What are the 6 main functions of the kidneys in the entire body?
What is the specific function of kidney parts? 4
What is capillary pressure verse hydrostatic pressure?
- hydrostatic pressure is blood pressure
What is oncotic pressure?
The pressure from having things dissolved in the blood
How is fluid pressure created in the kidney?
By fluid in the Bowman’s capsule
How much plasma is filtered in the glomerulus?
Only 20%
Where does reabsorption occur in the kidney?
All tubules
Where does secretion occur in the kidney?
Proximal and distal convulated tubules, collecting duct
List the stages of filtration throughout the kidney
What is the amount excreted equal to?
Amount excreted = amount filtered - amount reabsorbed + amount secreted
What are the filtration barriers in the glomerulus?
Podocytes: foot-like processes which surround the capillary, leaving slits through which filtration takes place
What three structures form the three-layer filtration barrier in the glomerulus?
The glomerular capillary endothelium, basal lamina and Bowman’s capsule epithelium. Filtered substance pass through epithelial pores and filtration slits
How is net filtration calculated?
Hydrostatic pressure (blood pressure) (Ph) - colloid osmotic pressure gradient (pi) - fluid pressure (P fluid)
Describe factors of Glomerular Filtration Rate (GFR)
What are the two factors influenciing GFR?
How are the two ways GFR autoregulation?
2. Tubuloglomerular control
What is Myogenic response?
GFR regulation
- intrinsic ability of vascular smooth muscle to respond to pressure changes
What is tubuloglomerular feedback?
GFR autoregulation
What is the nervous control ways GFR is regulated?
Hormones and autonomic neurons
List the eight stages of tubuloglomerular feedback loop to help GFR autoregulation
List the four steps of reabsorption in the kidney tubules
How does sodium reabsorption occcur in the proximal tubules? ENaC
What are the two ways sodium is reabsorbed in the proximal tubule?
- ENaC: Epithelium Sodium Channel
What is the central role of Na+?
The active transport of sodium allows for secondary active transport of other molecules which symport with sodium
e.g. Urea - passive reabsorption, plasma proteins - receptor-mediated endocytosis