Renal Blood Flow - Crimson Current

- Key Values:
- Renal Blood Flow (RBF): ~1 L/min (20-25% of Cardiac Output).
- Renal Plasma Flow (RPF): ~600 ml/min.
- Vascular Pathway: Renal a. → Segmental a. → Interlobar a. → Arcuate a. → Interlobular a. → Afferent arteriole → Glomerulus → Efferent arteriole → Peritubular capillaries/Vasa recta.
- Measurement:
- RPF via PAH clearance: $RPF = (U_{PAH} \times V) / P_{PAH}$.
- RBF from RPF: $RBF = RPF / (1 - Hct)$.
⭐ The kidneys receive approximately 20-25% of the cardiac output, despite constituting only 0.5% of body mass.
Glomerular Filtration & GFR - Mighty Microfilter

- Glomerular Filtration Barrier (GFB): Three layers.
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- Fenestrated endothelium: Stops cells.
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- Glomerular Basement Membrane (GBM): Type IV collagen, heparan sulfate (anionic barrier).
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- Podocyte foot processes: With slit diaphragms (nephrin); final size barrier.
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- Selectivity: Filters by size (restricts >4 nm, albumin) & charge (negative charge of GFB, esp. heparan sulfate, repels anionic proteins).
- Starling Forces determine GFR:
- $GFR = K_f \times [(P_{GC} - P_{BS}) - (\pi_{GC} - \pi_{BS})]$ (Note: $\pi_{BS}$ is usually negligible)
- $K_f$: Filtration coefficient.
- $P_{GC}$: Glomerular capillary hydrostatic pressure (favors filtration).
- $P_{BS}$: Bowman's space hydrostatic pressure (opposes).
- $\pi_{GC}$: Glomerular capillary oncotic pressure (opposes).
- $GFR = K_f \times [(P_{GC} - P_{BS}) - (\pi_{GC} - \pi_{BS})]$ (Note: $\pi_{BS}$ is usually negligible)
- Normal GFR: ~125 mL/min or 180 L/day.
- GFR Measurement:
- Ideal marker: Freely filtered; not reabsorbed/secreted.
- Inulin clearance: Gold standard.
- Creatinine clearance: Clinical estimate (slight secretion overestimates GFR).
⭐ The glomerular basement membrane (GBM) restricts filtration of molecules based on size and negative charge (due to heparan sulfate).
Regulation of RBF & GFR - Kidney's Command

- Autoregulation (Maintains RBF & GFR over MAP 80-180 mmHg):
- Myogenic: Afferent arteriole constricts/dilates to stretch.
- Tubuloglomerular Feedback (TGF): Macula densa senses ↑NaCl in DCT → signals afferent arteriole (adenosine/ATP) → constriction → ↓GFR.
- Neural Regulation: Sympathetic nerves (α1 receptors):
- Vasoconstriction (Afferent > Efferent arterioles) → ↓RBF, ↓GFR.
- Hormonal Regulation:
- RAAS (Angiotensin II):
- Low conc: Potent vasoconstrictor (Efferent > Afferent) → ↑GFR initially or maintains it.
- High conc: Both afferent & efferent vasoconstriction → ↓GFR.
- Stimulates aldosterone.
- Prostaglandins (PGE2, PGI2): Vasodilate afferent arteriole → ↑RBF, ↑GFR. Protective.
- ANP/BNP: Dilate afferent, constrict efferent → ↑GFR. Inhibit Na+ reabsorption.
- Endothelin: Vasoconstriction.
- Bradykinin: Vasodilation.
- RAAS (Angiotensin II):
⭐ Angiotensin II preferentially constricts the efferent arteriole at low concentrations, thereby helping to maintain GFR when renal perfusion pressure drops.
Filtration Fraction - The Net Yield
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Definition: Filtration Fraction ($FF$) = $GFR / RPF$.
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Normal: ~0.2 (20%).
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Factors affecting $FF$:
Factor RPF GFR $FF$ Afferent Constriction (NSAIDs) ↓ ↓ Variable/↓ Efferent Constriction (Low Ang II) ↓ ↑ ↑ Afferent Dilation ↑ ↑ Variable Efferent Dilation (ACE-I) ↑ ↓ ↓ ↑ Plasma Protein Conc. ↔ ↓ ↓ ↓ Plasma Protein Conc. ↔ ↑ ↑
⭐ ACE inhibitors decrease filtration fraction by dilating the efferent arteriole, which increases RPF and decreases GFR.
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- RBF is ~20-25% of cardiac output; RPF = RBF * (1-Hct).
- Normal GFR is ~125 mL/min; Filtration Fraction (FF) = GFR/RPF, typically ~0.2.
- Autoregulation (myogenic & TGF mechanisms) maintains GFR/RBF constant over MAP 80-180 mmHg.
- Afferent constriction (e.g., NSAIDs) ↓RBF & ↓GFR. Efferent constriction (low Ang II) ↑GFR, ↓RBF.
- Inulin clearance measures GFR; PAH clearance estimates RPF.
- Starling forces (glomerular capillary hydrostatic Pgc & oncotic πgc pressures) govern filtration.
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