Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
STRUCTURE & FUNCTION OF THE RENAL SYSTEM AND RENAL DIAGNOSTIC PROCEDURES • Kidneys (Fig. 28-1) – Paired, encapsulated • At hilus – Renal artery enters, renal vein exits – Approx. 25% cardiac output to kidney • Two main functions of kidney: • Filtration – Removes metabolic wastes Esp. urea, other N- containing wastes • Regulation – Electrolytes – Intravascular volume – Blood pH • Renal blood flow from cortex to medulla – Medulla has high metabolic rate • Prone to hypoxia if ischemia – Medulla arranged in wedges (Fig.28-2) • Renal pyramids • Columns – Between pyramids from cortex through medulla • Apices – Extend to: • Minor calyces – Cup-shaped cavities; join major calyces – Renal pelvis • Ureter (Fig.28-1) – Tube from kidney that carries waste fluid to the: • Bladder – Urine storage site; attached to urethra outside body Nephron • Anatomic unit of kidney function (Fig.28-3) – Approx. 106 nephrons/kidney – Two anatomical regions: • Glomerulus – Tuft of capillaries loop into circular capsule – In cortex of kidney – Blood filtration site • Renal tubule – Begins as end of glomerulus – Traverses cortex, medulla – Site where water, solutes reclaimed following filtration • Renal tubule – cont’d – Anatomical areas: – Proximal, convoluted tubule » Impt to reabsorption of water, electrolytes – Loop of Henle » Hairpin loop » Impt to urine concentration – Distal tubule » Both straight and convoluted » Impt to reabsorption in response to hormonal signals – Collecting ducts » Impt to Afine tuning@ of water, electrolytes Renal Tubule Summary • Anatomical areas: – Proximal, convoluted tubule • Impt to reabsorption of water, electrolytes – Loop of Henle • Hairpin loop • Impt to urine concentration – Distal tubule • Both straight and convoluted • Impt to reabsorption responding to hormonal signals – Collecting ducts • Impt to fine tuning of water, electrolytes Renal corpuscle • Bowman's capsule + glomerular capillary tuft (Fig.28-6) • Bowman's capsule – Circular – Space inside = Bowman’s space – Narrows to form proximal tubule • Glomerular capillaries arranged in loops • Glomerular capillary membranes (Fig.28-6) – Blood components from artery filtered here – Glomerular capillary tuft -- three membrane layers • Different than most other capillaries in body – Cells of membrane layers -- unique w/ unique structures in each layer • Inner capillary endothelium • Basement membrane • Epithelium – Primary urine forms as result of filtration • Glomerular filtration – Glomerulus permeable to • Water • Electrolytes • Small organic molecules (ex: glucose, urea, creatinine) – Not permeable to • Rbc’s • Wbc;s • Molecules w/ MW > 70,000 (so most proteins) – Leave glomerulus (still in blood) through the efferent arteriole – Size and charge of molecules impt to whether molecule will be filtered or not – Capillary pressures important (Fig.28-11, Table 28-1) • Hydrostatic Pressure forces fluids through filter – What is the filter? • Forces opposing BHP: – Colloid osmotic P » Due to blood cells, proteins, as in “regular” capillaries – Hydrostatic P of fluid already in Bowman=s space • Net filtration P = (forces favoring filtration) - (forces opposing filtration)(Table28-1) – Positive or negative net filtration in a healthy system? – Glomerular filtration rate (GFR) • Volume of plasma filtered at glomerulus per unit time • Approx. 180 L/day = 120 mL/min – BUT only 1-2 L/day excreted » About 99% of filtrate reabs’d in tubule • GFR depends on factors affecting fluid pressures in nephron and vasculature – Arteriolar resistance changes capillary hydrostatic P in glomerulus – Decr’d blood flow to kidney from systemic circulation decr’s GFR – Obstruction to urine outflow may incr back pressure at Bowman’s capsule, so decr GFR – Loss of protein-free fluid alters COP, so alters net filtration – Renal disease Hormonal Regulation of GFR • Through renin • changes in renal blood flow, so changes in GFR – Occur and regulated locally (at kidney tissue) and systemically • Two impt hormones affect GFR: – Aldosterone (regulates Na+) – ADH (regulates water) • Specialized cells sensitive to specific hormones – Juxtaglomerular aparatus • Juxtaglomerular cells – Lie around afferent arteriole • Macula densa – Portion of renal distal tubule » Loops back up toward Bowman’s capsule » Butts up against glomerulus – Located in space between afferent and efferent arterioles – Together juxtaglomerular cells + macula densa cells (or juxtaglomerular apparatus) control: • Blood flow into nephron at glomerulus, so – Glomerular filtration • Renal secretion – Because sensitive to hormones such as aldosterone and ADH Renal Tubule Physiology • Extend from Bowman’s capsule • Receive and process filtrate from capsule • Processing of fluid by two major forces: tubular reabsorption and secretion – Reabsorption • Occurs through minute pores in tubules • Compounds reabsorbed from tubule peritubular capillaries (surround the tubules) blood – Secretion • Opposite of reabsorption • Compounds secreted go from blood capillaries renal tubule filtrate – By the end of the proximal tubule • Water, Na+ – 60-70% reabsorbed back into blood • K+, glucose, bicarb, Ca+2, amino acids, uric acid – Approx 90% reabsorbed back into blood – Loop of Henle • Mostly Na+, Cl-, H2O move to adjust concentration of fluid in tubule • Loop has ascending, descending regions – Cells in some regions permeable to water » Here water can move out of tubule – Cells in other regions not permeable to water » Here water trapped in the tubule – Cells in some regions permeable to Na+ » Here Na+ can move out of the tubule – Cells in other regions not permeable to Na+ » Here Na+ is trapped in the tubule • Resulting fluid through loop goes from isotonic to hypertonic to hypotonic – Due to differences in kidney cells from cortex to medulla and different permeabilities of tubule to different molecules – As the fluid leaves loop of Henle, it is hypotonic (so dilute, compared to other body fluids) – Distal tubule - final regulation of water, and acid-base balance • Water, Na+, bicarb – Reabsorbed here when ADH present • K+, urea, H+, ammonia – Secreted • Hormones important to regulation here – ADH (antidiuretic hormone) » incr’d water reabsorption – Aldosterone » incr’d Na+ reabsorption – Parathyroid hormone (PTH) » incr’d Ca+2 reabsorption – Collecting duct • Final urine concentration adjusted • Final pH balance adjusted • Final product = urine low in volume (compared to what was filtered), and high in osmotic concentration (the body rids itself of unwanted molecules) Renal diagnostic procedures (Table 28-3 p.804) • Urinalysis – Non-invasive, inexpensive – Normal urine properties well-known, easily measured • Specific gravity – – – – Solute concentration in urine Correlates w/ osmolality in normal urine Normal value: 1.025-1.032 Usually describes ADH • Because ADH controls water reabsorption • What ADH problem might you expect if specific gravity were high? Low? • Urine sediment can be examined microscopically – Red blood cells • Hematuria = large number rbcs in the urine – Should be few/none – Why? What keeps rbc’s in the body? – Casts • Precipitates from cells lining the renal tubules – Red cells suggest tubule bleeding – White cells suggest tubule inflammation – Epithelial cells suggest degeneration, necrosis of tubule cells – Crystals • May form as urine cools • Observed microscopically • Indications – Inflammation – Infection – Stones – White blood cells (pyuria) • From urinary tract infection – Bacteria • Infection • Clearance tests – Determine how much of substance can be cleared from blood by kidney per unit time • Indirect measure of GFR, tubular reabs’n/secr’n, renal blood flow – GFR • Best estimate of overall kidney health • Decreases w/ lost or damaged nephrons • Use creatinine clinically – Biochem prod’d by muscle, released to blood at constant rate – Freely filtered at the glomerulus – Neither reabs=d nor secr=d as it progresses through the tubule, so: • Amount creatinine excreted = amount creatinine filtered – Can be calculated: » Amount creatinine in urine over time = (vol. urine/time) x (urine concentration of creatinine) • Blood tests – Plasma creatinine concentration (Pcr) • Normal levels = 0.7-1.5 mg/dL • Use same biochem described for clearance test, but measured in blood instead of in urine • Again, creatinine filtered at glomerulus; neither reabs’d nor secr’d; and amount creatinine filtered = amount excreted • Get increased Pcr if chronic disease affecting GFR – When GFR decr’d, get decr’d filtration of creatinine out of blood (and into urine), so – Blood (plasma) creatinine increases • Useful: – To monitor changes in chronic renal function • BUT Pcr increases with trauma, muscle tissue breakdown – Blood Urea Nitrogen (BUN) • Urea prod’d constantly as cells metabolize proteins • Measurement of BUN reflects both GFR and urine concentrating ability • Normal levels 10-20 mg/dL • Urea filtered at glomerulus • Urea reabsorbed back into blood at tubules – If decr’d GFR, get incr’d BUN – OR if decr’d blood flow to kidney, get incr’d BUN – Incr’d BUN or Pcr = increase in nitrogenous substances in blood = azotemia