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Flashcards in this deck (10)

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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.

    physiology renal
  • 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.

    renal gfr
  • 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.

    myogenic mechanism
  • 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.

    myogenic mechanism
  • 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.

    tubuloglomerular maculadensa
  • 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.

    tubuloglomerular feedback
  • 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.

    tubuloglomerular feedback
  • 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.

    comparison autoregulation
  • 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.

    difference autoregulation
  • 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.

    cardiovascular renal
Notatki do nauki

Autoregulation of Renal Blood Flow and GFR

  • Autoregulation: the kidney's intrinsic ability to keep renal blood flow (RBF) and glomerular filtration rate (GFR) stable despite changes in systemic blood pressure or tubular load.
  • Purpose: preserve steady filtration of fluids and electrolytes so body homeostasis is maintained across a range of blood pressures (e.g., 110/70 vs 150/90).

Key variable (filtration physics)

  • GFR depends on net filtration pressure and membrane properties; a compact form of Starling's relation is:

\(\(\text{GFR} = K_f\,\bigl(P_{GC} - P_{BS} - \pi_{GC}\bigr)\)\)

  • \(K_f\) = filtration coefficient (surface area × permeability).
  • \(P_{GC}\) = glomerular capillary hydrostatic pressure; \(P_{BS}\) = Bowman space hydrostatic pressure; \(\pi_{GC}\) = glomerular capillary oncotic pressure.
  • Autoregulation acts mainly by changing \(P_{GC}\) via adjustments of afferent (and sometimes efferent) arteriole tone.

Myogenic mechanism (pressure sensor)

  • Stimulus: changes in vascular wall stretch caused by systemic blood pressure shifts.
  • Response to increased BP:
  • Higher intravascular pressure → greater stretch of afferent arteriole.
  • Initial forced dilation is followed by an intrinsic afferent arteriole vasoconstriction.
  • Result: decreased RBF and partial normalization of \(P_{GC}\) and GFR.
  • Response to decreased BP:
  • Reduced stretch on the arteriole.
  • Intrinsic vasodilation of the afferent arteriole.
  • Result: increased RBF to help preserve GFR.
  • Net effect: quick, local adjustment of arteriolar tone that stabilizes GFR against acute BP changes.

Tubuloglomerular feedback (salt sensor)

  • Sensor: macula densa cells in the distal convoluted tubule detect tubular NaCl concentration.
  • When macula densa senses increased NaCl:
  • Interpreted as excessive GFR or flow through the nephron.
  • Triggers signals that cause afferent arteriole vasoconstriction, lowering RBF and GFR.
  • When macula densa senses decreased NaCl:
  • Interpreted as low filtration or low renal perfusion.
  • Triggers afferent arteriole vasodilation, increasing RBF and GFR.
  • Net effect: adjusts GFR on the basis of tubular load to keep filtration appropriate for reabsorption capacity.

Similarities and differences

  • Similarities:
  • Both aim to maintain stable GFR and RBF across physiologic perturbations.
  • Both act primarily by changing afferent arteriole tone.
  • Differences:
  • Trigger: myogenic = mechanical (pressure/stretch); tubuloglomerular = chemical/flow (NaCl at macula densa).
  • Time scale: myogenic responses are rapid; tubuloglomerular feedback is slightly slower (depends on tubular delivery).

Clinical relevance & limits

  • Autoregulation keeps GFR steady across a wide BP range but can fail in extreme hypotension or severe vascular disease.
  • Understanding these mechanisms explains why changes in systemic BP or tubular NaCl handling alter renal function and drug effects.

Quick study aids

  • Mnemonic: "Myogenic = pressure, Tubuloglomerular = salt".
  • Checklist to predict effect on GFR:
  • ↑ BP → myogenic → afferent constrict → ↓ RBF/GFR (toward baseline).
  • ↑ tubular NaCl → tubuloglomerular → afferent constrict → ↓ GFR.
  • ↓ BP or ↓ NaCl → afferent dilate → ↑ RBF/GFR.

Key points to remember

  • Autoregulation preserves internal renal environment despite systemic changes.
  • Afferent arteriole tone is the main effector adjusting glomerular hydrostatic pressure.
  • Two complementary sensors: vessel wall stretch (myogenic) and macula densa NaCl (tubuloglomerular feedback).