USMLE Renal System Guide
USMLE Renal System Guide
Embryology
Kidney embryology:
Pronephros—week 4; then degenerates.
Mesonephros—functions as interim kidney for 1st trimester; later contributes to
male genital system (Wolffian duct).
Metanephros—permanent; first appears in 5th week of gestation; nephrogenesis
continues
through weeks 32–36 of gestation.
Ureteric bud—derived from caudal end of mesonephric duct; gives rise to ureter,
pelvises, calyces, and collecting ducts; fully canalized by 10th week.
Metanephric mesenchyme (i.e., metanephric blastema)—ureteric bud interacts with this
tissue; interaction induces differentiation and formation of glomerulus through to
distal convoluted tubule (DCT).
Aberrant interaction between these 2 tissues may result in several congenital
malformations of the kidney (Multicystic dysplastic kidney).
Ureteropelvic junction—last to canalize most common site of obstruction (can be
detected on prenatal ultrasound as hydronephrosis).
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Horseshoe kidney:
Inferior poles of both kidneys fuse abnormally A.
As they ascend from pelvis during fetal development, horseshoe kidneys get trapped
under inferior mesenteric artery and remain low in the abdomen.
Kidneys function normally.
Associated with hydronephrosis (eg,
ureteropelvic junction obstruction), renal
stones, infection, chromosomal aneuploidy
syndromes (eg, Turner syndrome; trisomies 13,
18, 21), and rarely renal cancer.
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Anatomy
Kidney anatomy and glomerular structure:
Kidney surface anatomy:
UW: Fracture 12th rib risk for kidney injury.
The 12th rib overlies the parietal pleura medially and the kidney laterally.
The left 9th, 10th, and 11th ribs overlie the spleen.
The right 8th-11th ribs overlie the liver's posterior surface.
Left kidney is taken during donor transplantation because it has a longer renal vein.
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Course of ureters:
It courses anterior to the iliac vessels (area of resection of the pelvic nodes, which drain
the uterus and cervix) and just posterior to the uterine artery near the lateral fornix of the
vagina.
Ureters pass under uterine artery or under vas deferens (retroperitoneal).
Gynecologic procedures (eg, ligation of uterine or ovarian vessels) may damage ureter
ureteral obstruction or leak hydronephrosis and flank pain due to distension
of the ureter and renal pelvis.
―Water (ureters) under the bridge (uterine artery or vas deferens).‖
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Physiology
Fluid compartments:
Volume
where:
Volume = volume of distribution, or volume of the body fluid compartment (L)
Amount = amount of substance present (mg)
Concentration = concentration in plasma (mg/L)
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Renal clearance:
Cx = UxV/Px = volume of plasma from
which the substance is completely cleared
per unit time.
If Cx < GFR: net tubular reabsorption of X.
If Cx> GFR: net tubular secretion of X.
If Cx= GFR: no net secretion or reabsorption.
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Filtration:
Filtration fraction (FF) = GFR/RPF. Normal FF = 20%.
Filtered load (mg/min) = GFR (mL/min) × plasma concentration (mg/mL).
GFR can be estimated with creatinine clearance.
RPF is best estimated with PAH clearance.
Prostaglandins Dilate Afferent arteriole (PDA)
ACE inhibitors Constrict Efferent arteriole (ACE).
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K: What would happen if you gave NSAIDs to the 75-year-old man who is
hemorrhaging?
During a stress state the increase in sympathetic tone causes vasoconstriction
of the afferent arterioles. The same stimuli activate a local production of
prostaglandins.
Prostaglandins lead to vasodilation of the afferent arterioles, thus modulating
the vasoconstriction.
Unopposed, the vasoconstriction from the sympathetic nervous system and
angiotensin II can lead to a profound reduction in RPF and GFR, which in
turn, could cause renal failure.
NSAIDs inhibit synthesis of prostaglandins and interfere with these protective
effects.
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Glucose clearance:
Glucose at a normal plasma level (range
60–120 mg/dL) is completely reabsorbed
in proximal convoluted tubule (PCT) by
Na+/glucose cotransport.
In adults, at plasma glucose of ∼ 200
mg/dL, glucosuria begins (threshold).
At rate of ∼ 375 mg/min, all transporters
are fully saturated (Tm).
Normal pregnancy may decrease ability of
PCT to reabsorb glucose and amino acids
glucosuria and aminoaciduria.
Sodium-glucose cotransporter 2 (SGLT2) inhibitors (eg, -flozin drugs) permit
glucosuria at plasma concentrations < 200 mg/dL.
Glucosuria is an important clinical clue to diabetes mellitus.
Splay is the region of substance clearance between threshold and Tm; (between threshold
and Tm) due to the heterogeneity of nephrons.
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Nephron physiology:
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UW: ADH acts on the medullary segment of the collecting duct to increase urea
and water reabsorption, allowing for the production of maximally concentrated
urine.
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Tubular inulin ↑ in concentration (but not amount) along the PCT as a result of water
reabsorption.
Cl- reabsorption occurs at a slower rate than Na+ in early PCT and then matches the
rate of Na+ reabsorption more distally. Thus, its relative concentration ↑ before it
plateaus.
UW: Where is the lowest concentration of PAH?
PAH is primarily secreted into the nephron by the proximal tubule, but some is also
freely filtered by the glomerulus. PAH is not reabsorbed by any portion of the
nephron. Therefore, tubular fluid concentration of PAH is lowest in Bowman's space.
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Renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system:
Renin:
Secreted by JG cells in response to ↓ renal arterial pressure, ↑ renal
sympathetic discharge (β1 effect), and ↓ Na+ delivery to macula densa cells.
AT II:
Helps maintain blood volume and blood pressure.
Affects baroreceptor function; limits reflex bradycardia, which would
normally accompany its pressor effects.
ANP, BNP:
Released from atria (ANP) and ventricles (BNP) in response to ↑ volume;
may act as a “check” on renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system;
Relaxes vascular smooth muscle via cGMP ↑ GFR, ↓ renin.
Dilates afferent arteriole, constricts efferent arteriole promotes natriuresis.
ADH:
Primarily regulates osmolarity; also responds to low blood volume states.
Aldosterone:
Primarily regulates ECF volume and Na+ content;
Responds to low blood volume states.
Responds to hyperkalemia by ↑ K+ excretion.
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Juxtaglomerular apparatus:
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Prostaglandins:
Paracrine secretion which vasodilates the afferent arterioles to ↑
RBF.
NSAIDs block renal-protective prostaglandin synthesis constriction
of afferent arteriole and ↓ GFR; this may result in acute renal failure in
low renal blood flow states.
Dopamine:
Secreted by PCT cells, promotes natriuresis.
At low doses, dilates interlobular arteries, afferent arterioles, efferent
arterioles ↑RBF, little or no change in GFR.
At higher doses, acts as vasoconstrictor.
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Potassium shifts:
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Electrolyte disturbances
Acid-base physiology:
Acid
production
Nonvolatile
Volatile acid
acids (fixed
(Co2)
acids)
1. Volatile acid:
Is Co2.
Produced from the aerobic metabolism of cells.
CO2 combines with H2O to form the weak acid H2CO3, which dissociates
into H+ and HCO3- by the following reactions:
Co2 + H2O ↔ H2CO3 ↔ H+ + HCO3-
Carbonic anhydrase, which is present in most cells, catalyzes the reversible
reaction between CO2 and H2O.
2. Nonvolatile acids (fixed acids):
Include sulfuric acid (a product of protein catabolism) and phosphoric acid
(a product of phospholipid catabolism).
Normally produced at a rate of 40 to 60 mmoles/day.
Other fixed acids that may be overproduced in disease or may be ingested
include ketoacids, lactic acid, and salicylic acid.
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UW: Urinary acid excretion occurs primarily in the form of NH4 and titratable acids
(H2PO4). In metabolic acidosis, urinary pH decreases due to increased excretion of free H+,
NH4; and H2PO4. Bicarbonate is completely reabsorbed from the tubular fluid in
acidotic states.
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UW: Aspirin toxicity (suspected in a patient with the triad of fever, tinnitus,
and tachypnea): causes 2 different acid-base abnormalities simultaneously:
Respiratory alkalosis: is the first disturbance to occur, as salicylates directly
stimulate the medullary respiratory center. The resulting increase in ventilation
leads to increased loss of CO2 in the expired air.
Anion gap metabolic acidosis: begins to develop shortly afterward, as high
concentrations of salicylates increase lipolysis, uncouple oxidative
phosphorylation, and inhibit the citric acid cycle. This results in the
accumulation of organic acids in the blood (eg, ketoacids, lactate and
pyruvate).
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Metabolic alkalosis:
UW: The next step in a patient with metabolic alkalosis urine chloride.
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Why hypokalemia in type I RTA? The defect here is in H/K PUMP which normally excrete H and
reabsorb K its failure will lead to acidosis + hypokalemia.
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Pathology
Casts in urine:
Presence of casts indicates that hematuria/pyuria is of glomerular or renal tubular
origin.
Bladder cancer, kidney stones hematuria, no casts.
Acute cystitis pyuria, no casts.
RBC casts: A Glomerulonephritis, malignant hypertension.
WBC casts: B Tubulointerstitial inflammation, acute pyelonephritis, transplant
rejection.
Fatty casts (“oval fat bodies”): Nephrotic syndrome. Associated with ―Maltese
cross‖ sign.
Granular (“muddy brown”) casts C Acute tubular necrosis.
Waxy casts: D are seen in advanced renal disease (chronic renal failure).
They are shiny, translucent tubular structures formed in the dilated tubules of enlarged
nephrons that undergo compensatory hypertrophy in response to reduced renal mass.
Hyaline casts: E Nonspecific, can be a normal finding, often seen in concentrated
urine samples.
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Glomerular diseases:
Nephritic syndrome:
NephrItic syndrome = Inflammatory process. When glomeruli are involved, leads to
hematuria and RBC casts in urine. Associated with azotemia, oliguria, hypertension (due to
salt retention), and proteinuria.
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UW: Painless hematuria within 5-7 days of an upper respiratory tract Infection
IgA nephropathy.
UW: When IgA nephropathy is accompanied by extra renal symptoms (eg
abdominal pain, arthralgias, purpuric skin lesions), the syndrome is called Henoch-
Schönlein purpura.
5) Alport syndrome:
a. Mutation in type IV collagen thinning and splitting of glomerular
basement membrane.
b. Most commonly X-linked dominant.
c. Eye problems (eg, retinopathy, lens dislocation), glomerulonephritis, and
sensorineural deafness; “can’t see, can’t pee, can’t hear a bee.”
d. “Basket-weave” appearance on EM Lamellated appearance.
6) Membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis:
a. Type I—subendothelial immune complex (IC)
deposits with granular IF; “tram-track” appearance
on PAS stain D and H&E stain E due to GBM
splitting caused by mesangial ingrowth. Causes:
Idiopathic or may be 2° to hepatitis B or C
infection.
b. Type II—also called dense deposit disease
deposition within the basement membrane.
i. Type II is associated with C3 nephritic factor
(IgG antibody that stabilizes C3 convertase
persistent activation of C3 persistent
complement activation ↓ C3 levels).
c. MPGN is a nephritic syndrome that often copresents
with nephrotic syndrome.
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Nephrotic syndrome
The initial event is an increased permeability of the glomerular capillary wall to
plasma proteins caused by structural or physicochemical changes massive urine
protein loss.
Massive prOteinuria (> 3.5 g/day) with hypoalbuminemia, resulting edema,
hyperlipidemia.
Frothy urine with fatty casts. Due to podocyte damage disrupting glomerular
filtration charge barrier.
May be 1° (eg, direct sclerosis of podocytes) or 2° (systemic process [eg, diabetes]
secondarily damages podocytes).
Associated with hypercoagulable state (eg, thromboembolism) due to antithrombin
(AT) III loss in urine and ↑ risk of infection (due to loss of immunoglobulins in
urine and soft tissue compromise by edema).
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Severe nephritic syndrome may present with nephrotic syndrome features (nephritic-
nephrotic syndrome) if damage to GBM is severe enough to damage charge barrier.
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4) Amyloidosis:
LM—Congo red stain shows apple-green birefringence under polarized light due
to amyloid deposition in the mesangium.
Kidney is the most commonly involved organ (systemic amyloidosis).
Associated with chronic conditions that predispose to amyloid deposition (eg, AL
amyloid, AA amyloid).
5) Diabetic glomerulonephropathy:
Most common cause of end-stage renal disease in the United States.
Pathogenesis:
Non enzymatic glycosylation of GBM ↑ permeability, thickening.
Nonenzymatic glycosylation of efferent arterioles (hyaline
arteriosclerosis) hyperfiltration ↑GFR mesangial expansion.
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Kidney stones
Can lead to severe complications such as hydronephrosis, pyelonephritis.
Presents with unilateral flank tenderness, colicky pain radiating to groin, hematuria.
Treat and prevent by encouraging fluid intake.
Most common kidney stone presentation: calcium oxalate stone in patient with
hypercalciuria and normocalcemia.
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Hydronephrosis
Distention/dilation of renal pelvis and calyces A.
Usually caused by urinary tract obstruction (eg, renal stones, severe BPH, cervical
cancer, injury to ureter); other causes include retroperitoneal fibrosis, vesicoureteral
reflux.
Dilation occurs proximal to site of pathology.
Serum creatinine becomes elevated if obstruction is bilateral or if patient has only
one kidney. Leads to compression and possible atrophy of renal cortex and medulla.
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Renal
cancers
Collecting
Parenchyma system &
urinary tract
Transitional Squamous
Adults Children cell cell
carcinoma carcinoma
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Renal oncocytoma
Benign epithelial cell tumor arising from collecting ducts (arrows in A point to well
circumscribed mass with central scar).
Large eosinophilic cells with abundant mitochondria without perinuclear clearing B
(vs chromophobe renal cell carcinoma).
Presents with painless hematuria, flank pain, and abdominal mass.
Often resected to exclude malignancy (eg, renal cell carcinoma).
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Transitional Squamous
cell cell
carcinoma carcinoma
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Urinary incontinence
Stress incontinence:
1) Outlet incompetence (urethral hypermobility or intrinsic sphincteric
deficiency) leak with ↑ intra-abdominal pressure (eg, sneezing, lifting).
2) ↑ Risk with obesity, vaginal delivery, prostate surgery.
3) UW: It is almost twice as common in women because external urethral
sphincter (EUS) trauma or pudendal nerve (innervates EUS) injury is common
during vaginal child birth. Postmenopausal women have estrogen deficiency,
which can cause laxity and weakness of pelvic floor support.
4) ⊕ Bladder stress test (directly observed leakage from urethra upon coughing
or Valsalva maneuver).
5) Treatment: pelvic floor muscle strengthening (Kegel) exercises, weight loss,
pessaries.
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Mixed incontinence:
1) Features of both stress and urgency incontinence.
Overflow incontinence:
1) Incomplete emptying (detrusor underactivity or outlet obstruction) leak
with overfilling.
2) UW: Overflow incontinence is due to:
Impaired detrusor contractility (eg. diabetic autonomic neuropathy) or
Bladder outlet obstruction (eg, tumor obstructing urethra) causing
incomplete bladder evacuation.
3) Constant involuntary dribbling or urinary incontinence at the end of the day.
Pelvic floor relaxation at night combined with a full bladder can lead to
nocturnal enuresis.
4) ↑ Postvoid residual (urinary retention) on catheterization or ultrasound.
5) Treatment: catheterization, relieve obstruction (eg, α-blockers for BPH).
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Chronic pyelonephritis
The result of recurrent episodes of acute pyelonephritis.
Typically requires predisposition to infection such as vesicoureteral reflux or
chronically obstructing kidney stones.
Coarse, asymmetric corticomedullary scarring, blunted calyx. Scarring of the upper
pole and the lower pole is a characteristic of the VUR.
Tubules can contain eosinophilic casts resembling thyroid tissue C (thyroidization of
kidney).
Xanthogranulomatous pyelonephritis—rare; grossly orange nodules that can mimic
tumor nodules; characterized by widespread kidney damage due to granulomatous
tissue containing foamy macrophages.
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Renal osteodystrophy
Hypocalcemia, hyperphosphatemia,
and failure of vitamin D
hydroxylation associated with chronic
renal disease 2°
hyperparathyroidism.
Hyperphosphatemia also
independently ↓ serum Ca2+ by
causing tissue calcifcations, whereas ↓
1,25-(OH)2 D3 ↓ intestinal Ca2+
absorption.
Causes subperiosteal thinning of
bones.
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Clinical
Etiology
features
• Shiga toxin producing bacteria: • Antecedent diarrheal illness (often bloody).
• E. coli O157:H7 • Hemolytic anemia with schistocytes
• Shigella • Thrombocytopenia
• Acute kidney injury
Pathogenesis of HUS:
These toxins (Shiga toxin) injure the endothelium of preglomerular arterioles and
glomerular capillaries leading to platelet activation and aggregation and the
formation of microthrombi.
Platelet consumption causes thrombocytopenia (platelets <140,000/mm), but there is
typically no purpura or active bleeding.
Erythrocytes passing through the damaged capillaries suffer shear injury and are
broken down to schistocytes causing microangiopathic hemolytic anemia.
Extensive damage to the renal vasculature results in acute kidney injury
(oliguria/anuria, hematuria, increased creatinine).
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Histologically:
1) Flattening or ballooning of the proximal tubular epithelial cells with loss of
the brush border, and subsequent cell necrosis and denudation of the tubular
basement membrane.
UW: Ischemic injury predominately affects the renal medulla, which has low blood supply
even under normal conditions. The straight portion of the proximal tubule and the thick
ascending limb of Henles loop are particularly susceptible to hypoxia, as they participate in the
active (ATP-consuming) transport of ions and have high oxygen demand.
UW: When ATN is associated with multiorgan failure, renal function may be permanently
impaired (foci of interstitial scarring can be seen on light microscopy).
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UW: Fibrocystin is found in the epithelial cells of both the renal tubule and the bile
ducts; deficiency leads to the characteristic polycystic dilation of both structures.
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Renal cysts
Inherited Non-inherited
Medullary cystic
PKD
kidney
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Pharmacology
Diuretics site of action
Mannitol
MECHANISM: Osmotic diuretic. ↑ Tubular fluid osmolarity ↑ urine flow, ↓
intracranial/intraocular pressure.
CLINICAL USE: Drug overdose, elevated intracranial/intraocular pressure.
ADVERSE EFFECTS: Pulmonary edema, dehydration.
Contraindicated in anuria, HF.
Acetazolamide
MECHANISM: Carbonic anhydrase inhibitor. Causes self-limited NaHCO3 diuresis
and ↓ total body HCO3 stores.
CLINICAL USE: Glaucoma, urinary alkalinization, metabolic alkalosis, altitude
sickness, pseudo tumor cerebri.
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UW: In heart failure, aldosterone is also produced in the myocardium and acts
locally, leading to fibrosis and myocardial hypertrophy. The resulting cardiac
remodeling worsens left ventricular dysfunction in heart failure patients.
Spironolactone effectively blocks aldosterone's detrimental cardiac effects.
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MECHANISM:
1. Inhibit ACE ↓ AT II ↓ GFR by preventing constriction of efferent
arterioles.
2. ↑ Renin due to loss of negative feedback.
3. Inhibition of ACE also prevents inactivation of bradykinin, a potent
vasodilator.
CLINICAL USE: Hypertension, HF (↓ mortality), proteinuria, diabetic nephropathy.
Prevent unfavorable heart remodeling as a result of chronic hypertension. In chronic
kidney disease (eg, diabetic nephropathy), ↓ intraglomerular pressure, slowing GBM
thickening.
ADVERSE EFFECTS: Cough, Angioedema (due to ↑ bradykinin; contraindicated in
C1 esterase inhibitor deficiency), Teratogen (fetal renal malformations), ↑ Creatinine
(↓ GFR), Hyperkalemia, and Hypotension. Used with caution in bilateral renal artery
stenosis because ACE inhibitors will further ↓ GFR renal failure.
Captopril’s CATCHH.
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Aliskiren
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Vesicoureteral reflux P. 4
Retrograde flow of urine from bladder toward upper urinary tract. Can be 1° due to abnormal/insufficient
insertion of the ureter within the vesicular wall (ureterovesical junction [UVJ]) or 2° due to abnormally high
bladder pressure resulting in retrograde flow via the UVJ. risk of recurrent UTIs.
Uremia, FGF23 P. 59
- Normal phosphate levels are maintained during early stages of CKD due to levels of fibroblast growth
factor 23 (FGF23), which promotes renal excretion of phosphate.
- Uremia: syndrome resulting from high serum urea. Can present with nausea, anorexia, encephalopathy
(seen with asterixis), pericarditis, platelet dysfunction.
- Management : dialysis.
1. Atherosclerotic plaques: proximal 1/3 of renal artery, usually in older males, smokers.
2. Fibromuscular dysplasia: distal 2/3 of renal artery or segmental branches, usually young or middle-
aged females For unilateral RAS, affected kidney can atrophy asymmetric kidney size. Renal venous
sampling will show renin in affected kidney, renin in unaffected kidney.
For bilateral RAS, patients can have a sudden rise in creatinine after starting an ACE inhibitor, ARB, or renin
inhibitor, due to their interference on RAAS-mediated renal perfusion.
Can present with severe/refractory HTN, flash pulmonary edema, epigastric/flank bruit. Patients with RAS
may also have stenosis in other large vessels.
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Mention the blood supply of different segments of the ureter:
- Upper 1/3: renal artery
- Middle 1/3: gonadal artery
- Lower 1/3: common iliac, internal iliac, superior vesical artery
Volume Expansions and Contractions – “Lost in the Desert” = Diabetes Insipidus, SIADH = Primary
Polydipsia (i.e. same effects)
What are the changes of plasma osmolality, ICF, ECF in case of diabetes insipidus, dehydration,
profound sweating (hypotonic sweat) : Hyperosmolar volume contraction.
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Carbonic anhydrase enzyme is present in PCT, eye (aquous humor production), pancreas, GIT, CNS,
RBCs