CHAPTER 25 A&P

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Peritubular capillaries arise from

Efferent arterioles, cling to adjacent renal tubules in cortex, and empty into venules

Minor calyx

-Branch of major calyx -Collects urine from pyramid

Renin-angiotensin mechanism

-Granular cells release renin -Renin acts on angiotensinogen to form angiotensin I -Angiotensin I is converted to angiotensin II -Angiotensin II causes mean arterial pressure to rise and simulates the adrenal cortex to release aldosterone -Systemic and glomerular blood pressure rise

Net filtration pressure

-Pressure responsible for filtrate formation -Main controllable factor determining glomerular filtration rate (GFR). -NFP= HPg-(OPg+HPc)= 10 mm Hg

Three layers of bladder wall

-Transitional epithelial mucosa -Detrusor muscle -Fibrous adventitia

Three parts of renal tubule

1. Proximal convoluted tubule (closest to renal corpuscle) 2. Nephron loop 3. Distal convoluted tubule (farthest from renal corpuscle)

Renal arteries deliver

1/4 (1200 ml) of cardiac output to the kidneys each minute

Lobe

A medullary pyramid and its surrounding cortical tissue

Nephron capillary beds: Glomerulus

Afferent arteriole to glomerulus to efferent arteriole. -Specialized for filtration

Dilute urine is created by

Allowing this filtrate to continue into the renal pelvis

Filtration membrane

Allows passage of water and solutes smaller than most plasma proteins

Kidneys regulate

Blood volume (water balance), salts, the acid/base balance and pH

Granular cells (juxtaglomerular or JG cells)

Enlarged, smooth muscle cells of arteriole -Secretory granules contain enzyme renin -Mechanoreceptors sense blood pressure in afferent arteriole

Macula densa

Tall, closely packed cells, chemoreceptors that sense NaCl content of filtrate

Urinary bladder

Temporary storage reservoir for urine

JGA involves modified portions of the

Distal portion of the distal convoluted tubule and afferent (sometimes efferent) arteriole

Glomerulus blood pressure is high because

Efferent arterioles are smaller in diameter than afferent arterioles, and arterioles are high-resistance vessels (55 mmHg)

Vasa recta arise from

Efferent arterioles of juxtamedullary nephrons instead of peritubular capillaries

Filtrate is diluted in the

Ascending loop of Henle

Extraglomerular mesangial cells

Between arteriole and tubule cells, interconnected with gap junctions -May pass signals between macula dense and granular cells

Proximal convoluted tubule (PCT)

Composed of cuboidal cells with numerous microvilli, reabsorbs water and solutes from filtrate and secretes substances into it

Renal medulla

Cone shaped medullary (renal) pyramids separated by the renal columns

85% of nephrons are ______

Cortical nephrons, located in the cortex

Distal convoluted tubule (DCT)

Cuboidal cells without microvilli that function more in secretion than reabsorption

Glomerular capsule (Bowman's capsule)

Cup-shaped, hollow structure surrounding glomerulus

Podocytes

Extensions terminate in foot processes that cling to basement membrane. Filtration slits between foot processes allow filtrate to pass into capsular space

Renal capsule

Fibrous connective tissue

Fenestrations of filtration membrane prevent

Filtration of blood cells

Urine formation involves _____

Glomerular filtration, tubular reabsorption, secretion

List and describe three pressures operating at the filtration membrane, and explain how each influences net filtration pressure

Glomerular hydrostatic pressure is the chief force pushing water and solutes across the filtration membrane. The higher the glomerular hydrostatic pressure, the more filtrate is pushed across the membrane. Colloid osmotic pressure of plasma proteins in the glomerular blood, and capsular hydrostatic pressure exerted by fluids in the glomerular capsule, drive fluids back into the glomerular capillaries. The net filtration pressure equals glomerular hydrostatic pressure minus the sum of colloid osmotic pressure of glomerular blood and capsular hydrostatic pressure.

A renal corpuscle includes the ______

Glomerulus and glomerular (Bowman's) capsule

Kidney function in prolonged fasting

Gluconeogenesis

Descending limb of nephron loop reabsorbs

H2O

Ureters, renal blood vessels, lymphatics, and nerves enter and exit at the _____

Hilus

Juxtaglomerular apparatus (JGA)

Important in regulation of filtrate formation and blood pressure

Blood vessels of the renal columns are called ____

Interlobar

Juxtamedullary nephrons

Involved in the production of concentrated urine

The right kidney is lower than the left because

It is crowded by the liver

Negatively charged basement membrane repels

Large anions such as plasma proteins

Vasa recta

Long vessels parallel to long loops of Henle that function in formation of concentrated urine

Peritubular capillaries

Low pressure, porous capillaries adapted for absorption of water and solutes

Slit diaphragms also help to propel

Macromolecules

Juxtaglomerular complex (JGC) three cell populations

Macula densa, granular cells, extraglomerular mesangial cells

The kidneys are the

Major excretory organs

Urine has ____

Metabolic waste such as urea and uric acid

Ascending limb of nephron loop reabsorbs

Na+, K+, Cl-

The functional unit of the kidney is called a ____

Nephron

The sequence from the formation of a drop of urine to its elimination from the body:

Nephron, collecting duct, minor calyx, major calyx, renal pelvis, ureter, urinary bladder, urethra

Glomerular capsule structure

Parietal layer: simple squamous epithelium Visceral layer: branching epithelial podocytes

Urine passes through the ____

Pelvis of the kidney to ureter to bladder to urethra

Urochrome

Pigment from hemoglobin breakdown, gives urine color

Glomerular filtrate is least likely to contain _____

Plasma proteins

Endocrine function of the kidneys

Produce erythropoietin for the regulation of RBC production

Glomerular filtration

Produces cell- and protein-free filtrate by a passive process in which hydrostatic pressure forces (blood pressure) forces fluids and solutes through a membrane

Urine crystals in the renal pelvis are called

Renal calculi

Two main parts of nephrons

Renal corpuscle and renal tubule

Urine flow:

Renal pyramid to minor calyx to major calyx to renal pelvis to ureter

The kidneys lie in a ______ position in the ______

Retroperitoneal; superior lumbar region

If a substance is transported from the plasma of the peritubular capillary into the fluid of the renal tubule, it is said to be

Secreted

As the renal artery approaches the kidney, it branches to supply the renal tissue. The correct sequence starting from the renal artery:

Segmental, interlobar, arcuate, cortical radiate

Tubular secretion

Selectively moves substances from blood to filtrate in renal tubules and collecting ducts

Tubular reabsorption

Selectively returns 99% of substances from filtrate to blood in renal tubules and collecting ducts

Urine pH

Slightly acidic (4.5-8.0)

Substances reabsorbed in PCT

Sodium, all nutrients, cations, anions, water, urea and lipid-soluble solutes, small proteins

Renal cortex

Superficial region

Major calyx

The branching channels of the renal pelvis that collect urine from minor calyces and empty urine into the renal pelvis

Renal pelvis

The funnel-shaped tube within the renal sinus

Explain how filtration works in the glomerular capillaries

The glomerular capillaries are fenestrated, allowing fairly large molecules to pass through. The substances must pass through the basement membrane, where they are further selected for size by the filtration slits of the podocytes.

Papilla

Tip of a pyramid, releases urine into minor calyx

Glomerular filtration rate

Total amount of filtrate formed per minute by the kidneys (normal 120-125 ml/min)

Kidneys remove

Toxins, metabolic wastes, and excess ions from the blood

The area between the ureters and urethra is called the ____ in a bladder

Trigone

Glomerulus

Tuft of capillaries; fenestrated endothelium, highly porous, allows filtrate formation

Most important non reabsorbed substances

Urea, creatinine, uric acid

Kidneys activate

Vitamin D


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