00:00
Here, let me set this up for you.
00:03
So we have the afferent arteriole, I’d like
for you to begin up there, afferent arteriole.
00:07
How did you give rise to
this? It was a renal artery.
00:10
And it came in, and what did it do? Interlobar.
00:12
What was next? Interlobular. What’s
the name? Well, you have your arcuate.
00:15
And you had your Interlobular, what was
another name for that? Cortical radiate.
00:18
And you have the afferent
arteriole, and here we are.
00:22
I want you to come towards the glomerulus.
00:26
You’re going to form a tuft of
capillaries, I’ve mentioned that before.
00:31
The afferent arteriole is coming in
and you see all those structures there?
That’s a lot of structures.
00:36
Let me set each one up.
00:38
What's inside my afferent arteriole?
I’m sorry, what? I didn't hear you, one more time.
00:43
Good.
00:43
Plasma, excellent.
00:45
So your plasma coming through there, good.
00:47
Can you hear me? Loud and clear.
00:49
Afferent arteriole, plasma, filtering through.
00:52
Tell me about hydrostatic pressure from physio.
00:54
Increased.
00:55
It ensures filtration, right? ensures filtration.
00:59
Through what?
Through the endothelial cells across
the basement membrane, into where?
Into the Bowman's space.
01:07
Okay.
01:08
So now, tell me about the
cells that we see in green.
01:12
They're called juxtaglomerular cells.
01:14
What are they responsible for?
They're responsible for measuring the pressure
within the afferent arteriole, aren't they?
Mm-hmm.
01:20
So let's say that you have decreased
perfusion to the kidney, how did that occur?
You tell me what the diagnosis is in older
patient, male, approximately 52 years of age,
blood pressure: 160 over 90, three different
times on three different clinical visits.
01:37
So far, diagnosis? Hypertension.
01:39
We're not done.
01:41
Now, you go ahead and check the kidney, or
excuse me, you auscultate the renal area,
and you hear
noise, bruit, your renal bruit.
01:56
Give me diagnosis.
01:58
What's causing the hypertension?
What’s causing the bruit?
A 52-year-old male, the bruit
is caused by atherosclerosis.
02:07
Where? Renal artery.
02:09
Good?
What caused the 160 over 90?
Secondary hypertension, why?
Ah, this will explain everything.
02:17
The renal artery has been cut off, take a
look at the previous slide if you need to.
02:21
so that you see the positioning of
the afferent versus renal artery,
right?
Now, you have decreased
perfusion through the afferent.
02:29
This is not good.
02:31
You have decreased perfusion, that
kidney must maintain GFR at all times.
02:36
Tell me what the juxtaglomerular cells are going
to release here due to renal artery stenosis,
secondary to atherosclerosis.
02:46
Renin. Good.
02:47
What’s the name of that receptor that
those JG cells have, JG, juxtaglomerular?
beta-1
What are they going to release?
Renin. Good.
02:57
Continue the story.
02:58
Renin, angiotensin II, aldosterone.
03:02
What’s my blood pressure in my 52-year-old male?
160 over 90.
03:06
Was this primary or secondary hypertension?
Secondary hypertension,
huh? Secondary hypertension.
03:12
You got this? You better.
03:14
You have no choice, you have to know this.
03:16
Next, what's on the other side?
Well, the afferent arteriole with the JG cells
are going to communicate with a distal tubule.
03:25
What’s in there, what’s in the distal tubule?
You wish it was me being flushed down the toilet.
03:32
It’s not, it’s urine.
03:34
That’s urine in the distal tubule, you see it?
Okay, good.
03:38
So that’s urine in the distal tubule.
03:41
And what sensing the urine?
It’s not the juxtaglomerular cells,
it’s the macula densa, are we clear?
So in physio, you did a little bit of a reflex between
the macula densa and the juxtaglomerular cells.
03:54
Yeah, you did.
03:55
And that was called the tubuloglomerular feedback.
03:57
We’ll get to it in due time, not yet.
03:59
And the macula densa is sensing what?
The sodium and chloride within the urine.
04:04
Are you putting all of these together?
I hope so, I just gave you one example.
04:08
Now as we move, progress through
here in this lecture series,
we’re going to go ahead and talk about
the efferent arteriole in great detail.
04:14
We’ll talk about the afferent
arteriole in great detail.
04:16
We’ll bring all these structures together.
04:18
And we’re going to put in more
and more and more pathologies.
04:21
It’ll be fun, trust me.
04:22
All we’re doing is laying down foundation.
04:24
Are you having a good time? Smile for me.
04:26
Okay, let's discuss this graph for a moment.
04:29
On the x-axis, we see that
there's a mean arterial pressure
and on the y-axis, we see that we have renal
blood flow compared to percentage of normal.
04:37
This graph illustrates a phenomenon we've
already mentioned occuring in the brain
and that's 'autoregulation'.
04:42
In essence, this describes the organ's
ability to regulate its perfusion
over a range of blood pressures.
04:48
So if the chemoreceptors and baroreceptors
detect hypoxia or changes in blood pressure,
the system can constrict or dilate to maintain
the necessary blood flow relatively constantly.
04:59
If you look at the y curve here
on the graph, the green line,
what do you see from point A to point B?
Is there any change of blood flow to the kidney?
No, and this is important because we're
talking about a constant blood flow to an organ
over a range of about 100 mmHg in blood pressure
How did that occur?
Autoregulation.
05:19
So what does that mean to?
There was no communication with the brain.
05:23
There was a reflex in which it
was able to handle the pressure
at the level of the kidney
just like that, like a reflex.
05:31
So now, this is autoregulation.
05:33
You pay attention.
05:34
As the pressure starts dropping,
from 90, point C is normal
Point C as in Charlie is 90.
05:41
Let’s call that normal.
05:43
As your pressure starts
dropping all the way down to 40,
what do you expect your blood vessels
to do so that you maintain proper flow?
A represents vasodilation.
05:53
Part of autoregulation so that
the flow doesn’t diminish.
05:57
The pressure starts decreasing, but autoregulation
causes vasodilation - that’s point A.
06:04
Whereas if you have point B,
now what does that mean to you?
Your pressure is increased.
06:08
Autoregulation tells your blood
vessels to do what?
Vasoconstrict, we have B.
06:13
We pretty much identified the perfect
autoregulation points on this line for horizontal.
06:20
That is as far as I’m going to go with you on this.
06:22
I need you to at least understand
autoregulation and its specifics.
06:27
At any point in time, any one of your
licensed exam could ask you about curve X
in which there is absent, no autoregulation.
06:35
And that dashed line represents mild
autoregulation, I’ll go as far as that.
06:39
But your focus right now in pathology
is going to be between A and B,
that green line exhibiting
perfect, perfect autoregulation.
06:47
Let’s move on.