Friday, April 29, 2011

April 29 Lecture

Bryce

vasculitis symptoms - fatigue, fever, weight loss

medium vessels:  Kawasaki's disease - vasculitis - usually of coronary arteries.  80% of patients < 4 years old.  viral trigger.  most common among children of Japanese and Korean descent.

small vessels: 
  • Wegener granulomatosis - granulomas with necrosis and vasculitis
  • Churg-Strauss syndrome - associated with asthma - allergic vasculitis
vein diseases

Spaulding

ABC rule - PQR                P = QR

hypotension = systolic BP < 90 mm Hg

shock = MAP < 60 mm Hg
  1. cardiogenic
  2. hypovolemic
  3. vasodilation
Big picture    P = QR       decreased P = dec Q and/or dec R
  • if decQ (cardiogenic, hypovolemic) then compensation is inc R (vasoconstriction)   (pale, cold skin)

  • if decR (e.g., septic, anaphylactic) then compensation is inc Q (tachycardia, SNS) (warm skin)

    Wednesday, April 27, 2011

    April 27 Lecture

    Aurelius

    Arteriosclerosis
    • medial sclerosis
    • arteriolarsclerosis - arterioles (<0.3mm diameter) - seen in malignant hypertension (thick intima)
    • atherosclerosis - larger arteries (most often aorta) also coronary arteries, cerebral arteries, etc.
      • deposition of atheromas common at bifurcation of arteries (favored by turbulent flow)
      • microscopic appearance - all 3 layers are affected
        • media - loss of smooth muscle, replaced with collagen and ground substance
        • adventitia - fibrous thickening, inflammation
        • intima - deposition of atheromatous plaque - receptors for LDL catch LDL in circulation.  Monocytes also enter intima (renamed macrophages once in intima).  macrophages eat LDL and become "foam cells".   fibrous cap formed.
      • emboli - from broken plaques. 
      • aneurysm
        • dissecting - tear in intima = double barrelled blood vessel - seen in Marfan's
        • arherosclerotic - > 5cm at risk for rupture
      • coronary artery atherosclerosis - normally epicardial arteries involved (not intramusclular arteries)
        • supply/demand properties (e.g., shovelling snow MIs)
        • MI common with 70% narrowing of coronary artery (esp. if narrowing is acute)
          • enlarged heart dangerous - one capillary serves one myocyte
          • damage to muscle takes days to weeks to appear; scarring occurs after 2 months

    Tuesday, April 26, 2011

    April 26 Lecture

    Ahmed

    Wall tension = pressure x radius
                                   thickness

    hypertrophy is adaptive in decreasing wall tension thus oxygen demand

    Oxygen Supply
    • coronary blood flow = most important in determining oxygen supply
    • Q = P / R        
    • Q factors
      • vasodilation (hypoxia most important)  hypoxia has direct effect on vascular smooth muscle and increases adenosine and NO.
      • neural factors (alpha and beta)
      • autoregulation
      • cardiac cycle timing - most Q during diastole for left coronary artery - most during systole for venous   (RCA has more flow during systole)
          review of anatomy of coronary arteries and veins.  Coronary dominance is determined by origin of the PDA (posterior descending artery).  85% of population is right corornary dominant (PDA comes from right coronary artery)

    exertional chest pain may indicate a supply problem (exertion increases oxygen        demand)

    Oxygen Supply
    • arterial oxygen content   = Hb x 1.36* x SaO2  + (PaO2 x 0.003)      (*ml O2 per g Hb  - 1 mol of O2 can bind with 1 mole of Hb = 22,400ml/mole/16,800 g/mol)
    • extraction very high for heart so little reserve for increasing O2 delivery. 
    Treatment

    1. increase supply



  1.   nitrates - vasodilate  ( The hemodynamic effects of nitrates include relaxation of conduit arteries, increased arterial compliance, increased venous capacitance, dilation of collateral vessels in the myocardium - http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/1449098)



  2. Valenzuela


    increasing demand (O2 consumption) causes increased supply (lower resistance)

    autoregulation - best in heart, brain, and kidneys

    angina pectoris - precipitated by exertion (increased demand)
    • classic (effort)
    • vasospastic (associated with atheromas)
    • unstable (at rest)
    reducing risk factors (http://www.webmd.com/diet/ornish-diet-what-it-is)

    Nitrates operate primarily by reducing PRELOAD - dilating veins >>> arteries  - don't increase O2 supply but decrease O2 demand.

    side effects - nitrates oxidize ferrous iron to ferric (methemoglobin) - treated with methylene blue.  [metHb has high affinity for cyanide,  higher than cytochrome oxidase.]

    Cyanide poisoning from food.  The cassava plant is now the world's third largest source of low cost carbohydrates especially for populations in the humid tropics, with Africa as its largest center of production. It originated in Brazil, and it is now brought to the world, especially to the African continent and all parts of Southeast Asia as well as many parts in the US. It is the principal source of nutrition for about 600 million people or even more around the world. The toxin in cassava is called "linamarin". It is chemically similar to sugar but with a CN ion attached. When eaten raw, the human digestive system will convert this to cyanide poison. Just a few pieces of cassava roots contain a fatal dose of cyanide.

    Nitrates should not be used for right heart MI because reduced preload will worsen condition.

    Nitrates plus beta or calcium channel blockers when combined have all beneficial effects for CAD.


    • calcium channel blockers - vasodilate

    Primary Cardiovascular Actions of Nitrodilators (http://www.cvpharmacology.com/vasodilator/nitro.htm)

    Systemic vasculature

    • vasodilation
          (venous dilation > arterial dilation)
    • decreased venous pressure
    • decreased arterial pressure (small effect)

    Cardiac

    • reduced preload and afterload
          (decreased wall stress)
    • decreased oxygen demand

    Coronary

    • prevents/reverses vasospasm
    • vasodilation (primarily epicardial vessels)
    • improves subendocardial perfusion
    • increased oxygen delivery

    2. decrease demand
    • beta blockers - decrease contractility, heart rate, BP
    • calcium channel blockers -  decrease contractility, heart rate, BP

    Colleran

    vulnerable plaque have thin fibrous cap

    HDL scavenges excess cholesterol and returns it to liver

    HMG CoA reductase is rate limiting step for LDL cholesterol synthesis  (inhibited by statins)
    


    

    

    Friday, April 22, 2011

    April 22 Lecture

    Danielson

    acid base problems

    case 1 metabolic acidosis.  HCO3 = 6 

    Treatment of metabolic acidosis with THAM buffer
    http://ajrccm.atsjournals.org/cgi/content/full/161/4/1149


    interesting case from 1993 NEJM:
    http://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJM199302183280717
    Note survival of pH 6.46!


    A simple tool for deciding if small acid base disturbances are compendated or not is shown below.  For a respiratory disturbance if the PCO2 is changed by 12 (from 40 to 52) (from 40 to 28) and there is no compensation by kidneys, then the pH will be changed by 0.1 (from 7.4 to 7.3) (from 7.4 to 7.5).  For a purely metabolic disturbance, if the HCO3 is changed by 6 (from 24 to 18) (from 24 to 30) and there is no respiratory compensation then the pH will be changed by 0.1 (from 7.4 to 7.3) (from 7.4 to 7.5)


    Thursday, April 21, 2011

    April 21 Lectures

    Fisher

    Rondon (case wrap up)

    Beta agonists used to treat hyperkalemia can cause tremor.  This is enhanced physiological tremor (normal tremor in everyone is enhanced) via the action of beta agonists on muscle spindles

    1 lactic acid = 1 proton + 1 lactate
    1 proton + 1 HCO3 = reduction of   HCO3 = anion gap increases by 1
    AG went up by 14 but bicarb only went down by 11.  conclusion = extra metabolic alkalosis. 

    also extra respiratory acidosis (PCO2 > predicted from Winter's formula)

    Mary Widow  "anemia of inflammation"  -  inflammation causes liver to produce Hepcidin which prevents mobiliztion of iron from iron stores.  Proton pump inhibitors (omeprazole) caused ATN.

    Wednesday, April 20, 2011

    April 20 Lectures

    Danielson

    acid secretion in alpha intercalated cells acidifies urine down to a minimum pH of about 4.1.  In the process a new HCO3 is produced.  these new HCO3s replace the ones lost during blood buffering of metabolic acids produced by tissues.  beta intercalated cells can secrete HCO3 into urine when there is metabolic alkalosis.

    titratable acid is buffered by phosphate.  HPO4 - H2PO4. Titratable acid can be measured in the urine from the amount of sodium hydroxide needed to titrate the urine pH back to 7.4.  Can't increase much in acidosis because phosphate buffer is limited to the filtered load of phosphate and plasma phosphate is normally only 2.5 - 4.5 mg/dL. 
    non-titratable acid is buffered by NH3 to NH4+ (trapped in tubule due to charge).  It is non-titratable because the high pK of ammonium means no H+ is removed from NH4+ during titration to a pH of 7.4..

    glutamine synthesis is stimulated by acidosis.  iIn proximal tubule glutamine is metabolized to NH3 and 2 HCO3 (new bicarbonate).  Most important buffer for metabolic acidosis (can reach 300 mmol/day is severe acidosis).

    Davenport Diagram

    slope of buffer line is due to hemoglobin (major blood buffer).  steeper in polycythmia.  lower in anemia.  slope is zero for a bicarbonate solution (no buffer for changes in CO2; i.e., a buffer can't buffer itself)

    bicarbonate buffer is for metabolic acidosis or alkalosis (steeper slope at higher PCO2)
    hemoglobin buffer is for respiratory acidosis or alkalosis (steeper slope with higher Hb)

    practice questions for acid base

    Alas

    Gul

    Total GFR = gfr per nephron x total number of nephrons.  with nephron loss, gfr per nephron increases (increased Pc) so total GFR may be normal

    1 in 9 of adults have chronic kidney disease

    90% loss of GFR before uremic symptoms occur
    Intact Nephron Hypothesis; remaining nephrons compensate for loss of nephrons
    Trade Off Hypothesis; renal failure = increased ECF = stimulation of ANP = increased Na loss

    Hb starts to decline when GFR < 40 (higher GFRs with diabetics).   treated with Epogen. 

    ferretin < 100 ug/L = iron deficiency anemia

    GFR is meaningful ONLY when patient is in steady state   not meaningful in acute kidney injury.

    Tuesday, April 19, 2011

    April 19 Lectures

    Kanagy

    Site 1 diuretics
    Carbonic Anhydrase inhibitors - Na, Cl, HCO3 stay in lumen along with water.  side effect = metabolic acidosis (HCO3 lost in urine = not reabsorbed into blood)  Used as prophylaxis for acute mountain sickness (metabolic acidosis counters the respiratory alkalosis from hypoxia induced hyperventilation) and to reduce aquaeous humor formation in eye (glaucoma)

    Site 1-5 osmotic diuretics; e.g., mannitol - volume expansion of ECF leads to decreased renin secretion = decreased aldosterone = Na loss H2O loss.

    Site 2 - loop diuretics - most potent - prototype furosemide (lasix).  decreased Na delivery to macula densa (turns off tubuloglomerular feedback).  Inhibit Na, K, Cl tri-transporter.  hypokalemia causes metabolic alkalosis - and enhances digitalis toxicity.

    Site 3 (distal tubule) - thiazides.  increased excretion of NaCl.  "low ceiling = limited volume loss".  inhibit Na-Cl symporter in DCT.   hypokalemia; hypercalcemia (reduced Ca secretion)
    "Thiazides INCREASE calcium reabsorption. Two mechanisms have been proposed for this effect.  Thiazide blockade of the sodium-chloride-cotransporter in the distal tubule leads to volume depletion and elevates passive transcellular calcium and sodium reabsorption from the proximal tubule.  In addition, increased sodium delivery to the late distal tubule appears to increase calcium reabsorption in the late distal tubule. Together, these effects can lead to a significant reabsorption of filtered calcium.  This is opposite to the effects of the loop diuretics, such as furosemide which tend to cause calcium wasting. For that reason, the two classes of drugs have opposite effects on the formation of kidney stones with thiazides decreasing the frequency of stone formation and loop diuretics increasing the risk."

    Site 4 (late distal tubule and collecting duct).  inhibit epithelian sodium channels (ENaC) = countering aldosterone; e.g. amiloride.  Potassium sparing diuretic.  Hyperkalemia causes metabolic acidosis.  blocking aldosterone also causes metabolic acidosis directly.  Aldosterone antagonists; e.g., spironolactone.    anti-androgenic effects.

    Site 5 - vasopressin (V2) blockers -  increase urine volume.

    also see:
    http://www.cvpharmacology.com/diuretic/diuretics.htm


    Danielson

    pHa < 7.35 = acidemia   pHa > 7.45 = alkalemia

    ...osis versus ...emia.   acidosis is a condition due to respiratory or metabolic change.  initially causes acidemia but later pH may be compensated back to within normal range (called compensated acidosis).   Similar for alkalosis.

    metabolic acidosis = low pH due to low HCO3.   caused by addition of acid or loss of HCO3 (e.g., diarrhea).     Winter's formula for expected PCO2 compensation.  expected PCO2 = 1.5 x HCO3.

    "make it or take it"   make it = daily acid load from metabolism.  CO2 load =

    metabolic alkalosis =  high pH due to high HCO3.  causes = gastric suction.  vomiting.  diuretics (contraction alkalosis). 

    ROME   ( "respiratory opposite; metabolic equal)  describes pH change with PCO2 change (respiratory) and pH change with HCO3 change (metabolic).

    Anion Gap (AG) = unmeasured anions  (mainly albumin).    Na+ - HCO3 - Cl = AG.
    E-MUDPILES

    Normal anion gap with metabolic acidosis (hyperchloremic metabolic acidosis). 
    diarrhea; renal tubular acidsosis, CA inhibitors; HCl ingestion.

    Osmolar Gap  = measured serum Osm - calculated serum Osm.  increases with increased serum solutes or ethanol, methanol.

    http://www.anaesthesiamcq.com/AcidBaseBook/ab3_5.php

    Main Use of Osmolar gap:
    Screening test for detecting abnormal low MW solutes (esp ethanol, methanol & ethylene glycol



    Fisher

    proteinuria due to foot process effacement so more prevalent in nephrotic syndrome than in nephritic syndrome.

    Monday, April 18, 2011

    April 18 Lecture Dr. Rondon

    Rondon

    with complete block of renal blood flow (zero GFR) it takes several days for creatine in plasma to double.

    Creatinine can increase in multiple ways independent of GFR; e.g., blocked secretion of Cr by tubule cells
    BUN can also increase independent of kidney problems; e.g., GI bleed (BUN level increases in upper GI bleeding because patients become prerenal, secondary to blood loss)

    AKI
    • fluid overload

    Fractional excretion of sodium (FeNa) = sodium clearance/creatinine clearance

    = UNaV/PNa



    AKI
    1. pre-renal -
    • decreased fractional excretion of sodium  (stimulation of aldosterone)  (unless patient is on diuretics)
    • BUN/Cr > 20  hypovolemia stimulates ADH which increases urea reabsorption in medulla = increased BUN.
    • fractional excretion of urea < 35% (low)  (reliable measure for patient on diuretics where FeNa is higher due to diuretic)
    • decreased GFR due to low blood pressure/hypoperfusion.  compensated by autoregulation of GFR; i.e., afferent arteriole vasodilation mediated by prostaglandins (blocked by NSAIDS).  also compensated by efferent arteriole vasoconstriction mediated by AT 2 (blocked by ACE inhibitors and ARB).
    • IV contrast dyes can vasoconstrict afferent arterioles
    2. intrinisic renal
    • tubular necrosis (ATN) - ischemic; e.g., following prolonged pre-renal hypoperfusion or toxic
    endothelial damage - tubular injury = inflammation, obstruction of tubule
    dilute urine, FeNa increased, FeUrea increased
    oligouria - reduced urine volume:  normal glomeruli but damged tubules - mechanisms =
    1. blockage of lumen by dead cells, blocked urine enters blood ("back leak");
    2. increased tubuloglomerular feedback Na Cl to MD signals afferent arteriole vasoconstriction
    indication for dialysis = no response to diuretics, also hyperK, metabolic acidosis refractory to treatment; uremia; progressive azotemia (BUN > 80-100 mg.dL)

    • interstitial (AIN)
    lymphocytes and eosinophils in interstital space
    normal urine output (tubules not blocked)

    • glomerular (Ann Richards)  (AGN)   acanthocytes (Mickey Mouse hat)

    • vascular -  microvascular (TTP),  macrovascular (renal artery thrombosis)
    3. post renal - obstruction of both ureters OR in bladders (e.g., BPH) or urethra

    increased pressure in Bowman's capsule decreases GFR.  hydronephrosis = dilation of kidney

    Friday, April 15, 2011

    April 15 Lectures

    Chang

    sterile below vocal chords

    surfactant in alveoli is bacteriostatic (plus macs, lysozymes)
    particle size  > 5 um deposit in upper airways   1-2 um can make it to alveoli (most bacteria)
    virulence counts - TB less virulent than Klebsiella

    colonization

    direct innoculation
    • aspiration
    • esophageal rupture (severe vomiting - Boerhaave's syndrome)
    • dental abscess; pyelonephritis (tracking fascial planes)
    anaerobic pneumonia = patient with teeth

    lobar pneumonia  -  spreads via pores of Kohn (openings between adjacent alveoli)

    calcified lung lesions = previous TB  - tend to be in upper lobes because (she meant to say) oxygen levels are HIGHER.  Multiplication of Mycobacterium tuberculosis is favored by a high oxygen tension (high V/Q in upper lungs results in higher PO2 and lower PCO2).

    chronic fungal infections:
    • blasto, southeast  (duck hunters)  (includes extrapulmonary diseases)
    • histo, Mississippi valley
    • cocci, southwest, southern AZ, central valley of CA  ("valley fever")
    pneumonias

    pleural effusion
    • parapneumonic effusion (no organisms)
    • empyema (with organisms)
    • empyema necessitans (flourishing bacteria eats way out of pleura)

    Thursday, April 14, 2011

    April 14 Lecture

    Kanagy

    plasma = 300 mOsm    maximum concentration = 4 fold = 1200 mOsm    maximum dilution = 10 fold = 30 mOsm

    tip of loop of Henle in tissue with 1200 mOsm in humans.   longest loops in desert rats (never drink water - get all water from food metabolism).
    "shortest loops in marine mammals";   not really - marine mammals can concentrate their urine by 8 fold (2400 mOsm) allowing them to drink sea water (2000 mOsm) and get some net water gain from sea water.  freshwater mammals; e.g., Beavers, do have shorter loops of Henle

    ADH  osmoreceptors in hypothalamus  ADH secreted in posterior pituitary

    ADH secretion also stimulated by decreased blood pressure.  carotid sinuses most important (not cardiac baroreceptors)

    ADH=AVP    vasoconstriction via V1 receptor Gq via phospholipase C.    Antidiuresis via V2 receptor cAMP - PKA - phosphorylates aquaporins - inserts aquaporins in luminal membrane (modulated by PGE2 - fine tuning of water reabsorption),  also inserts urea channels adding urea to interstitial fluid. 

    Free water clearance

    total clearance = water clearance + solute clearance

    urine volume = Cwater + Cosm

    or Cwater = urine volume - Cosm

    example for dehydrated person:  urine volume = 1 ml/min   Uosm =1000 mOsm  Posm = 333 mOsm

    Cwater = 1 ml/min  -   (1000 x 1)/333 = 1 - 3 = - 2 ml/min

    for overhydrated person: urine volume = 10 ml/min   Uosm = 30 mOsm   Posm = 300 mOsm

    Cwater = 10 ml/min - (30 x 10)/300  = 10 - 1 = 9 ml/min

    Wednesday, April 13, 2011

    April 13 Lectures

    Scariano

    40-80 mg/day = normal protein in urine 
    <300 mg.dL = microproteinuria        >300 mg/dL = macroproteinuria

    "foot strike hemolysis" in long distance runners = urine findings

    ketones = acetoacetate and hydroxybutyrate  (conjugate bases of their acids) (contribute to anion gap of metabolic acidosis)

    specific gravity - normal range 1.003 - 1.035  (distilled water = 1.000)

    pH  minimum pH of urine about 4.5  ([H] = 0.03 mEq/L)

    oval fat bodies - hyperlipidemia associated with nephrosis.  low albumin levels stimulate hepatocytes to produce lipoproteins = hyperlipedemia.

    red blood cells - dysmorphic erythrocytes = acanthocytes - acanthocyte is derived from the Greek word "acantha" meaning "thorn." imbalance in membrane lipids causes cells to stiffen, wrinkle, pucker, and form spicules.

    Rohrscheib

    60:40:20 rule   Intracellular volume is 2x extracellular.  therefore, K is major cation of the body.

    Ins and Outs:   GI loss is normally 10% vs. renal at 90%. 
    GI loss increases with diarrhea; K =30-40 mEq/L in diarrhea fluid.  can lose 5L or more (e.g., cholera) per day.


    a good review of K and ECG.  ECG findings can be understood from high K effects on cardiac myocytes and nodal cells (decreased slope of phase 4 = bradycardia). 

    Myocyte

    solid line = normal; dashed line = hyperkalemia.  decreased slope of phase 0 causes slowed cell to cell conduction time (long PR interval; widening of QRS). Increased rate of repolarization (higher conductance of K channels) causes peaked T wave.



    Practice question: Predict effect of Bartter and Gitelman syndromes on plasma Na and K.

    Tuesday, April 12, 2011

    April 12 Lectures

    Danielson I

    Clearance of creatine = GFR   
    amount of creatinine excreted is constant (depending on body size, muscularity) - this means that U x [Cr]u is constant.   The amount of creatinine leaving plasma is V x [Cr]p.
    The amount leaving plasma is always equal to the amount in urine, so V x [Cr]p = U x [Cr]u.  For creatinine, V = GFR because there is only filtration, no secretion or reabsorption.

    Using normal values; GFR x [Cr]p = U x [Cr]u or 125 ml/min x 1 mg/dL = 1 ml/min x 125 mg/dL

    Renal failure = decreased GFR.  this means that plasma creatinine will be increased until new steady state is reached and urinary excretion is stable.

    examples          GFR x [Cr]p = U x [Cr]u     62.5ml/min  x 2 mg/dL = 1 ml/min x 125 mg/dL
                                                                           41.2ml/min  x 3 mg/dL =  1 ml/min x 125 mg/dL
                                                                           50 ml/min x 5 mg/dL =  1 ml/min x 125 mg/dL

    Danielson II

    Proximal tubule
    • early and late - filtered HCO3 is reabsorbed (Carbonic anhydrase essential for this)
    • early - tight junctions - water not permeable; lots of cotransport of solutes
    • late - organic acids sereted (antiporter with chloride); water reabsorbed via osmosis into blood  (volume expansion dilutes oncotic pressure in peritubular caps causing decreased water reabsorption - volume contraction (dehydration) leads to higher oncotic pressure and more water reabsorption. volume contraction can cause an alkalosis due to the stimulation of higher Angiotensin II (AT2)levels.  Increased AT2 stimulates Na-H antiporter leading to higher HCO3 levels in blood.
    Contraction Alkalosis - also occurs passively with volume changes; e.g., due to diuretics.
    http://fitsweb.uchc.edu/student/selectives/TimurGraham/Contraction_Alkalosis.html


    Loop of Henle

    • descending - permeable to water, salt, and urea
    • thin ascending - salt reabsorption, no water
    • thick ascending - not permeable to water - active transport of NaCl, K out of lumen into blood, dilutes lumen to hypotonic
    distal tubule sourrounded by afferent and efferent arterioles; JGA fine tunes final salt excretion - aldosterone, ADH
    • early - macula densa respond to JGA signals; reabsorption of NaCl, hypotonic fluid in DT
    • late - principal cells and intercalated cells; NaCl, K reabsorption; water reabsorption (via aquaporin channels - regulated by ADH)
    • collecting duct - aldosterone, ADH
    Renin secretion regulated by blood pressure (also potassium, sympathetic NS)

    Aldosterone receptor is transcription regulator.  upregulates pumps and transporters of principal cells. 

    Practice questionConn's syndrome is a disease of the adrenal glands involving excess production of aldosterone (primary hyperaldosteronism).  Predict the effect of this condition of urine and plasma Na, K, HCO3, and pH.

    Other practice questions


    Barry

    kidneys 0.5% body weight receive 25% of cardiac output = 1700 L per day = blood flow through kidneys       -  out of this the kidneys produce about 1 L of urine.

    many diseases of glomerulus are immune mediated.  specific cause usually not known.
    damage from in situ antigens (e.g., on podocytes) or by circulating antigen-antibody complexes (e.g., Lupus)

    nephrotic syndrome - immune but not-inflammatory.  >3.5 g protein/day; hypoalbuminemia; hyperlipidemia (increased production by liver).  Enhanced hepatic synthesis of lipoprotein lipids may be stimulated by a decreased plasma albumin concentration or oncotic pressure (N Engl J Med 1985; 312:1544–8.)

    urine - oval fat bodies.  Edema due to decreased osmotic pressure PLUS salt and water retention.

    Minimal Change Disease  - damaged podocytes not seen with light microscopy - no immune deposits by immunoflorescence but immune dysfunction that damages podocytes

    Monday, April 11, 2011

    April 11 Lecture

    Scariano

    filtration fraction = GFR/RPF   glomerular filtration rate/renal plasma flow = 20%  (i.e., 80% of plasma is not filtered) prevents hyperviscosity of blood in efferent arterioles and peritubular caps.

    filtration barrier to negatively charged molecules and to molecules > 70,000 kDa (albumin is 65,000 kDa but is negatively charged - 200 neg. charges per molecule)

    GFR = 125 ml/min = 180 L/day  (Urine production = 1.8 L/day;  99% reabsorption)

    Angiotensin II constricts efferent arteriole more than afferent arteriole.

    How is GFR measured?  There is one way into the kidney (blood) and two ways out (blood or urine).  By using substances that are filtered from blood BUT not reabsorbed and not secreted into urine.  Clearance of substance X from plasma:  GFR [X]pv = Vu[X]u    In English, the amount of X leaving plasma = the amount of X in urine.  Amount = volume x concentration.    for plasma, volume = GFR and concentration = [X]p
    for urine, volume = Vurine and concentration = [X]u.

    amount leaving plasma = amount in urine = GFR [X]p = Vu[X]u   or GFR = Vu[X]u/[X]p  
    note that the graph of [X]p = f(GFR) = y=1/X  = hyperbola.


    Example of GFR calculation using lab data:
    [Cr]u = 75 mg/dL  [Cr]p = 2.5 mg/dL     Vu = 1440 ml/day or 1/ml/min.



    GFR = 75 x 1/2.5 = 30 ml/min

    Friday, April 8, 2011

    April 8 Lectures

    Danielson

    kidneys regulate concentration of substances in blood and urine.  Concentration = amount/volume.  Therefore, concentration can change in two ways - changing amount or changing volume

    use this to measure volume:  volume = amount/concentration; e.g., 8g/8g/L = 1 L 


    Osmolarity - the most important osmolytes (particles that contribute to plasma osmolarity) are sodium, glucose, and BUN.  Sodium dominates because it is the major osmolyte in extracellular fluid.  [Na] x 2 = plasma osmolarity estimate.  Normal = 290 mOsm/L


    How is osmolarity regulated?  Osmoreceptors in the hypothalamus detect osmolarity and regulate secretion of ADH.


    sea water has osmolarity about 8 times higher than plasma (about 2000 mOsm/L)


    practice questions using volume diagrams: 

    http://www.boom-outahere.com/boardreview/generalcell.html 



    Naik

    Important note: afferent and efferent arterioles are sites of resistance and that are in series; i.e., the total resistance is the sum of the two.  Rt = Ra +Re.  Need to Know how changes in Raff and Reff affect capillary P (GFR) and renal plasma flow (RPF).
    Good summary figure from First Aid:






    JGA line afferent arteriole. secrete renin and serve as baroreceptors.
    glomerular caps = high pressure, high surface area, leaky (fenestrated) = high volume of filtration

    peritubular caps = low pressure, higher oncotic pressure = high volume of reabsorption.  vasa recta caps maintain osmotic gradient.


    myogenic reflex is primarily occurring in afferent arterioles.


    macula densa cells in distal convoluted tubule sense salt and water delivery to DCT
    feedback control.  inc. GFR = inc. Na delivery = release of adenosine, etc. = constriction of afferent arteriole = dec GFR.


    JGA cells, increase stretch = depolarization = inc. Ca = DECREASE in renin release (opposite to neurons)


    ANP dilates afferent and constricts efferent arterioles = double increase in GFR; decreases Na reabsorption in collecting duct
    BNP from ventricle has longer half life than ANP = more useful as clinical marker.


    Prostaglandins (PGI2, PGE2) don't alter renal blood flow under normal conditions but may buffer vasoconstriction effects; e.g., fight or flight sympathetic activation vasoconstricts both afferent and efferent but this is reversed by prostaglandins released by kidney.  also important in settings of volume depletion.  dangerous to use NSAIDS if volume depletion will occur.

     

    Thursday, April 7, 2011

    April 7 Lecture

    atelectasis pulls trachea toward collapsed lung
    pleural effusion does not

    transudate = pressure or oncotic imbalance - sytemic processes - usually bilateral
    • increased venous pressure = increased capillary pressure = leading cause of pleural effusion in USA (500,000 per year)
    • decreased plasma oncotic pressure = decreased albumin
    • leakage of ascites through diaphragm
    exudate = inflammation (increased permeability)
    • inflammation of lung
    • inflammation of pleural space
    • parapneumonic effusion - Pneumococcus most common organism.  infected effusion = empyema
    • pulmonary edema - exudative effusion near PE, blood tinged
    •  
     pleural fibrosis - causes restrictive lung disease

    Wednesday, April 6, 2011

    April 6 Lecture

    Danielson

    pH 7.0 is neutral (i.e., pH = pOH) at  room temperature (20 C).
    pH 7.4 is neutral at body temperature (37 C)

    pH is determined by ratio of HCO3 / PCO2 or pH is determined by kidneys/lungs
    pH = 6.1 + 1.3 = 7.4   1.3 = log 20    20 = [HCO3]/(PCO2 x 0.03) = 24/(40 x 0.03) = 24/1.2 =20 

    If ratio is 20, pH will be normal.   COPD PaCO2 may be twice normal = 80 mm Hg.  Renal compensation will increase [HCO3} over time to twice normal = 48 mM.   Ratio will be 48/(80 x 0.03) = 48/2.4 = 20.

    acid base practice questions
    https://spreadsheets.google.com/viewform?formkey=dFV2U2lDbTJxZGFGLWtva3M4Sng1b2c6MQ

    Tuesday, April 5, 2011

    April 5 Lectures

    Klepper

    tension pneumothorax - air continues to enter thorax - through tear in lung  (tear forms a 1-way valve.

    Boivin

    pulmonary hypertension (PHTN)  = mean pulmonary artery pressure > 25 mm Hg (mean = 2/3 diastolic + 1/3 systolic)

    direct sign of  PHTN = palpable P2

    echo measures velocity of tricuspid regurgitation "jet" indirect measure of pressure in right ventricle.  also measures RV volume
    Swan Ganz = gold standard

    etiology PHTN       P=QR  
       increased Q  increased R

    pneumonectomy - all Q goes through remaining lung but P does not increase since R decreases.  P = 2Q x 0.5R

    Pulmonary embolism

    S1Q3T3  (inverted T wave lead III)

    Paul

    pulmonary edema - 
    hemodynamic
    protein loss; e.g., GI diseases with diarrhea
    microvascular damage
    undetermined cause; e.g., high altitude; neurogenic (head trauma)

    hemosideren laden macrophages in chronic pulmonary edema (stress fracture of capillaries leaks RBCs into interstitium.

    causes of sudden death
    central pontine hemorrhage
    v fib
    saddle pulmonary embolism (obstructs both right and left PA)
    primary (idiopathic) pulmonary hypertension = death sentence  - due to inactivating mutations of BMPR2
    secondary PHTN     inc P = inc Q or inc R  e.g., VSD, MS, thromboemboli,


    Crookston

    thrombin cleaves fibrinogen into fibrin.  thrombin also activates platelets.

    fibrin monomers polymerize into clot.

    hemophilia A,B, C

    Fibrinolytic pathway - activates plasminogen

    natural anti-coagulants  and therapeutic anticoagulants (thrombin inhibitors; heparin which potentiates antithrombin).  low molecular weight inhibits factor X.

    Warfarin (coumadin) in vitamin K antagonist.  (active ingredient of D-con rat poison)

    INR measures extrinsic pathway








    Friday, April 1, 2011

    April Fool's Day Lecture

    Allan

    glucocorticoid side effects are also called exogenous Cushing's syndrome
    http://www.nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus/ency/article/000389.htm

    Morales

    Savitch
    lung surface area of adults = 140 square meters (tennis court) (not football field which is 5000 sq. m)

    good website on fetal circulation:
    http://www.indiana.edu/~anat550/cvanim/fetcirc/fetcirc.html

    IRDS grunting is a way of increasing airway and alveolar pressure "auto PEEPing"  PEEP = positive end expiratory pressure.