9-26-08 Renal Introduction

Kidney Functions

  • Fluid Composition – controls fluid volume, osmolarity, electrolyte content, and pH
  • Metabolic End Products – excretes metabolic products, foreign substances (durgs), & hormones (insulin)
  • Enyzme/Hormone Production – creates renin, erythropoietin, vitamin D, prostaglandins

Body Water Composition Review

  • ~60% of body weight is water:
  • 2/3 of water is intracellular
  • 1/3 of water is extracellular:
  • 1/4 of extracellular water (1/12 of total) is circulating plasma
  • Hematocrit is about 40%, and thus total blood volume = (Plasma volume)/(1 – Hct)

Renal Failure EKG

  • K+is normally excreted by kidneys in larger amounts than Na+ or Cl-
  • Renal failure can’t excrete K+hyperkalemia more intense repolarization very large T-wave

Kidney Anatomy

  • Medulla – inner layer of renal pyramids  ascending/descending limbs of nephrons
  • Cortex – surrounding outer layer w/glomeruli, w/ portions penetrating between pyramids = renal columns
  • Renal Pelvis – collection of all renal pyramids
  • Renal Artery – gets 20% of cardiac output  important to filter blood
  • Arcuate Arteries – divide medulla from cortex, travel horizontally
  • Glomeruli – branches off arcuate artery into cortex, site of filtration
  • Afferent arteriole – leads from arcuate artery  glomeruli
  • Efferent arteriole – leads from glomeruli peritubular capillaries around nephrons
  • Bowman’s Space – outside of arteriole, but inside glomerulus, site of filtration
  • Plasma enters nephron at Bowman’s space, and re-enters blood at peritubular network

Kidney Plasma Journey

  • Afferent arteriole Bowman’s space & capsule  Proximal convoluted tubule  Thin descending limb (permeable only to water, gets sucked out)  Loop of Henle  Thin ascending limb (permeable only to ions, actively transports Na+ out) Thick ascending limb  Distal convoluted tubule (reg. signal to nephron) & Macula densa collecting duct  minor/major calyces  renal pelvis.
  • Bold = cortex, Regular = medulla
  • Proximal Convoluted Tubule – thicker epithelial lining, bulk of filtration work
  • Distal Convoluted Tubule – thinner epithelial lining, fine-tuning of filtration

Kidney Function

  • Creatinine – muscle breakdown product excreted at constant rate, thus great kidney function marker
  • High Creatinine – not being reabsorbed by kidneys, and thus renal failure
  • Low Creatinine – kidneys functioning properly to re-absorb creatinine (good = 1)
  • Na+/K+ ATPase – present in epithelial cells of nephron, function to generate osmotic gradient for filtration
  • Apical Microvilli – lumen-facing villi in tubules, break off and excreted in urine if in kidney failure
  • Casts – remnants of cells excreted in kidneys pathological, means kidneys aren’t filtering properly

Kidney X-ray

  • Visualization – patient ingests contrast agent, take x-ray of kidneys to assess function as contrast passes by
  • Abnormalities – will see blockages where contrast builds up in disease states

End-Stage Kidney Disease Treatments

  • Dialysis – artificially filter blood
  • Transplant – get new kidney