11. Calcium regulation Flashcards Preview

ESA 2 - MEH > 11. Calcium regulation > Flashcards

Flashcards in 11. Calcium regulation Deck (17)
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1
Q

how much Ca is there in body and how is it stored

A

1kg, mainly stored as hydroxyapatite crystals in bone

1g present in extracellular fluid

2
Q

what are the 3 forms of Ca found in plasma

A
  1. free ionised form - biologically active
  2. complexed with albumin
  3. complexed with low molecular weight organic anions
3
Q

which 3 organs are critical in Ca homeostasis

A
  1. skeleton: calcium deposition = calcium resorption
  2. GI tract: absorbs dietary calcium and secretes calcium for excretion
  3. kidney: calcium excretion in kidneys = net absorption in GI tract
4
Q

why is Ca and phosphate homeostasis linked

A
  1. both principal components of hydroxyapatite crystals

2. regulated by same hormones - PTH and calcitriol

5
Q

which 2 hormones act to increase serum Ca conc.

A
  1. parathyroid hormone (PTH)

2. calcitriol (active form of vitD)

6
Q

how does PTH increase serum Ca

A
  1. acts on BONE: activates osteoclasts to increase bone resorption and Ca release
  2. acts on KIDNEY:
    - increase calcium reabsorption
    - increases 1a-hydroxylation of inactive vitD to calcitriol
7
Q

how does PTH prevent kidney stone formation

A

increases Ca reabsorption but decreases Pi reabsorption

8
Q

what is the effect of PTH on osteoblasts and osteoclasts

A
  1. stimulates osteoblast synthesis and secretion of cytokines… stimulates differentiation and activity of osteoclasts and protects them from apoptosis… produce acid to dissolve hydroxyapatite
  2. decreases osteoblast activity… exposes bony surfaces to osteoclasts
9
Q

how does calcitriol act to increase Ca serum conc.

A
  1. acts on BONE: increases resorption
  2. acts on KIDNEY: increases Ca reabsorption
  3. acts on GI TRACT: increases intestinal absorption of dietary Ca via transcellular uptake
10
Q

which hormone is released from thyroid parafollicular/C cells and why

A

CALCITONIN - little effect but thought to counteract effects of PTH in pregnancy

11
Q

which cells produce PTH

A

parathyroid glands (2 at back of each thyroid lobe)

12
Q

which 2 cell types are found in parathyroid glands

A
  1. CHIEF cells: produce PTH

2. OXYPHIL cells (more cytoplasm): role?

13
Q

how do chief cells sense serum Ca levels

A

Ca binds to GPCRs on cell surface

14
Q

what type of hormone is PTH

A

polypeptide hormone (synthesised as preprohormone and cleaved in liver)

15
Q

describe the synthesis of calcitriol

A
  1. inactive vitD3 obtained from dairy or action of sunlight on 7-dehydrocholesterol in skin…
  2. hydroxylation to 25-hydroxyvitamin D in liver…
  3. transported to kidney via transcalciferin…
  4. hydroxylation to calcitriol by 1a-hydroxylase in PCT
16
Q

how is 1a-hydroxylase regulated

A
  • stimulated by PTH

- inhibited by high serum Ca

17
Q

why is PTH involve in short term Ca regulation and calcitriol in long term regulation

A

PTH has shorter 1/2 life (4 min) as no serum binding hormone, whilst calcitriol has longer 1/2 life (0.25 days)