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100

What are the steps of urine formation

Filtration - Bulk movement of fluid 

Resorption - filtrate to capillaries 

Secretion - capillaries to filtrate 

Excretion - out of the body

100

What communication exists between the DCT and the afferent arteriole 

Paracrine from the macula densa in response to Na+ conc.

100

What type of capillaries makes up the glomerular tuft 

Fenestrated 

100

What is (volume) normal urine output 

>0.5ml/kg/day

100

Define (volume) oliguria and anuria 

Oliguria <400ml/day

Anuria <100ml/day

200

What are the three primary functions of the kidney?

Excretion of waste 

Water and ion homeostasis 

Endocrine signaling 

200

List and describe the starlings forces acting at the glomerulus

Capillary oncotic 

Capillary hydrostatic 

Bowmen capsular oncotic 

Bowmen Capsular hydrostatic 

200

How do starlings forces (Bowmen capsular only) change across the glomerular capillary bed 

Oncotic increases as fluid is filtered out concentrating plasma proteins

Hydrostatic is unchanged

200

What are the main classifications of renal failure - one example of each  

Pre-renal - Hypovolemia (dehydration, sepsis, burns ect.)

Intrarenal/intrinsic - glomerulonephritis, ATN, DM

Post-renal - BPH, calculi, tumor 

200

What region of the nephron is most water reabsorbed 

PCT 

300

What are the components of the juxtaglomerular aparatus?

JG cells 

Macula densa cells 

Extraglomerular mesangial cells 

300

How do NSAIDs and ACEI affect GFR 

NSAIDs - Afferent arteriole constriction (inhibition of prostaglandins)

ACEI - ACEI cause efferent arteriole dilation

Add in a diuretic and this is the 'triple whammy' of renal death

300

Quick, medium, long term mechanisms for correcting acid-base disruptions

Quick - buffer systems 

Medium - respiratory 

long - renal 

300

How is the interstitial concentration gradient which drives fluid reabsorption created

Countercurrent multiplication
Uses ATP to build up the concentration gradient in the intersitium by reabsorbing solutes in ascending limb LOH

300

What are the two main factors that stimulate the release of ADH (comment on their sensitivity)

Extracellular fluid osmolarity (highly sensitive~1% change from baseline needed) 

Blood pressure (less sensitive ~ 10% change from baseline needed)

400

What factors affect GFR 

Intrinsic - Tubuloglomerular feedback, myogenic response 

Extrinsic - SNS, RAAS 

400

What are the triggers for renin release 

Afferent arteriolar stretch mechanism 

SNS 

Macula densa paracrine (reduced GFR = reduced renal Na+ in DCT - increased paracrine signal)

400

pH: 7.30

HCO3-: 30 

Co2: 50

Respiratory acidosis with partial metabolic compensation/alkalosis 

400

pH: 7.47 

HCO₃⁻: 36 mmol/L 

CO₂: 50 mmHg

Metabolic alkalosis with partial respiratory compensation

400

Explain countercurrent multiplication

In the thick ascending LOH - Sodium transporters move Na+ into the medulla resulting in increased concentration in the medulla, and a gradient with the tubule.
This part of the LOH is impermeable to water but the thin descending LOH allows water out.

500

List 4 signs of fluid overload 

Peripheral/sacral pitting oedema 

Pulmonary oedema 

JVD 

Rapid Weight gain 

HTN 


500

How does the presence or absence of antidiuretic hormone (ADH) affect urine volume and osmolarity?


With ADH: distal nephron becomes permeable to water, water reabsorbed into medulla, low-volume, high-osmolarity urine.

Without ADH: collecting duct impermeable to water, no reabsorption despite medullary gradient, high-volume, low-osmolarity urine.

500

How do the descending and thick ascending limbs of the Loop of Henle differ in permeability, and what is the main function of this difference?

Descending limb: permeable to water, impermeable to solutes.

Thick ascending limb: impermeable to water, actively reabsorbs Na⁺, K⁺, and Cl⁻.

They establish the medullary osmotic gradient, critical for urine concentration

500

What are the two main hormones which regulate transport in the distal nephron, and what specific ions or solutes do they affect?

ADH (vasopressin): increases water reabsorption.

Aldosterone: increases Na⁺ reabsorption and K⁺ secretion.

500

What is meant by the transport maximum

Transport maximum is the point at which all membrane carriers for a substance are saturated. Once plasma concentration exceeds this, reabsorption cannot keep up with filtration, and the excess solute begins to appear in urine (I.E., glucose)

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