in inner layer
    of cortex, next to medulla- hairpin loop goes
    through the entire depth of medulla- peritubular
    capillaries form vasa recta

13
Distal tubule
Distal tubule
Glomerulus
Proximal tubule
Bowmans capsule
Proximal tubule
Cortex
Medulla
Loop of Henle
Collecting duct
Descending limb of loop of Henle
Other nephrons emptying into the same collecting
duct
Vasa recta
Ascending limb of loop of Henle
To renal pelvis
Fig. 14-5, p. 505
14
The Kidneys Multiple Roles
  • Play a major role in maintaining homeostasis
  • Maintain water balance
  • Regulate the quantity and concentration of ECF
    ions
  • Regulate the plasma volume
  • Regulate pH by controlling elimination of acid
    and base in urine
  • Maintain osmolarity
  • Regulate the concentration of plasma constituents
    (e.g. electrolytes and water)

15
The Kidneys Multiple Roles
  • Remove Toxic Metabolic Wastes
  • Excreting foreign compounds
  • Secreting erythropoietin
  • Producing renin (imp. in salt handling)
  • Converting Vitamin D into its active form

16
Basic Renal Processes
  • Glomerular filtration
  • Tubular reabsorption
  • Tubular secretion
  • Urine results from these three processes.

17
Glomerular Filtration
  • The first step in urine formation
  • Blood flows through the glomerulus, allowing
    protein-free plasma to be filtered through the
    glomerular capillaries into Bowmans capsule.
  • 20 of plasma entering the glomerulus is
    filtered
  • 125 ml/min filtered fluid

18
Tubular Reabsorption
  • Movement of substances from tubular lumen back
    into the blood
  • Reabsorbed substances are therefore not lost in
    the urine, but are carried by the peritubular
    capillaries to the venous system
  • Most of the filtered plasma is reabsorbed

19
Tubular Secretion
  • The selective transfer of substances from the
    peritubular capillary into the tubular lumen.
  • Allows for rapid elimination of substances from
    the plasma via extraction of the 80 of
    unfiltered plasma in peritubular capillaries and
    adding it to the substances already in tubule as
    result of filtration

20
Urine Excretion
  • The elimination of substances from the body in
    the urine
  • All plasma constituents filtered or secreted, but
    not reabsorbed remain in the tubules and pass
    into the renal pelvis to be excreted as urine and
    eliminated from the body

21
Renal Processes 1
22
Glomerular Filtration
  • Fluid filtered from the glomerulus into Bowmans
    capsule passes through 3 layers
  • the glomerular capillary wall
  • the basement membrane
  • Collagen
  • Glycoproteins- negative charge
  • the inner layer of Bowmans capsule
  • Podocytes
  • Filtration slits

23
Layers of Glomerulus Membrane
24
What Drives Filtration?
  • How does fluid move from the plasma across the
    glomerular membrane into Bowmans capsule?
  • No active transport mechanisms
  • No local energy expenditure
  • Simple passive physical forces accomplish
    filtration
  • - Filtration occurs throughout the length of the
    capillaries

25
Forces involved in Filtration
  • Glomerular capillary blood pressure (favors
    filtration)
  • Plasma-colloid osmotic pressure (opposes
    filtration)
  • Bowmans capsule hydrostatic pressure (opposes
    filtration)

26
Glomerular Capillary Blood Pressure
  • Fluid pressure exerted by the blood within the
    glomerular capillaries
  • Glomerular capillary pressure is significantly
    higher than other capillary blood pressures
  • This is due to the larger diameter of the
    afferent arteriole compared with the efferent
    arteriole
  • Blood pressure does not fall along the length of
    this capillary, which pushes fluid out of the
    glomerulus into Bowmans capsule
  • (pressure build-up in glom. Cap. 55mmHg)

27
Pressure opposing filtration
  • Plasma-colloid oncotic pressure- caused by the
    unequal distribution of plasma proteins across
    the glomerular membrane
  • (30mmHg)
  • Bowmans capsule hydrostatic pressure- the
    pressure exerted by the fluid in this initial
    part of the tubule- tends to push fluid out of
    Bowmans capsule
  • (15mmHg)

28
(No Transcript)
29
Net Filtration Pressure
  • Force favoring filtration (glomerular capillary
    blood pressure of 55 mmHg) minus forces opposing
    filtration (plasma colloid osmotic pressure of 30
    mmHg Bowmans capsule pressure of 15 mmHg)
  • 55 (30 15) 10 mmHg

30
Glomerular Filtration Rate
  • Depends on
  • The net filtration pressure
  • How much glomerular surface area is available for
    penetration
  • How permeable the glomerular membrane is
  • GFR Kf x net filtration pressure
  • Where (Kf) filtration coefficient (a product of
    the above two glomerular properties)
  • - Roughly 125 ml/min in males

31
GFR
  • Changes in GFR primarily result from changes in
    the glomerular capillary blood pressure
  • As glomerular capillary blood pressure ?, the net
    filtration pressure ?, as does GFR
  • If afferent arteriolar resistance ?, GFR ?

32
Mechanisms to Regulate GFR
  • Autoregulation (prevent spontaneous changes in
    GFR)
  • Involves myogenic and tubuloglomerular feedback
    mechanisms
  • Extrinsic sympathetic control (long-term
    regulation of arterial BP)
  • Mediated by the sympathetic nervous system
  • Can override autoregulatory mechanisms

33
Autoregulation Myogenic mechanism
  • Response to changes in pressure within the
    nephrons vascular component
  • Arterioles contract inherently in response to the
    stretch accompanying ? pressure. Vessel
    automatically constricts, which helps limit blood
    flow into glomerulus despite increased systemic
    pressure
  • Opposite reaction occurs when smooth muscles
    sense a drop in pressure

34
Autoregulation Tubuloglomerular feedback
  • Juxtaglomerular apparatus
  • the combination of tubular and vascular cells
    where the tubule passes through the angle formed
    by the afferent and efferent arterioles as they
    join the glomerulus
  • Smooth muscle cells within the afferent arteriole
    form granular cells
  • Specialized tubular cells in this region known as
    macula densa- sense changes in salt level of
    tubular fluid

35
(No Transcript)
36
Importance of Autoregulation of GFR
  • The myogenic and tubuloglomerular feedback
    mechanisms work in tandem to autoregulate GFR
    within a MAP range of 80-180 mmHg
  • Autoregulation greatly blunts the direct effect
    that changes in arterial pressure might otherwise
    have on GFR and preserves water and solute
    homeostasis and allows waste excretion to carry
    on as usual

37
(No Transcript)
38
Extrinsic Sympathetic Control
  • GFR can be changed purposefully, even when MAP is
    within the autoregulatory range
  • GFR is reduced by the baroreceptor reflex
    response to a fall in blood pressure (the SNS
    causes vasoconstriction in most arterioles as a
    compensatory mechanism to ? TPR)
  • Afferent arterioles innervated with sympathetic
    vasoconstrictor fibers much more than are the
    efferent aa.
  • ? GFR causes ? urine output, conserving some
    water and salt, helping to restore plasma volume
    to normal

39
Baroreceptor Reflex Influence on the GFR in
Long-term Regulation of Arterial Blood Pressure
40
Filtration Fraction
  • The Percentage of Renal Plasma Flow that is
    Filtered
  • FF GFR/RPF
  • Roughly 20
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com