Physiology of the Urinary System

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Physiology of the Urinary System Functions of the Urinary System Major Nitrogenous Wastes Formation of Urine Filtration Reabsorption Secretion

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Physiology of the Urinary System. Functions of the Urinary System Major Nitrogenous Wastes Formation of Urine Filtration Reabsorption Secretion. Functions of the Urinary System. Remove waste products from blood Maintain water balance Maintain salt balance Regulate blood pressure. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Physiology of the Urinary System

Page 1: Physiology of the Urinary System

Physiology of the Urinary System

Functions of the Urinary System

Major Nitrogenous Wastes

Formation of Urine

Filtration

Reabsorption

Secretion

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Functions of the Urinary System

Remove waste products from blood Maintain water balance Maintain salt balance Regulate blood pressure

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Major Nitrogen-containing Wastes

Urea: results from catabolism of amino acids

- amino acids => ammonia => urea

- protein is 16% nitrogen

- 100 g of protein => 16 g of waste nitrogen

- of these 16 g, 14 g is converted to urea

- most abundant nitrogenous waste product (21 g/day)

Ammonia salts: Minor component of urine. Of 16 g of waste nitrogen, 2 g are converted to ammonia salt

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Major Nitrogen-containing Wastes (cont.)

Uric acid: results from breakdown of nucleic acids (RNA), about 0.5 g/day

Creatine: generated in muscle tissue from breakdown of creatine phosphate (1.8 g/day, depending on muscle mass)

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Processes involved in Urine Formation

Three processes are involved: Filtration: forcing water and solutes across plasma

membrane (renal corpuscle). Selection by size. Reabsorption: Taking back water and important solutes

(nutrients, salts) back into the bloodstream. Very specific. Secretion: Transporting substances into urine. Specific.

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Filtration

All filtration occurs at the renal corpuscle Recall that the corpuscle if formed from the glomerulus

(capillary) and Bowman’s capsule (continuous with the tubules of the nephron)

parietal epithelium

podocyte

glomerularcapillary

afferentarteriole

efferentarteriole

DCT

macula densa

juxtaglomerularcells

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Process of Filtration

Blood pressure forces water across the glomerular endothelium, basement membrane, and filtration slits of podocyte cells (visceral layer of Bowman’s capsule) into the capsular space

Podocytes

filtration slits

basement membraneendothelial wall

of capillary

fenestra

capsular space

filtration

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Size Selection at Different Components of Filtration Apparatus

Fenestrated capillaries of glomerulus: pores allow water and most solutes through (but NOT blood cells)

Basement membrane: permits smaller proteins, nutrients, and ions through

Filtration slits of podocytes: prevent passage of most proteins

- The filtrate contains dissolved ions and small organic molecules, including nutrients.

- Filtration is selective for size only

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Some Definitions regarding Filtration

Renal Fraction: that part of the total cardiac output which passes through the kidneys (about 20%)

The renal flow rate is 1.2 liters of blood per minute Filtration Fraction: the amount of plasma going to the

kidney which is filtered and becomes filtrate

- on average, 20% of renal fraction

- blood is about 50% plasma, so the renal flow rate is 0.6 liters/min

- 0.6 liters/min x 20% = 0.12 ml filtrate/min

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Some More Definitions regarding Filtration

Glomerular Filtration Rate: how much filtrate is produced per minute (120 ml/min, or 170 liters/day)

- about 99% of this must be reabsorbed

- urine output = 1.7 liters

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Driving Force of Filtration

The filtration across membranes is driven by the net filtration pressure

The net filtration pressure = net hydrostatic pressure minus the net colloid osmotic pressure

The net hydrostatic pressure is determined by the glomerular hydrostatic pressure (GHP) minus the capsular hydrostatic pressure (CHP)

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Hydrostatic Pressures

The GHP is the blood pressure in the glomerular capillaries

- tendency to push water and solutes out of plasma, across membranes

- since efferent arteriole is smaller than afferent arteriole, GHP is relatively high (50 mm Hg)

The CHP is the resistance to flow along nephron tubules and ducts

- tendency to push water and solutes out of filtrate, into plasma

- CHP is normally low (15 mm Hg)

Thus, net hydrostatic pressure = 50 - 15 = 35 mm Hg

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Colloid Osmotic Pressure (COP)

The colloid osmotic pressure is the osmotic pressure resulting from the presence of proteins in a solution

The COP of blood is about 25 mm Hg The COP of filtrate is normally 0 Thus, total COP is 25 mm Hg

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Net Filtration Pressure

Thus, the net filtration pressure =

net hydrostatic pressure - colloid osmotic pressure

= 35 mm Hg - 25 mm Hg = 10 mm Hg Abnormal changes in either net hydrostatic pressure or

colloid osmotic pressure will affect filtration rate

- damage to glomerulus will allow proteins into the filtrate, decreasing net COP, and increasing filtration rate

- increasing capsular hydrostatic pressure (obstruction of tubules, ducts) will markedly decrease net hydrostatic pressure, decreasing filtration rate

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Reabsorption

Reabsorption takes place in the proximal convoluted tubule (PCT; 65%), loop of Henle (20%), distal convoluted tubule (DCT; 5%), and collecting ducts (10%)

In the PCT:- Over 99% of organic nutrients (glucose, amino acids) are resorbed- Active ion resorption- Water resorption by osmosis- Other solvents (urea, lipids, Cl- ions) resorbed by solvent drag

At the end of the PCT, filtrate contains no glucose, no amino acids, 12% of NaCl, 25% of volume, and increased urea, uric acid (no change in osmolarity)

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Resorption in the Loop of Henle

In the loop of Henle, half of the remaining water and 2/3rds of the remaining NaCl will be resorbed

The loop of Henle utilizes a countercurrent multiplication exchange system to reabsorb water and NaCl

Countercurrent: exchange occurs between fluids moving in opposite directions

Multiplication: the effect of exchange between the limbs increasing as fluid movement occurs

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Countercurrent Exchange: Loop of Henle

The walls of the descending and ascending limbs have different permeability characteristics

The descending limb is permeable to water, impermeable to solutes

The ascending limb is impermeable to water and solutes

Na+ and Cl- are actively pumped out of ascending limb

Osmotic concentration of peritubular fluid rises

Water leaves descending limb by osmosis Increased solute concentration causes

increased Na+ and Cl- transport

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Results of Countercurrent Exchange

Get resorption of water and NaCl, with filtrate at the end of the loop of Henle with lower osmolarity than at the beginning of the loop

A concentration gradient is built up in the peritubular space, which allows subsequent resorption of water from collecting duct

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Reabsorption in the DCT and Collecting Ducts

In the distal convoluted tubule, small adjustments in composition of filtrate take place

- active transport of Na+ and Cl- continues

- water reabsorption occurs under influence of ADH (5% of total water reabsorption)

In the collecting ducts, water and sodium are reabsorbed

- water is reabsorbed under regulation by ADH (10% of water reabsorption)

- sodium reabsorbed under regulation by aldosterone

- some reabsorption of bicarbonate and urea

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Secretion into Urinary Filtrate

Secretion plays a relatively small role in production of urine

Occurs in tubules and ducts There is active secretion of a number of substances into the

filtrate:

- potassium, hydrogen ions (in exchange for sodium ions)

- creatinine, penicillin, neurotransmitters, organic acids and bases

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Summary

Reviewed major nitrogenous wastes Defined terminology related to filtration Reviewed processes of filtration, absorption, and secretion

(mechanisms, site of action)

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Next Lecture......

Regulation of the Urinary System