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What is renal autoregulation?
The kidneys' ability to self-regulate and maintain stable function despite fluctuations in blood pressure and other physiological conditions.
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What is the primary goal of autoregulation in the kidneys?
To maintain a stable glomerular filtration rate (GFR) and proper filtration of fluids and electrolytes despite blood pressure changes.
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How does the myogenic mechanism respond when systemic blood pressure increases?
Increased vascular stretch leads to afferent arteriole vasoconstriction, decreasing renal blood flow (RBF) to maintain GFR.
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How does the myogenic mechanism respond when systemic blood pressure decreases?
Decreased vascular stretch leads to afferent arteriole vasodilation, increasing renal blood flow (RBF) to maintain GFR.
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What does the macula densa sense in the tubuloglomerular feedback mechanism?
The macula densa senses the salt (sodium chloride, NaCl) content in the distal convoluted tubule.
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What is the tubuloglomerular feedback response when the macula densa senses increased NaCl?
Increased NaCl indicates high GFR; the response is afferent arteriole vasoconstriction to decrease RBF and lower GFR.
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What is the tubuloglomerular feedback response when the macula densa senses decreased NaCl?
Decreased NaCl indicates low filtration; the response is afferent arteriole vasodilation to increase RBF and raise GFR.
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What common goal do the myogenic mechanism and tubuloglomerular feedback share?
Both act to restore GFR and renal blood flow: they increase RBF/GFR when low and decrease RBF/GFR when high.
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What main difference distinguishes the myogenic mechanism from tubuloglomerular feedback?
The myogenic mechanism is triggered by blood pressure/stretch changes; tubuloglomerular feedback is triggered by NaCl concentration sensed by the macula densa.
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How are the kidneys and cardiovascular system related in the context of autoregulation?
They are directly interconnected so changes in one system affect the other, making renal self-regulation essential.
Browse your cards here, or sign up to study with spaced repetition.
What is renal autoregulation?
The kidneys' ability to self-regulate and maintain stable function despite fluctuations in blood pressure and other physiological conditions.
What is the primary goal of autoregulation in the kidneys?
To maintain a stable glomerular filtration rate (GFR) and proper filtration of fluids and electrolytes despite blood pressure changes.
How does the myogenic mechanism respond when systemic blood pressure increases?
Increased vascular stretch leads to afferent arteriole vasoconstriction, decreasing renal blood flow (RBF) to maintain GFR.
How does the myogenic mechanism respond when systemic blood pressure decreases?
Decreased vascular stretch leads to afferent arteriole vasodilation, increasing renal blood flow (RBF) to maintain GFR.
What does the macula densa sense in the tubuloglomerular feedback mechanism?
The macula densa senses the salt (sodium chloride, NaCl) content in the distal convoluted tubule.
What is the tubuloglomerular feedback response when the macula densa senses increased NaCl?
Increased NaCl indicates high GFR; the response is afferent arteriole vasoconstriction to decrease RBF and lower GFR.
What is the tubuloglomerular feedback response when the macula densa senses decreased NaCl?
Decreased NaCl indicates low filtration; the response is afferent arteriole vasodilation to increase RBF and raise GFR.
What common goal do the myogenic mechanism and tubuloglomerular feedback share?
Both act to restore GFR and renal blood flow: they increase RBF/GFR when low and decrease RBF/GFR when high.
What main difference distinguishes the myogenic mechanism from tubuloglomerular feedback?
The myogenic mechanism is triggered by blood pressure/stretch changes; tubuloglomerular feedback is triggered by NaCl concentration sensed by the macula densa.
How are the kidneys and cardiovascular system related in the context of autoregulation?
They are directly interconnected so changes in one system affect the other, making renal self-regulation essential.
\(\(\text{GFR} = K_f\,\bigl(P_{GC} - P_{BS} - \pi_{GC}\bigr)\)\)
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