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Fig. 17.1

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Title: Fig. 17.1


1
Fig. 17.1
2
Renal Function
  • Remove organic wastes (urea, creatine, uric acid)
  • Control fluid volume/water balance
  • Influences blood pressure
  • Eliminate excess solutes from blood/control
    solute concentrations
  • Regulate solute concentration
  • Regulate pH

Functions performed by nephrons (within kindeys)
3
Renal corpuscle glomerulus glomerular capsule
Renal tubule PCT nephron loop DCT
4
Fig. 17.5
5
RELAVENT SPACES/COMPARTMENT SUBSTANCE MOVE
THROUGH BETWEEN TUBULE AND PLASMA
Peritubular fluid (interstitial fluid)
Tubular fluid (originally filtrate)
Cytoplasm of tubular cells
plasma
Peritubular capilary in x.s.
Renal tubule in x.s.
6
Fig. 17.21
  • Renal Function is based on three process
  • Filtration
  • Reabsorption
  • Secretion

urine
7
Conceptual Nephron Function/Urine
formation Filtrate Reabsorption secretion
Urine
8
Urine Production Blood Volume
  • Urine is made from blood
  • Increased fluid retention decreased urine
    output decreased loss of blood volume
    (stabilization of blood volume)
  • Reduced fluid retention increased urine output
    increased loss of blood volume (reduced blood
    volume)

9
Reabsorption
Secretion
10
Processes
  • Filtration
  • The process in which substances from plasma leave
    blood and enter a nephron
  • From blood/plasma (of glomerulus) into glomerular
    capsule ?filtrate
  • Occurs in the corpuscle (glomerulus bowmans
    capsule).
  • Modification of Filtrate
  • Reabsorption
  • Returns many substances that left glomerulus by
    filtration back into blood.
  • From renal tubule into interstitial space/blood
    then into plasma of peritubular capillaries
  • Occurs throughout the nephrons and collecting
    duct
  • Secretion
  • Eliminates additional substances from blood (of
    peritubular capillaries) by transporting them
    into renal tubule
  • From blood/plasma into renal tubule
  • In PCT, DCT, collecting ducts

11
Nephron Anatomy and Processes
12
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13
FILTRATION
  • Filtration is the basis for all other renal
    events
  • It occurs in the renal corpuscle

14
FILTRATION rate and composition
  • We will examine two aspects of Filtration
  • 1. How much filtration occurs is based on blood
    pressure
  • How much filtration occures Glomerular
    Filtration Rate (GFR)
  • 2. What enters filtrate (leaves blood) is based
    on size of substance

15
Fig. 17.10
  • The amount of filtration that occurs glomerular
    filtration rate (GFR)
  • To function GFR must be
  • 1. maintained within normal range despite changes
    in systemic BP
  • 2. Alterable to increase or decrease water loss
    through urine

16
Filtrate Formation
  • Filtrate is formed when blood pressure in the
    glomerulus (glomerular hydrostatic pressure)
    causes substances to leave the glomerular
    capillaries and enter the nephron through the
    process of filtration.
  • GFR is proportional to glomerular pressure
  • Glomerular pressure ? ? GFR ?
  • Glomerular pressure ? ? GFR ?

17
Filtrate Formation
  • The pressure in glomerular capillaries is
    unusually high (45-55 mmHg) because the efferent
    arteriole is narrower than the afferent arteriole.

Glomerular pressure and therefore GFR is
regulated by 1. Dilation/constriction of
afferent arteriole 2. Dilation/constriction of
efferent arteriole
18
  • GFR is regulated at 3 levels
  • Autoregulation
  • Maintains adequate GFR despite changes in blood
    flow to kidney
  • due to stretching of afferent arteriole
  • due to solute levels in filtrate
  • ANS
  • SD stimulation under periods of physical
    activity, stress, or in response to the
    baroreceptor reflex.
  • Hormonal regulation
  • Maintains adequate GFR despite changes in overall
    systemic BP
  • Renin (Renin-Angiotensin-Aldosterone-System)

19
  • Autoregulation
  • Smooth muscle of the arterioles responds
    automatically to glomerular pressure (Myogenic
    control)
  • Increased blood pressure within afferent
    arterioles (which could lead to GFR being too
    high)
  • Stretching afferent arteriole? Constriction of
    Aff Art? decreased filtration pressure ?
    decreased GFR? GFR stays within normal range
  • Decreased pressure within afferent arteriole
    causes (could lead to GFR being too low)
  • Less stretching of arteriole?muscle cells of Aff
    art relax? aff art dilates? increased filtration
    pressure ? increased GFR?GFR stays within normal
    range

20
  • Sympathetic Stimulation
  • -- This tends to over-ride influence of other
    factors
  • Baroreceptor reflex (for BP regulation)
  • Decreasing BP causes ?SD and constriction of
    afferent arteriole
  • Decreases GFR and filtrate/urine production
  • Conserves fluid for blood helping maintain normal
    BP
  • Increasing BP causes ?SD and dilation of
    afferent arteriole
  • Increases GFR and filtrate production/urine
    output
  • Eliminates excess fluid/blood volume helping
    reduce BP
  • Strength of SD influence proportional to degree
    of BP change
  • 2. Increases SD activity during prolonged
    exercise
  • shunts blood away from kidney to other organs
    needed to support other tissues (limited
    compensation for this by autoreg)
  • SD stimulation to shunt blood away from kidney
    and reduce water loss/urine output

21
Fig. 17.11
22
Table 17.1
23
  • Hormonal Regulation
  • ReninAngiotensin II
  • In response to decreased GFR
  • Juxtaglomerular apparatus (macula densa) releases
    renin
  • Renin?angiotensin II
  • Angiotensin II? vasoconstriction of efferent
    arteriole
  • Increases glomerular pressure and GFR
  • (also produces widespread systemic
    vasoconstriction to increase systemic BP)
  • Atrial Natriuretic Peptide (ANP)
  • Increased BP? stretch of atria walls
  • Atria release ANP
  • ANP ? dilation of afferent arteriole
  • Dilation of afferent arteriole? Increased GFR?
    increasing urine production/water loss?
    decreasing Blood volume? BP goes down

24
FILTRATION What gets filtered (composition of
filtrate)
  • What enters filtrate (leaves blood) is based
    mostly on size of substance
  • If substance is small enough to fit through gaps
    in glomerular capillaries and gaps between
    podocytes it will leave plasma, enter the
    corpuscle, and become filtrate

25
  • Plasma proteins (e.g., albumin), formed elements,
    and other proteins are too big to cross out of
    glomerulus
  • Water, ions, amino acids, glucose, urea, uric
    acid, creatine and other small organic molecules
    are small enough to leave glomerulus and become
    filtrate

26
  • When created the filtrate is isosmotic with
    interstitial fluid/peritubular fluid
  • The solute concentration of filtrate and plasma
    is the same
  • See below and next slide

27
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28
Filtrate Modification
  • Reabsorption
  • Substances move from filtrate into interstitial
    space/blood.
  • Occurs throughout the nephrons and collecting
    duct
  • Primary location of reabsorption is the proximal
    tubule
  • Re-captures substances that entered filtrate by
    that the body needs to retain/keep.
  • Based largely on passive diffusion and presence
    of various transport proteins
  • Transport proteins may be limited in reabsorptive
    capacity
  • Reabsorption can be selective in different
    regions based on which transport proteins are
    present
  • Reabsorption can be hormonally influenced/regulate
    d

29
Filtrate Modification
  • Secretion
  • Moves substances from blood into filtrate
  • Eliminates/removes from blood substances that did
    not enter the filtrate or need to be eliminated
    at greater levels then achieved by filtration
    alone.
  • Typically based on transport proteins
  • Can be hormonally modified/regulated

30
Tubular reabsorption occurs throughout the
tubule and collecting duct
31
The PROXIMAL CONVOLUTED TUBULE primary site of
reabsorption
  • Filtrate entering the PCT has a composition
    similar to plasma
  • The PCT Will
  • Reabsorbs 60-70 of filtrate (108L of filtrate)
  • Reabsorbs 99 of organic nutrients
  • E.g., Glucose, amino acids
  • Reabsorption occurs through a complex combination
    of
  • Active transport of ions creating gradients that
    power
  • Passive movement through
  • Channels
  • Facilitate transport
  • Cotransport
  • Because the solute transport occurs through
    transport proteins each of which is specific to
    only one or several solutes
  • The reabsorption of specific solutes can be
    selectively regulated
  • The transport proteins can potentially be
    saturated creating a maximum limit of how much of
    a solute can be reabsorbed
  • Tmax
  • The reabsorption of water is always passive and
    secondary to the movement of a solute

32
  • One set of reabsorption relationships is as
    follows
  • Na is reabsorbed with pumps/active transport
    creating a electrical gradient
  • Cl- (an other anions) follows passively
    (attracted by charges)
  • Water then follows solutes.
  • Na actively reabsorbed
  • 2. Cl- passively reasbsorbed
  • 3. H20 passively reabsorbed

Creates concentration gradient
33
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34
  • Other routes of transport in PCT
  • Glucose and amino acid reabsorption by
    co-transport with sodium
  • H secretion via counter transport
  • HCO3- reabsorbed with Na cotransport
  • Na reabsorption w/ K countertransport
  • Secretion of various substances also occurs at
    the PCT but those will be considered later on a
    case-by-case basis

35
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36
  • Nephron loop (loop of henle)
  • The descending limb is permeable to water, but
    not to solutes
  • The ascending limb is relatively impermeable to
    water, but reabsorbs/pumps out Na and K
  • The Na and K pumped out of descending limb
    creates a high solute concentration in
    surrounding interstitial fluid/peritubular fluid
    that causes water to passively be reabsorbed from
    the descending limb.
  • This all results in a tubular fluid that is more
    concentrated with solutes by the time it reaches
    the end of the ascending limb.

37
Distal Convoluted Tubule
  • Receives only 15-20 of original fluid of
    filtration
  • Variable reabsorption under the direction of
    hormones
  • Variable secretion of ions and xenobiotics
    (foreign molecules)

38
Distal Convoluted Tubule Reabsorption
  • Reabsorption in the DCT is mostly Na and Ca
    under hormonal control
  • Aldosterone causes increased production of
    incorporation of Na reabsorption proteins
  • Because Na is counter-transported for K,
    prolonged high aldosterone levels can lead to
    hypokalemiadangerous
  • Ca reabsorption can be influenced by parathyroid
    hormone and calcitriol

39
DCT Secretion
  • When the concentration of some substances becomes
    high in blood, they diffuse into peritubular
    fluid where they will be picked up by tubular
    cells and transported into the renal tubule
  • Key substances Secreted include
  • K
  • High blood K causes K secretion in exchange for
    Na (it is gradient driven)
  • By Na/K co-exchange
  • H
  • When blood becomes acidic peritubular cells
    secrete H into tubular fluid
  • The resulting HCO3- is transported into the
    peritubular fluid and then enters blood where it
    buffers pH
  • One H secretion pathway is Na
    reabsorption/aldosterone linked
  • So prolonged increased aldosterone can cause
    alkalosis

40
Figure 26.15 The Effects of ADH on the DCT and
Collecting Ducts
Figure 26.15
41
Collecting Duct DCT
  • Variable amounts of secretion
  • Variable amounts of reabsorption
  • We will focus on role of CD in water reabsorption
    and control of urine volume

42
Regulation of Urine Volumeregulated through Na
reabsorption and water permeability
  • Urine originates with the filtrate
  • If it is in urine, then it originally came from
    blood
  • Normal urine output 1.2L/day
  • Increase urine output
  • Increased water to solute ratio
  • Increased water loss from body (potential blood
    volume decrease)
  • Decreased urine output
  • Decreased water to solute ration
  • Decreased water loss from body (stabilizes blood
    volume)

43
A Summary of Renal Function
Figure 26.16a
44
Figure 26.11b
45
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46
Urine Volume is Regulated primarily by ADH (in
conjunction with aldosterone)
  • ADH causes increased water permeability of DCT
    and CD
  • Causes incorporation of aquaporins
  • Increased ADH Results in
  • increased water reabsorption
  • Concentrates urine
  • Less water lost from plasma
  • Aldosterone enhances this by increasing the
    solute concentration of the peritubular fluid
    through increased Na reabsorption.

47
The Effects of ADH on the DCT and Collecting
Ductsdots represent solutes
Figure 26.15a, b
48
Fig. 17.20
ADH and water reabsorptionNOTE increased
plasma osmolality can also be cause by increased
solutes (Na) in blood)
Solute concentration
Solute concentration
49
ADH (vasopressin)
  • ADH released by Post Pit when osmoreceptors in
    hypothalamus detect high osmolality
  • From excess salt intake or dehydration
  • Causes thirst
  • Stimulates H2O reabsorption from urine
  • Homeostasis maintained by these countermeasures

14-25
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Table 17.3
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  • ACID BASE REGULATION
  • Homeostasis H production/intake H loss
  • When H formation gt H loss fluids more acidic
  • When H formation lt H loss fluids more
    alkaline

or when base increases
57
Normal blood pH range, acidosis, and alkalosis
58
Fig. 18.06
  • Sources of H in body

CO2


Volatile acid
Metabolic and fixed acids
59
Buffers temporarily minimize pH changes
(neutralize H) This minimizes pH changes and
damages to local tissues They do NOT eliminate
H Lungs and Kidneys REMOVE H from body
Also present in ICF but most important in ECF
60
Bi-carbonate Buffer System
  • From organic and fixed acids
  • NOT from CO2 production of aerobic respiration
  • in this process H are fixed as part of H20
    and bicarbonate is reformed with the
    elimination of CO2 from body

Eliminated through ventilation/exhalation
regenerates HCO3- which accepts/buffer more H
61
  • Acid base balance can maintained by
  • First existing buffer systems
  • These work instantaneously
  • Limited (when all buffers are bound this system
    stops working)
  • Second physiological activity of
  • 1) respiratory system (responds in minutes,
    begins compensating within minutes)
  • 2) renal systems (responds in hours to days)which
    can compensate through
  • Secretion or absorption H
  • Secretion or absorption of acids and bases
  • Generation of additional buffers

Accomplished by respiratory and renal
compensations
62
GENERAL BASIS FOR ACIDOSIS AND ALKALOSIS
63
  • Types of pH imbalances
  • Respiratory acidosis resp system failure to
    eliminate sufficient CO2 (? hypercapnia ? low pH)
  • Most common
  • Respiratory alkalosis
  • Too much CO2 eliminated (through
    hyperventilation)
  • ? hypocapnia ? high pH
  • Generally uncommon, but happens routinely at high
    altitude
  • Metabolic Acidosis
  • Commonly due to increase lactic acid and ketone
    bodies
  • Inability to secrete H at kidneys severe
    bicarbonate loss
  • Second most common
  • Metabolic alkalosis
  • Relatively uncommon
  • Elevated levels of HCO3
  • Combined metabolic and respiratory acidosis
  • Caused because oxygen started tissues perform
    anaerobic respiration

64
Fig. 18.11
Mechanisms of Respiratory Acidosis
Failure of receptors
65
Fig. 18.13
Mechanisms of Respiratory alkalosis
66
Fig. 18.12
Mechanisms of Metabolic Acidosis
67
Fig. 18.14
Mechanisms of metabolic alkalosis
68
  • Renal and Respiratory Compensation
  • responses to acidosis or alkalosis
  • Respiratory System
  • Alter breathing rate to
  • Remove H by tying them up in H2O
  • Producing HCO3-
  • Renal/Urinary System
  • Secrete H into urine
  • Reabsorb HCO3-

69
  • Limitations of bicarbonate buffer system
  • Cannot protect against pH changes due to CO2
  • Works only when respiratory system is working
  • Limited by availability of bicarbonate
  • Sources of bicarbonate are the NaCO3 reserve
  • Bicarbonate reabsorption by kidney

70
  • Respiratory Influences/Compensations
  • Breathing/ventilating
  • Eliminates H and maintains available HCO3
  • Increased breathing rate/ventilation ? more
    bicarbonate and less H ? decreased acidity
    (i.e., more alkaline)
  • Decreased breathing rate/ventilation ? less
    bicarbonate and more H ? increased acidity
  • Takes minutes to compensate for significant
    changes in plasma pH

71
  • Normal respiration is regulated by in pH of blood

Increased respirations
Decreased respirations
72
  • Renal Influences/Compensation
  • Kidneys normally
  • Secrete H or add H to blood
  • Ability to do so is limited by buffers in
    filtrate which help maintain H gradient
  • Reabsorb HCO3 (enters blood as NaHCO3)
  • These activities are dependent on carbonic
    anhydrase
  • Take days (1-3 d) compensate for significant
    changes in plasma pH

73
  • In response to alkalosis H is released into
    blood

74
  • Secretion of H into tubular fluid paired with
    release of HCO3- into blood
  • In starvation state, glutamine is metabolized
    causing release of HCO3- into blood

75
  • GENERAL COMBINED RESPONSES TO ACIDOSIS

H from body fluids/plasma causing acidosis
76
  • GENERAL COMBINED RESPONSES TO ALKALOSIS

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