Title: Renal
1Renal
- ??? ??? PhD, RPh
- hsumj_at_mail.cmu.edu.tw
- Office hours
- ?????(8-12),
2Contents
- Overviews of Renal function
- Assessment of renal function
- Regulation of Renal blood flow (RBF) Glomerular
filtration rate (GFR) - Solutes and water homeostasis
- Acid-base balance
3- Body fluid osmolality volume
- Maintain the normal cell volume is essential for
cardiovascular system (through regulation of NaCl
and H2O) - Electrolyte balance Na, K, Cl- , HCO3-, H,
Ca, PO43-(intake excretion)Positive balance
(intake gt excretion)?Negative balance - Acid-balance balance Lung kidneys
- Excreteion (metabolites, foreign substances)
Urea(aa),Uric acid (nucleic acid),
Creatinine(muscle creatine), end product of
hemoglobin , drugs, pesticides, chemical ingested - Endocrine organ
- Renin(RAAS) ????, ??Na, K??,
- calcitriol(Vitamin D3 ???? ?GI??????
?????deposition) - Erythropoietin (when? erythrocyte production)
??????????anemia
4??????-1
- Decreased ability to excrete Na ? ?ECF ?
hypertension(occasionally, the patients have high
plasma renin and angiotensin level ? produce even
further ??ECF, and arteriolar vasoconstriction ?
HP) - Inability of kidney to produce NH4 ??capacity
to excrete H in urine ? metabolic acidosis
5??????-2
- ?K (become excessive)? hyperkalemia(acidosis
??hyperkalemia)?? - Acidosis in renal failure patients further
?hyperkalemia - Patients with renal failure can produce membrane
depolarization and cardiac failure
6??????-3
- Renal failure causes ?ECF ionic calcium
concentration(hypocalcemia)?? - ?ECF calcium(hypocalcemia)
- ?excrete PO4-3 ?ECF PO4-3 ? ?ECF Ca(Ca x
PO4-3 35-45) - Reduce the ability of the kidney to active
vitamin D ??absorb calcium from GI - Reduced Ca2ECF promotes increased release of
Parathyroid hormone(PTH),
7?
????NH4
?
8Diseases related with construction
9Nephrotic syndrome
- Causes Increased permeability of the glomerular
capillaries to proteins - Incidence Proteinuria protein excretion
- Indicting kidney disease (protein in urine)
- Develop edema and hypoalbuminemia
10Nephrin
- A transmembrane protein, a major component of the
slit diaphragm - Gene mutation leads to the abnormal or absent
slit diaphragms - Develop massive proteinuria and renal failure
- So, Nephrin plays essential role in the formation
of the normal glomerular filtration barrier
11Alports syndrome
- Hematuria (blood in the urine) and progressive
glomerulonephritis (inflammation of glomerular
capillaries) - 1-2 of cases of end-stage renal failure
- Cause defects in type IV collagen, a major
component of the glomerular basement membrane - Result basement membrane fails to serve as the
barriers.
12Nephrolithiasis (kidney stone)
- 80-90 calcium salts
- Uric acid, magnesium-ammonium acetate
- Cysteine
- Formed by crystalization in a supersaturated
urinary milieu. - ??ureter is blocked with kidney stone, reflex
constriction of the ureter around the stone
elicits severe flank pain.
13Micturition
- Process of emptying the urinary bladder
- Progressive filling of the bladder
- Stretches the bladder wall and triggers a reflex
initiated by stretch receptors - Micturition reflex
14Assessment of renal function
15Renal clearance
16Pxa Pxv ?? substance X in renal artery and
renal vein plasma ??? RPFa RPFv renal plasma
flow rates In artery and vein UxX in
urine Vurine flow rate Pxa (mg/ml) Cx Ux
(mg/ml) V (ml/min) Cx clearance of
substance X Cx (Ux V)/ Pxa
Fick Principle Mass balance
Pxa Ux x V????
17Assessment of renal functionRenal Clearance (Cx)
???
- A volume of plasma from which all the substance
- (substance x) has been removed and excreted into
the - urine per unit of time
(Unit volume/time)
18Renal Clearance (Cx) ???
?? 1 2 3 4
Urea excretion ?M/min 200 400 200 20
Plasma Urea ?M /min 3 6 30 3
Ratio 67 67 7 7
3 and 4 are patients with kidney diseases
Ratio Urea in Urine/Plasma Urea concentration
Ratio is a reliable index as renal function
(normal 70)
19Assessment of renal function ??Inulin Clearance
(Cin) ?? GFR
Inulin polymer of fructose neither reabsorbed,
secreted nor metabolized by the cells of
nephron ??????? Amt filtered amt excreted Pin
x GFR Uin x V GFR Uin x V/Pin
Determine Cin determine GFR
20Assessment of renal function Creatinine
Clearance (Ccr)
- Creatinine
- By product of sketeal muscle creatine metabolism
- Produced at a constant rate
- Endogenous, not reabsorbed but small amount of
secretion in urine
21Glomerular Filtration Rate( GFR )
- Index of kidney function
- Essential in evaluating the severity and course
of kidney diseases - GFR the sum of filtration rate of all
functioning nephrons - ?GFR
- ??????????????
- ??????
- ?GFR(recovery)
22- GFR????????????Pcr??
- GFR 120-100 ml/min
- Pcr 1.0-1.2 mg/dl
23Glomerular filtration
- GFR 90-140 ml/min, female (80-125) after 30
GFR declines with age - The first step in the formation of urine is the
production of an ultrafiltrate of the plasma at
the glomerulus - The ultrafiltrate is devoid of cellular
components and protein free. - Salt, organic molecules (glucose, aa), are
similar as plasma
24- Ultrafiltration is driven by Starling forces
across the glomerular capillaries, and changes in
these factors alter the GFR. GFR and RPF are
regulated by autoregulation - The force responsible for the glomerular
filtration of plasma are the same as those
involved in fluid exchange across all capillariry
beds
25Hydrostatic and oncotic pressure
26Hydrostatics of glomerular filtration
Filtration coefficient(Kf) intrinsic
permeability of the glomerular capillary and the
glomerular surface area available for filtration
27Determinants of glomerular filtration rate(GFR)
- Starling equation
- GFR Kf (PGC - PBS)- pGC
- Changes in Kf
- Drugs, hormones could dilate the glomerular
arterioles also increase Kf - A reduction in PGC is caused by
- Decline in renal arterial pressure
- Increase in afferent arteriolar resistance
- Decrease in efferent arteriolar resistance
- Increased PBS reduces GFR. Acute obstruction
(kidney stone) of the urinary tract increase PBS
28Regulation of renal blood flow and GFR
29Renal Blood Flow (RBF) 1.25 L/min
- ? GFR ?????
- ?????????????????????
- Participate in the concentration and dilution of
the urine - Deliver O2, nutrients and hormones to renal cells
and returning CO2 and reabsorbed fluid and
solutes to the general circulation - Deliver substrates for excretion in the urine
30Renal blood flow (RBF)
- Q (blood flow) ?P (arterial pressure venous
pressure of ea organ) / R (resistance) - RBF aortic pressure renal venous pressure/
renal vascular resistance
31Autoregulation
- Regulate the tone of afferent arteriole
- Change in arterial pressure
- Myogenic mechanism ????, renal afferent
arterioles is stretched, the smooth muscle
contract, increase in the resistance of the
arteriole offsets the increase in pressure, RBF
and GFR remains constant - Change in NaCl concentration of tubular fluid
- Tubuloglomerular feedback ??GFR, ??NaCl in the
tubule fluid in the loop of Henle, increases
resistance of afferent arteriole, ???decrease GFR
32Myogenic mechanism
Autoregulation -???????????RBF?GFR -achieved by
changes in vascular resistance
Vascular R Precisely responds to changes of
arterial pressure 90-180 mmHg
33Tubuloglomerular feedback
NaCl ?tubular fluid ?? JGA???,
??JGA???? Afferent arteriole ?? Resistance ??GFR?
??, NaCl? Tubular fluid??, --------
34N
AP ?
1
RBF ?P/R R k/r4 PGC hydrostatic pressure in
the glomerular capillary
2
3
4
35???????? RBF and GFR
- Sympathetic nerve binds to ?1 receptor, which
are located mainly on the afferent arterioles - Angiotensin II ??????????, ???? RBF ?? GFR
(????AgII???, ?????????, ????????????) - Angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE)
- ACE inhibitors increase RBF and GFR
- Prostaglandins
- NO
- Endothelin
- bradykinin
36Regulation of GFR and RBF
- Extrinsic(??????)
- Renal sympathetic nerves(?????? ? NE ? ???? ?
?GFR) - a1 receptor(??????????afferent artreioles)
- ?Effective circulating volume(ECV) hemorrhage
- Fear, pain ? ? RBF GFR
- Angiotensin II(?GFR)
- Prostaglandins
- PGE2,PGI2 ? ?? ? ?GFR
- NSAID ?
- Intrinsic
- Autoregulation
37Regulation of renal blood flow and GFR
- NO(endothelium-derived relaxing factor)
- Counteracts vasoconstriction produced by
angiotensin II and catecholamines - An increase in shear force acting on endothelial
cells in arterioles - Acetylcholine, histamine, bradykinin, ATP ?
increase production of NO - Abnormal production of NO
- Diabetes Mellitus, HP Excess of NO production ?
glomerulat hyperfiltration and damage of the
glomerulus - Salt intake triggers NO production
- Prostaglandins
- ???????? May not regulate RBF and GFR in normal
healthy person - PGI2 PGE2 are produced locally within the kidney,
and ?RBF w/o changes of GFR---???? - Prevent severe and harmful vasoconstriction and
renal ischemia - Prostaglandin synthesis is stimulated by
decreased ECV and stress, angiotensin II, and
sympathetic nerves
38Regulation of renal blood flow and GFR
- Endothelin
- A potent vasoconstrictor
- Secreted by
- Endothelial cell of renal vessels,
- Mesangial cells
- Distal tubular cells in response to angiotensin
II, bradykinin, epinephrine, and shear stress - Elevated in number of disease states(renal
diseases with DM)
- Bradykinin
- Kallikrein is a proteolytic enzyme produced in
the kidney - Kallikrein cleaves circulating kininogen to
bradykinin, a vaodilator - Bradykinin is a vasodilator that acts by
stimulating the release of NO and prostaglandins
39 Regulation of renal blood flow and GFR
- Adenosine
- Produced in the kidney
- Cause vasoconstriction of the afferent arterioles
- Reduce RBF and GFR
- Atrial Natriuretic peptide ( ANP )
- Secreted by the heart rises with HP and expansion
of extracellular fluid volume - Cause vasodilation of afferent arteriole and
vasoconstriction of efferent arterioles - The net effect of ANP is therefore to produce a
modest increase in GFR with little change in RBF
40Hemorrhage
- Hemorrhage ? ?arterial pressure ? baroreceptor
reflex ? ?sympathetic nerve to the kidney ?
Intensive constriction of afferent and efferent
arterioles ??RBF and GFR ? - ? Sympathetic ? ?release of epinephrine and
angiotensin II ? further vasoconstriction and
?RBF GFR - Rise of vascular resistance of the kidney ??TPR
- ?BP offset the fall in MAP caused by hemorrhage
41Regulation of renal blood flow and GFR
42Regulation of renal blood flow and GFR
43Solutes and water homeostasis
44- Types of cellular transport pathway
??? Na ??? ???Na ??blood
Na 12 mEq/L
Na 145 mEq/L
45Collecting duct Principal cell
46Key
Acetazolamide Diamox
Solute and H2O reabsorption along the nephron 1.
Proximal tubule early segment ??HCO3-? glucose
, amino acids, Pi, lactate?????
47Solute and H2O reabsorption along the nephron 2.
Proximal tubule late segment ??Cl-
????? ?????Cl-??? ?? Na?early proximal
tubule?? ??????
48Proximal Tubule Na transport
- Early PT
- Glucose and amino acid
- Hydrogen iondriving the reabsorption of HCO3-,
- In the early PT, HCO3- is the major anion
reabsorbed with Na, and luminal HCO3- falls - ????????
- Phlorhizin(block Na - glucose cotransporter)
- Digoxin(? Na K- - ATPase )
- Acetazolamide (?H- Na counter transporter ? H
???? ? ????)?CAI block bicarbonate reabsorption
49Protein in the urine
- Nephrotic syndrome
- Fanconis syndrome????aa, glucose,
low-molecular-weight proteins.??????????, so.. - Synthesis by thick ascending limb of Henles loop
(Tamm-Horsfall glycoprotein????????????Tamm-Horsf
all????????????PMN????? )
50Renal excretion of anions
Glutamate??
??organic anions????? transporter,
????PAH?? ??penicillin?secretion
51Renal excretion of cations (OC)
Cimetidine-H2 blocker, ??organic cation
pathway??secretion. ???procainamide
(antiarrhythmic) ?secretion.
52Renal excretion of cytotoxic drugs
Tubular fluid
blood
P-glycoprotein
Mrp1
Mrp2
Multidrug resistance (MDR)-associated protein
53Thick ascending limb Na Cl- transport( mainly of
the reabsorption in Loop of Henle)
- Basolateral membrane
- Key element in solute reabsorption by the thick
ascending limb is the Na/K ATPase in the - Lumen positive potential
- Electrogenic 2 Cl- for each Na that exit
lumen(K diffuse back out via channel) - Positive lumen potential difference is an
important force for driving Na K Ca Mg
reabsorption - Inhibited by Furosemide
- ????PT?????????
- ???HL???,????? Na ???
54Thick ascending limb Na Cl- transport
Loop diuretics Furosemide ??NaCl??? ??K, Ca???,
??K, Ca, excretion ????excretion
Symporter
55Bartters syndrome
- Autosomal recessive genetic disease
- mutations in the gene coding for the
1Na-2K-2Cl- symporter, apical K channel, or
baslateral Cl- channel in tick ascending limb - ?? NaCl, K???
- ??hypokalemia, decrease in effcetive circulating
volume (ECV), ??aldosterone??? - Metabolic alkalosis
- hyperaldosteronism
56Distal tubule
57Early distal tubule Na Cl- transport
- Reabsorbs 5 of filtered NaCl
- Na enters cell via a Na/Cl- cotransporter
- Inhibited by thiazide diuretics
- Relatively little water reabsorption, not
responsive to ADH
58Early distal tubule Na Cl- transport
Thiazide Diuretics
59Late distal tubule
- Principal cells
- Na reabsorption, K secretion
- Aldosterone
- ?number of open Na - channels at the apical
membranes - ?Na/K ATPase and open apical K channels
- Intercalated cells
60Solute and H2O reabsorption along the
nephron Distal tubule-last segments
Amiloride ???? Cl-??? ????K ??, ?? ?????
61Liddles syndrome
- Genetic disorder characterized by an increase in
extracellular fluid volume (ECFV) ?????? - ?? Na channel? ????-subunit??mutation??????apica
l cell membrane?Na-channel??? (overactive), ??,
Na???????, ??ECFV???
62Pseudohypoaldosteronism type I (PAH1)
- Increase in Na excretion
- A reduction in ECFV
- Hypotension
63Hormones regulate NaCl reabsorption
Angiotensin-II renin? PT ?Na, H2O
aldosterone Ag-II ? TAL, DT/CT ?Na, H2O
ANP ECFV ? CD ?Na, H2O
Urodilatin ECFV ? CD ? Na, H2O
???? ECFV ? PT ?Na, H2O
Dopamine ECFV ? PT ? Na, H2O
ADH ECFV ? CT/DT ? H2O
64??angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACEI)
- ?? angiotensin II
- ?PT? NaCl and water reabsorption
- Aldosterone????, ????NaCl???
- Systemic arteriole?dilation, ?????? (TPR??)
65Collecting tubule
- Water reabsorption
- Relatively impermeable to water in the basal
state, and is responsive to ADH, with the
insertion of water channels
66Collecting tubule
- Intercalated cells
- Hydrogen ion secretion
- Bicarbonate reabsorption
- Hydrogen and bicarbonate formed from water and
CO2 in the cell in the presence of carbonic
anhydrase. Bicarbonate returns to the circulation
by Cl-/HCO3- exchanger at basolateral membrane,
and H secreted into the lumen by a H/ATPase.
Process is stimulated by acidemia - K reabsorption
- Although cortical collecting tubule normally
secretes K under circumstances of K depletion,
net reabsorption occurs by the K - ATPase of the
intercalated cells
67Control of body fluid osmolality and volume
- ???????NaCl?????????osmolality?????
68Plasma osmolality
- ?????extracellular fluid (ECF)??????, ????Cl-,
HCO3- - So, Na is the major determinant of the
osmolality of the ECF - Rough estimate
- 2 (plasma Na) 285-295 mOsm/kg H2O
- In clinical set
- 2 (plasma Na) glucose/18 urea/2.8
- ???????????????????
69(No Transcript)
70Control of body fluid osmolality urine
concentration dilution
- Renal excretion of water is regulated to maintain
water balance
71Water reabsorption along the nephron
- PT
- 65-70 filtered water reabsorbed isoosmotically
- Na concentration and osmolality remains constant
along PT. remember that although 65-70 of the
filtered Na is rebasorbed in PT, water follows
readily(because of the high water permeability of
PT), and therefore the concentration of Na is
essentially unchanged along PT - HL
- Descending limb is always water permeable(20 of
filtered water reabsorbed) - Ascending limb is always water impermeable
- Late distal and collecting tubule
- Water reabsorption only in the presence of ADH
72Water reabsorption along the nephron
73Antidiuretic Hormone(ADH)
- ADH determines
- The concentration of urine
- The amount of water reabsorbed
- The volume of urine produced
- ADH binds to receptor on basolateral surfaces of
principal cells - Activate guanulate cyclase
- Lead to produce of water channels, and insert
them into the luminal membranes of principal
cells - Water is reabsorbed passively down its
concentration gradient into the interstitium of
both cortex and medulla
74Antidiuretic Hormone(ADH)
- A 9 amino acid peptide
- Synthesized in supraotic and paraventricular
hypothalamic nuclei - ADH release is regulated by
- More sensitive to changes in osmotic pressure
- Osmotic regulation
- Osmoreceptor in anterior hypothalamus in the
regions of the supraoptic nuclei - Hemodynamic regulation
- volume(stretch-sensitive neurons in the cardiac
atria and great veins) - Arterial pressure(stretch-sensitive neurons in
the carotid sinuses and aortic arch)
75(No Transcript)
76PKA
77ADH action on kidney
Collecting duct
lumen
Blood
Activate Gi
cAMP
H2O channel
PKA
H2O
H2O
??? UT-A1
UT-4
Aquaporin 2 gene
urea
urea
Aquaporin 2/H2O channel
H2O
78(No Transcript)
79Inadequate secretion of ADH
- Central diabetes insipidus
- Inherited ????
- Head trauma, brain neoplasm, brain infection
- Corrected by administration of exogenous ADH
- Nephrogenic diabetes insipidus
- Collecting duct do not respond to ADH (????)
- Defects in ADH receptors
- Failure to insert water channel to apical
membrane - ?????hypercalcemia, Lithium,
80??(lithium)
- ????????? (bipolar disorder) ???????
- ??????????????(0.6-1.2 meq/L) ??????,?????????????
???? - ???????????????,?????? (nephrogenic diabetes
insipidus ),??????????????????
81- ??????????60?????????,20????????????????????????
???,??????????????????????????? - ????????????????????????????????
82??????????????????????
???????CAMP??????Arginine vasopressin?????(hydro-o
smotic effect)???(????????????????????????????????
?)
83Syndrome of inappropriate ADH secretion (SIADH)
- ????
- Infection and neoplasms of brain
- Drugs (antitumor agents)
- Pulmonary disease
- Plasma ADH is elevated
- Retain water
- Urine is more concentrated
84Renin-angiotensin-aldosterone
Captopril
85- Efferent is more sensitive to A-II than afferent
- Low concentration of A-II, constriction of
efferent arteriole predominates - High concentration of A-II, constriction of both
afferent and efferent arterioles occurs
86Phosphatidyl choline Arachidonic acid
NSAID
Cyclooxygenase
Lipooxygenase
PAF NO
Leukotrienes
Prostaglandin Thromboxanes
Neutrophil function Phagocytosis Bacterial
killing
Vasodilation
Permeability Leukocyte trapping
87Potassium homeostasis
88K homeostasis
K distribution
?????? ???K???? ???plasma K
98 in cell 2 in ECF Normal K 4mEq/L
K balance
???K????? ???
89?? K distribution
- Insulin
- after K ingestion increase K uptake into cell
- Epinephrine
- Exercise ? K out of cell increase by 2-4 mEq/L
(????? ?-adrenergic blockers, ??????hyperkalemia) - Stress ? K uptake into cell
- Aldosterone ????
- Plasma K is increased ?increase K uptake into
cell and excreted by kidney ? decrease plasma K
90Factors ?? K distribution
- Acid-base balance
- Plasma osmolality
- Cell lysis
- Exercise
- Drug-induced hyperkalemia
91Two processes of cellular K secretion
92Factors regulate renal K secretion
- Plasma K
- Aldosterone
- Glucocorticoids
- Antidiuretic hormone(ADH)
Tubular flow
K excretion
GFR
93K and aldosterone regulate renal K secretion
Hyperkalemia
Aldosterone
Na/K-ATPase
Permeability of apical m. to K
Flow rate of tubular fluid
Driving force for K across apical m.
K secretion??
94Control of aldosterone and its effect on Na
reabsorption and K secretion
95ADH maintain constant K balanceEven when H2O
excretion is fluctuated
Na uptake from apical m. ? electrochemical
driving force for K
96Hyperkalemia
Hyperkalemia
- Low aldosterone
- GFR below 20 of the normal
- ??
- Insulin
- Epinephrine
- Aldosterone
- Burns
- Tumor lysis syndrome
- Rhabdomyolysis ??????
- Gastric ulcer blood cells are digested, and the
K released from the cells
97???
- ??????????,???????????,??????????????????????????,
?????????????????,????????1000??,??????????????? - ??????????,??????????????????????????????????????
????????????? - ??????????ACEIs?Cyclosporine?Digitalis
overdose?Heparin?Lithium?NSAIDs?Spironolactone?Suc
cinylcholine?Trimethoprim?