Water Balance Flashcards

1
Q

Two key stimuli for increased ADH secretion?

A
  1. increased plasma osmolarity (more sensitive)

2. blood volume depletion

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2
Q

Secondary stimuli for ADH secretion:

A

pain

nausea

drugs (narcotics in particular)

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3
Q

Pathway for ADH secretion with increased plasma osmolarity:

A

Brain osmoreceptors depolarize –>

stimulates supraoptic nuclei in hypothalamus –>

Neurosecretory cells in posterior pituitary secrete ADH

**thirst is also stimulated

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4
Q

Pathway for ADH secretion by decreased plasma volume:

A

low MAP –> carotid and atrial baroreceptors –>

parasympathetic stim of hypothalamus paraventricular nuclei –> neurosecretory cells in post pituitary –> increased ADH secretion

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5
Q

Only nephrons that control water:

A

juxtamedullary (loops dive way down into medulla, glom still in cortex)

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6
Q

Variability of water reabsorption by percent?

A

80-99.5%

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7
Q

With full ADH effect, how much water gets excreted?

A

0.5%…..

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8
Q

With NO ADH effect, how much water can be excreted?

A

20%…36 L

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9
Q

Water % reabsorbed in prox tubule?

A

65%

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10
Q

Water % reabsorbed in descending LoH?

A

10% (vs 20% NaCl)

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11
Q

What joins NaCl in the interstitium around the lower loop of henle to increase osmolarity when ADH is in effect?

A

urea

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12
Q

Go learn about urea in lecture notes.

A

Not very flashcardable.

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13
Q

ADH deficiency?

A

Diabetes insipidus

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14
Q

If diabetes insipidus corrects with exogenous ADH the it’s called?

A

Neurogenic

don’t make ADH

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15
Q

If diabetes insipidus does not correct with exogenous ADH, then it is called?

A

Nephrogenic

kidney doesn’t respond to ADH (mutation of V2 receptor)

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16
Q

ADH receptor that stimulates transcription of aquaporins that get stored in intracellular vesicles for release to membrane?

A

V2

17
Q

Player in the V2 receptor signaling pathway:

A

ATP

cAMP

Protein kinase A

cAMP response element binding protein (CREB)

CREB-P – the transcription factor

18
Q

AQP2 inserts where?

A

luminal membrane (collecting tubule)

19
Q

AQP 3&4 insert where?

A

basolateral membrane

20
Q

Drug that can cause diabetes insipidus?

A

lithium

21
Q

V2 receptor antagonist used in HF?

A

tolvaptan

22
Q

Most important aquaporin?

A

2 (luminal)

23
Q

If you don’t eat any protein or solutes, what happens?

A

No gradient formation in deep medullary region

no ability to resorb water because no urea or NaCl

“tea and toast”

“beer potomania”

24
Q

Location of UT1?

A

distal third of collecting tubule

25
Q

Location of UT2?

A

ascending LOH

26
Q

UT1/2 upregulated by?

A

ADH