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00:03 | Good morning campers. You guys never that. Did you? Yeah. |
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00:11 | . All right. Um, so couple of things, uh, we |
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00:14 | about, uh, eight people that still taking the exam. So I'm |
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00:17 | gonna open it up until Thursday maybe Friday morning, depending on what |
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00:22 | clock lets me do. Um, not gonna show, uh, grades |
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00:26 | , or stuff probably until after, , spring break because I want their |
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00:30 | in there. I want you guys really understand what those grades are. |
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00:33 | so I kind of want to just of focus in on the kidney for |
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00:37 | next two days, which is really to do because how many of you |
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00:40 | are really here? I mean, not here. I, I'm, |
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00:43 | brain's already in spring break. Is brain already in spring break? |
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00:47 | It's like, been like the early semester, I think in a |
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00:51 | time. I mean, that's probably true but it's just like, |
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00:54 | man. And so I'm just going let you know, now, you |
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00:57 | , the stuff that we're going to is not, like, scary |
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01:01 | but because our brains aren't necessarily it's going to make it harder to |
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01:06 | through that stuff and then we get break and we're going to forget everything |
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01:09 | learn and then we're going to come and we're going to be expected to |
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01:11 | the stuff that we lost. So aware of that as you are moving |
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01:15 | notice, I have no requirement, expectation that you guys are gonna study |
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01:19 | spring break. Right? You I know there are some professors |
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01:22 | oh spring break that just means I to pile on more work. |
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01:25 | no, no, no spring break for breaking. So for this |
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01:30 | at least just know that you have to uh resell yourself because when we |
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01:35 | back, we gotta come back All right. And what we're gonna |
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01:40 | doing uh over this unit is we're two sections. One that can be |
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01:44 | little bit kind of confusing. I'll be honest when I was in |
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01:47 | seats, when I did the there's this part of the kidney where |
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01:50 | like, I don't know. And I started doing this every time I'd |
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01:53 | it, I'd go like la la, la la, I don't |
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01:55 | to know and then the second so I'm going to try to walk |
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01:59 | through that to make it easy, ? So it's not as hard as |
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02:03 | could be. All right, but just one little section of it and |
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02:06 | everything after that little section is As far as I'm concerned, moving |
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02:10 | the end of the semester, digestive easy. And what we're doing when |
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02:16 | think about the kidney, the digestive , we're going to deal with the |
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02:19 | reproductive system. Each of these systems tube systems. And what I mean |
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02:24 | that is that there is a beginning the tube and there is an end |
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02:27 | the tube. And when you have tube system, that means when you |
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02:31 | it, you can treat it by through the tube and asking the |
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02:35 | what goes on during the tube? happens here at the front end? |
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02:39 | other words, an example would be , think of a car wash on |
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02:42 | front end of the car wash, put in a dirty car at the |
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02:45 | end of the car wash, you a clean car. So what are |
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02:48 | steps to go from dirty car to car? All right. So when |
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02:52 | studying these things, the kidney, digestive system and the reproductive systems of |
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02:58 | there are two, right? Ask question, hey, this is a |
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03:02 | . Where do I start? Or start at the front end of the |
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03:06 | and I work through the tube and find out what happens by the time |
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03:09 | get to the back end of the . If you do that, it's |
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03:11 | to be pretty easy. It's an way of organizing. Information. And |
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03:15 | what we're gonna do for the first talks is we're gonna talk about the |
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03:18 | today. We're doing kidney anatomy. right. Uh We're, we're doing |
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03:23 | urinary system, but we're going to kind of focus in on kidney anatomy |
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03:26 | . And then we're going to deal some of the processes, really the |
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03:31 | of filtration that the kidney is responsible . It's one of three major processes |
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03:35 | allow us to produce urine. And on Thursday, we'll deal with the |
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03:39 | two processes and then we'll talk about . All right. So our starting |
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03:44 | here is just this, this is urinary system and a big, you |
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03:46 | , for the big picture stuff. should pause. Are there questions first |
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03:51 | the, the test stuff? You ? OK. You don't necessarily have |
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03:54 | be OK with it, but you , test stuff probably won't come until |
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03:58 | the exam, right? If you're about scores, if you're worried, |
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04:03 | and talk to me, I my office hours are right after |
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04:05 | I'm not going to yell at People who come to see me. |
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04:08 | , you know, it's, it's to talk to a professor. |
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04:10 | I'm a normal guy too. I up, I eat food. |
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04:14 | I beat up Children. No, don't do that. No, |
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04:18 | I'm easy. Just, just if nervous or concerned, come talk to |
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04:22 | , I'll help you. I stayed school. I know how school |
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04:26 | I, I liked it so I stayed right. So, don't |
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04:30 | afraid to come and talk to I'll help you. I'll help you |
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04:31 | with that. All right. but anyway, so are we, |
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04:35 | we OK with what the strategy is now? Ok. All right. |
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04:39 | this is just our starting point. is kind of view that big |
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04:43 | The urinary system isn't just the It actually consists of the ureter, |
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04:47 | consists of the bladder, what we the urinary bladder and it consists of |
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04:50 | urethra. In the big picture, grand schema thing is the kidney is |
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04:55 | for making urine. It's responsible for the blood and taking out materials that |
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05:00 | body doesn't want or need. And it allows that stuff to be moved |
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05:06 | the blood and then passed from the through a little tube to pass it |
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05:10 | a storage space because you're always making and then that storage space holds it |
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05:15 | there's enough fluid for you to go the bathroom. And so the ureters |
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05:19 | the path between the kidney to the . The bladder is a holding |
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05:23 | right? Because we're not all peeing now, but we're all making |
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05:27 | All right. And then once I enough of it, it's like, |
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05:30 | , I feel the need and off go and then the path, the |
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05:33 | between the bladder and the bathroom is urethra and the urethra has dual function |
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05:40 | males. It serves not only as path between uh for urine from |
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05:44 | from the bladder to the bathroom, it also serves as the ejaculatory structure |
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05:49 | which semen is passed during copulation. right, females, it's just urethra |
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05:55 | just the pathway from the bladder to bathroom right now, in terms of |
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06:01 | , what does the urinary system Right. It's actually pretty simple. |
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06:06 | a general theme and you can see down there on the bottom. It's |
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06:09 | for conditioning the blood. That's the picture. But if you kind of |
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06:13 | down into it and ask these what, what is it exactly |
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06:18 | Primarily it's responsible for filtering the blood removing the waste products in the |
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06:23 | Now, when we talk about waste , we're really talking about nitrogenous |
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06:27 | right? So when you break down acids, when you break down nucleic |
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06:34 | , when you are exercising, you down muscle fibers and other things, |
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06:40 | know, at these things produce nitrogenous , wastes nitrogenous waste. And so |
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06:48 | stuff can be dangerous to the And so what we do is we |
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06:52 | it off in the form of uric urea and um I'm blanking on the |
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06:58 | one right now, but that's how get rid of that stuff. And |
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07:01 | it's passed out of the body through urine. The other thing that we |
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07:05 | is we're going to convert this this, these waste products that our |
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07:11 | is doing and we're going to sort it and actually ask the question is |
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07:14 | stuff we really want to get rid . It's like, like going through |
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07:17 | junk drawer, right? You've put that you don't think you want into |
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07:21 | junk drawer into a box and before throw it out, you kind of |
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07:23 | through it and go do, I want to get rid of this |
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07:26 | And then it's like, well, , oh, this is something I |
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07:29 | to keep. And so we're going process that, that material, what |
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07:32 | call the filtrate. And that's what results in creating the urine. And |
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07:37 | , ultimately we eliminate. And so kind of what we're focusing on. |
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07:41 | there's other things we're going to focus little later. When we talk about |
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07:44 | uh endocrine system, we'll talk about formation of calcitriol. Calcitriol is the |
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07:51 | word for saying vitamin D, We're going to see or we've already |
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07:55 | about er, erythropoetin and how it's to make new red blood cells. |
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08:00 | what the kidney is responsible for. then it regulates your ion water |
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08:04 | So it's water salt balance, which blood pressure. It also plays a |
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08:08 | in major, regulating your acid base in your blood. And, and |
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08:13 | I found is that when I talk to try to throw those things |
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08:16 | we end up with way too much . So we're not even gonna bother |
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08:19 | it. All right. But just your kidney plays a role in making |
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08:23 | you're at the proper P H and just gonna leave it at that. |
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08:28 | right. And it also plays a or it could play a role in |
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08:31 | is a process called gluconeogenesis. Gluconeogenesis saying I make new glucose. And |
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08:37 | what we're doing is we're taking amino and we're converting them into ketone bodies |
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08:42 | are then converted into glucose. And the kidney is capable of doing that |
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08:47 | certain conditions. And so it ensures your body has the nutrients, it |
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08:51 | to power the the things that, you do primarily what the brain |
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08:55 | All right, but if you look all of these different things, |
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08:58 | Ion base or ion, ion salts water balance and ion balance or acid |
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09:05 | balance and, and moving waste and like that. Each of these things |
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09:10 | looking at the blood and asking the , is it improper balance? And |
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09:13 | conditioning the blood is how we think what the kidney is doing. It's |
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09:18 | the blood work the way it's supposed work. In other words, make |
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09:23 | it has the proper concentrations of So that's kind of the big |
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09:28 | And what we wanna do is we to focus in today, like I |
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09:31 | on the kidney and we'll talk about S and urethra and the bladder, |
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09:34 | , um, we'll talk about, , I think it's on Thursday. |
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09:37 | might be next on the Tuesday when get back. But this again, |
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09:42 | aren't, aren't, aren't that big a thing to talk about. It's |
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09:45 | all the action is taking place here the kidneys. And so what I |
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09:49 | to first point out is where the are located and what they look |
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09:52 | And you can see in the picture looks like a bean. I |
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09:54 | we talk, we talk about kidney . They name the bean because they |
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09:57 | like kidneys, right? But you see here the kidney is this bean |
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10:02 | structure on top. It has a that looks like a dollop of whipped |
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10:06 | . It's called the adrenal gland. deal with that. When we get |
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10:08 | the endocrine system, it's not part the kid, it's separate from |
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10:12 | but it's wrapped, it's found on posterior side of the abdomen. So |
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10:16 | you were to dissect, you'd find way back here. It's partially protected |
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10:19 | the ribs and it's wrapped in a bunch of unique layers. It's actually |
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10:25 | we say is it's found behind the peritoneum. Now, the perineum, |
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10:30 | we haven't talked about, we'll get when we talk about the digestive system |
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10:33 | the, is the serious membranes that found inside the abdomen. And there |
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10:38 | some structures that are found between the layers or protected by those layers. |
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10:44 | then there are some that are found on, on the back side. |
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10:48 | other words, both layers sit in of the organ and the kidney is |
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10:52 | of those. And so what we that is a retro perineal structure. |
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10:58 | found in the retroperitoneal space. So basically not covered completely by a serious |
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11:04 | . It's only partially covered on the side. Now, in terms of |
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11:10 | actual structure itself, we're going to on the baseline, we're not going |
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11:13 | work our way in, we're going work our way out. So the |
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11:16 | itself has its own capsule. So basically a tissue that has this layer |
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11:21 | connective tissue that holds it and makes shape and basically separates that structure from |
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11:27 | else. All right. So that's first layer. And this is the |
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11:30 | capsule. And then outside the renal , you have a layer of fat |
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11:36 | we call the perinephric fat. And our picture, we can see the |
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11:40 | fat. So there's your capsule, can see how they've pulled it |
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11:43 | So in there, that would be renal tissue. So the capsule sits |
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11:47 | top of that and then here's the that sits wrapped around the kidney, |
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11:50 | the perinephric fat and then surrounding that a layer of connective tissue, which |
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11:55 | just referred to as the renal And that kind of holds everything in |
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11:59 | position in place. So it doesn't around the body and then outside |
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12:03 | which is not shown here is another of fat, which is the para |
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12:07 | . So perry means next two para around, OK. And I know |
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12:11 | distinction there is kind of subtle but means around the whole thing. And |
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12:17 | that would be like the abdominal that's kind of like what that's |
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12:20 | All right. So it's not shown the picture, but you can imagine |
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12:24 | outside here around the FAA. All . So we go capsule fat, |
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12:32 | layer connected tissue fascia and then more . And that's what covers and protects |
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12:38 | kidney so far, so good, ? If you were to take a |
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12:46 | through the kidney and part of your is to do that, you'll get |
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12:49 | dissect the, you know, the dissection and kind of look at this |
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12:56 | is you'll see that the kidney has different regions to it. We have |
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13:01 | cortex and the medulla and this cortex medulla have different roles which will come |
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13:05 | learn over the next couple of All right. But you can clearly |
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13:09 | the delineation here. If you were take a slice, it, you're |
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13:12 | see one area is a little bit , the other area is a little |
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13:14 | darker. And so you can kind see cortex sits out here. Uh |
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13:18 | mela sits internally all right now, switched things around on the slide. |
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13:24 | I was introducing things, we talked columns first, I think on what |
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13:27 | get. But I'm moving first to pyramids and I want to point out |
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13:30 | pyramids first because they're really overt and these triangular shapes that make up |
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13:36 | the structure and the primary portion of module. All right. Now, |
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13:41 | you look at this, you can of see in the cartoon that there's |
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13:44 | everywhere, there's even lines up here the cortex. But the, but |
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13:47 | pyramids really, you can see these rather clearly when you do that |
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13:53 | All right. And what they represent first, the base of the pyramid |
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14:00 | the point between the cortex and the . So it's a cortical medullary |
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14:05 | All right. And then the apex a point of conversion of all these |
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14:11 | lines that you see. And the lines, the striations are the nephrons |
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14:16 | early, the collecting tubes of the that we're going to talk about a |
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14:19 | bit later. So these are microscopic that are so um um there's so |
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14:26 | of them that they actually make their visible by the naked eye between the |
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14:35 | are the columns. So this this structure so on and so |
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14:40 | All right, those are the columns the columns are extensions of the cortex |
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14:45 | kind of push in between the uh pyramids themselves and so it kind of |
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14:50 | the pyramids overt easy to see. , there's a term that some anatomists |
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14:56 | using, it's called the lobe and are no true lobes here. In |
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14:59 | words, a lobe is usually a that's demarcated by some connective tissue. |
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15:04 | that one part of the structure is from another part of the structure. |
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15:07 | don't see that here. But what do is we can take an imaginary |
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15:10 | right up the middle of one of columns and up in the middle of |
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15:13 | other column and then right to the of the, to the end of |
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15:17 | kidney. And so everything in there includes a pyramid, the two halves |
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15:21 | those columns represents a lobe. And that would be what it was a |
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15:25 | lobe. And so it's just kind a way to say here is a |
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15:29 | that has functionality together. All And it's this is becomes more clear |
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15:35 | you start looking at the, the vessels that are working into these structures |
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15:40 | the blood vessels are basically surrounding each the pyramids. All right. So |
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15:46 | have each of these little areas. have the pyramids, we have the |
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15:50 | , we have a lobe which represents pyramid plus half of the column are |
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15:55 | it if you go internal to the . So the central portion of the |
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16:04 | here is referred to as the renal . And in the renal sinus. |
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16:09 | have these larger structures that become very overt they're referred to as the |
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16:14 | C. There's Minor Ks and Major of CS. So we have a |
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16:18 | K C that's for each one of pyramids. And what they are really |
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16:23 | microtubules or micro tubes that you can't with the naked eye. They come |
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16:29 | and they form this larger basin like . So what they're doing is they're |
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16:35 | fluid from these little tubules that are of the pyramids. And then the |
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16:41 | K CS converge and they form the Kless C. And so you'll see |
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16:45 | to 3 of these per pyramid. so where the demarcation is, is |
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16:49 | always 100% clear, but you can , all right, there's a |
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16:52 | there's a minor, there's a there's a minor. So this region |
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16:55 | here where all they can converge those converge. That would be a |
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17:00 | But where the dividing line begins between minor and the major is a little |
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17:04 | less obvious. And then the major C. So if that's a major |
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17:10 | C and that's a major K the region where those two things converge |
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17:14 | referred to as the pelvis. So have a renal pelvis and so you |
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17:18 | think about it like this, I little tiny tubes. I can't see |
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17:21 | converge to form big kind of in or big tubes which then converge form |
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17:26 | bigger tube which are really, really . So it doesn't look like a |
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17:29 | which goes into a big giant That's the pelvis. And the pelvis |
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17:34 | what is going to form the, it leaves the kidney, the region |
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17:43 | the exits, where the vein um and where the artery enters as well |
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17:48 | the limp vessels which aren't showing here referred to as the hill. And |
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17:52 | think on your slide it says helium I'm an idiot and I type an |
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17:55 | , every time I spell out. . All right. So Hiems, |
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18:01 | gonna see any structure where you have vessels going in. We saw the |
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18:05 | when we talked about the lungs, gonna see a hi, when we |
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18:08 | about the liver, we're gonna see hi when we talk about the pancreas |
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18:13 | are basically where things enter into All right. And so here the |
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18:17 | is very, very obvious because your has that bean shape to it. |
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18:21 | so everything is going in where the of the bean normally is located. |
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18:28 | that's your macrostructure. Macrostructure is pretty . Do you think pretty straightforward? |
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18:33 | you draw a kidney and label all parts? Yeah. Ok. |
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18:38 | that's, that's it for the big . Everything now is microscopic, |
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18:43 | And this is where all the action place is in the microscopic, |
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18:47 | And so this is part of the why kidney gets a little bit difficult |
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18:50 | we're looking at things that we can't except under the microscope and when you |
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18:54 | your histology courses, when you go to nursing school and they make you |
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18:57 | at all these slides and you're I don't know what the hell I'm |
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18:59 | at. It's gonna be even harder you're looking at a bunch of |
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19:03 | That's what, how, you you, where, you know, |
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19:05 | looking at the kidney because everything is bunch of tubes jammed in there, |
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19:09 | ? And the structure, we're looking the thing where all the action takes |
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19:13 | . The interesting part about the kidney this thing right here is called the |
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19:17 | , right? And there are hundreds thousands of nephrons, right? They |
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19:22 | two major units. We have the puzzle. Core puzzle is simply this |
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19:28 | structure right here. It's the point we have a blood vessels going in |
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19:32 | coming back out again. And it's point where our tube begins. All |
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19:37 | . And then the other part is renal tubule which you can see kind |
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19:40 | goes around and around and around and and like that. And there you |
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19:43 | , it's all just kind of mish together. In fact, some of |
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19:46 | names suggest how strange and structured it and how windy it is. All |
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19:53 | . So when we look at the , we need to remember there is |
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19:56 | point of contact between the tube where filtrate is being made, where urine |
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20:01 | going to be made from. And a point of contact with the blood |
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20:05 | . And so there's going to be exchange point. And that's what the |
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20:08 | puzzle plays. It plays a role terms of filtering the fluid from the |
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20:13 | and exchanges it and puts it into f as a filter and allows it |
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20:18 | go into the tube and then the of it is just the tube where |
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20:22 | going to do further processing. both of these units are going to |
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20:27 | exist within the cortex. All And where they exist in the cortex |
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20:32 | going to be a big deal a bit later. All right. But |
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20:36 | going to see most of the Nephron up here in the cortex, a |
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20:41 | portion called the Nephron loop or the of Henley or loop of Henle. |
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20:46 | honestly, I don't know how the pronounced his name. I've had professors |
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20:50 | it one way, professors pronounce it way and no book will tell you |
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20:53 | which way to pronounce it. All . So that's why I think they're |
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20:57 | to get rid of all the, names. It's like the, the |
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21:00 | stuff is like, oh no, don't, no one knows how to |
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21:02 | it. But if you think of loop, when you think of the |
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21:05 | loop, the Nephron loop, the of Henley loop of heel. This |
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21:08 | a portion that's actually found in the , that's the pyramid portion. And |
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21:13 | when we say we can see those , what we're looking at is we're |
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21:17 | at this action down here. So cortex is everything else part of the |
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21:23 | , the pyramid or the medulla are long elongated loops of Henley. There's |
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21:30 | the collecting ducts which we'll get to a little bit later. So I |
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21:33 | to focus in first on our little puzzle here. All right. So |
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21:40 | we're gonna do is we're gonna first at the blood vessels and then we'll |
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21:43 | at the tube itself. OK. I, I think it's easy to |
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21:47 | it that way because you got to in terms of what is my |
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21:51 | All right. So in terms of , the Glaus is a ball, |
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21:56 | of capillaries. And this is a capillary. This is not a capillary |
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22:00 | plays a role in uh blood exchange the exchange of nutrients between surrounding |
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22:06 | In fact, the glomeruli is this structure that exists between two arterials and |
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22:13 | doesn't sound right? Does it? supposed to have arterial then capillary? |
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22:17 | then what veal, right? And , we don't have that. We |
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22:23 | an arterial, then we have this and then we have another arterial. |
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22:28 | so what this is, is really modification of an arterial so that the |
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22:33 | can do what it does. And just this really, really strange capillary |
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22:38 | that's kind of built into a ball structure that sits between these two arteries |
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22:43 | it's stuck inside this capsule. All . But this is where the site |
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22:48 | exchange is going to take place. is where the fluid from the blood |
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22:52 | going to be moved into the Right. So that's the first |
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22:56 | that's the glomeruli. So I have here, water plus other stuff are |
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23:01 | to be filtered here inside that little vessel that's in there, that |
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23:06 | Now, the blood going into the is going to be an arterial that's |
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23:10 | the aerin arterial. All right. then the blood coming out on the |
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23:15 | side is coming out via another arterial the EENT arterial. So A is |
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23:20 | , E is second. All And again, it's probably afferent and |
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23:24 | . But you know, if we that in Texas, it's just gonna |
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23:28 | weird. So it's a and EENT helps us to, to distinguish between |
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23:32 | two. So we go a arterial the glome list out via the E |
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23:37 | . And you can see that in little pictures here, here's our a |
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23:41 | the glome and out via the E . So that is the blood |
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23:47 | the vascular side of the core pus structure that surrounds the glomeruli and under |
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23:56 | or in which the ara comes in goes out is called the glomerular capsule |
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24:02 | more familiarly called Bowman's capsule named after guy that identified it. All |
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24:07 | And so Bowman's capsule is a bunch epithelial tissue that is like a blunt |
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24:13 | tube that you've pushed this glomeruli And so you have epithelium that sits |
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24:20 | up against the structures of the We're gonna deal with this picture a |
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24:25 | bit more clearly, a little bit . All right. And so it |
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24:29 | as the tubular side of the core . So if the glomeruli is the |
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24:35 | side, Bowman's capsule is the tubular . And so the exchange is going |
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24:38 | be from the blood on the inside the glomeruli through the walls of the |
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24:43 | of the capillaries and then through the into this open space that is Bowman's |
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24:50 | and then Bowman's capsule is then going kind of move on and form the |
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24:54 | of those tubule uh moving on down that will get to. So you |
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24:58 | think of the the core puzzle as halves vascular pole, tubular pole things |
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25:04 | from the blood, moving to the . That's the easiest way to kind |
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25:09 | think of these two structures. So far are you with me? |
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25:18 | . Moving down through the tube, we're going on through the tube. |
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25:22 | have this first region you can see winds all over the place like |
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25:26 | all right. So this windy structure nearest the glomeruli and near as Bowman's |
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25:33 | . So it's near as the core . So we say it is |
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25:37 | that's where it's got its first half the name. And because it winds |
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25:40 | over the place, it's convoluted. proximal convoluted tubule. All right. |
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25:48 | then it gets even more complicated. you want to get down, there's |
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25:52 | a proximal straight tubule, but we're going to deal with that. You |
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25:55 | kind of see where it straightens out what it does is it then enters |
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25:59 | the mela and dips down and then back out in this weird hairpin |
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26:05 | All right, this hairpin loop is Nephron loop or loop of Hindley. |
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26:11 | . Now, you can see the loop has this kind of structure. |
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26:13 | starts off fat and ivory cartoon you at and they're trying to demonstrate there |
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26:18 | something unique going on here. It really, really thin for a little |
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26:21 | while. And so we have this that's thick, that becomes thin and |
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26:26 | it hair turns or it turns and it becomes thick again. And so |
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26:30 | refer to the side that's going down the proximal convoluted tubule is that's the |
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26:35 | the descending limb, all right, then it turns on itself and then |
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26:40 | goes back up, that's the ascending . And so you can see |
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26:43 | they've also labeled it this side as , this side is thick and |
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26:47 | those appearances there are, are for the, the thickness and the |
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26:51 | are a result of unique changes that occurring inside the loop which we're not |
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26:56 | get into right now. All we'll deal with that in a, |
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26:59 | a, in a couple of All right. But the idea here |
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27:02 | we have these structures that are unique they have different functionalities, right. |
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27:09 | we descend and then we ace in back out again. So we're stuck |
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27:13 | the mela for only a very short of time. And then when we |
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27:18 | , we go out through another windy . So it's convoluted, but because |
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27:22 | not near, it's far away, refer to as the distal convoluted tubule |
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27:26 | sometimes you'll see it labeled just distal . Now, the distal convoluted tubule |
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27:35 | going to join up with this larger called the collecting duct. And so |
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27:39 | can see for every collecting duct that a series of nephrons associated with |
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27:45 | So you can think of it like tree that has a whole bunch of |
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27:48 | . So you might see anywhere between and 12 nephrons associated with the single |
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27:53 | duck. And it's the collecting decks continue down through the medo and keep |
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27:57 | striations and it's what are going to up and form those minor minor. |
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28:03 | filtrate. So blood is coming through being filtered and turning into what is |
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28:09 | a filtrate. The filtrate passes through the different regions, proximal convoluted |
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28:15 | the loop of Henley back through the convoluted tubule and then down through the |
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28:20 | duct and then that's where you're making from. It's through all those different |
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28:25 | that you're making adjustments or modifications to filtrate. Now, this is a |
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28:32 | picture, but this is what it like. More or less. It's |
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28:36 | to look at a structure like this you can see it a little bit |
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28:39 | . All right. So here you see the aar arterial. There's your |
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28:42 | , there's your ear arterial. You see here's the proximal cotton valided tubule |
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28:47 | out. There's the loop of Henley limb, aying limb. And then |
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28:51 | the distal convoluted tubule and then down the collecting duct, you'll see that |
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28:56 | of them mark this small region over and they call it the collecting |
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29:00 | And so we'll just define that just , collecting tubules are simply the small |
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29:06 | between the collecting dup and the distal tubule. Little tiny, tiny |
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29:12 | Ok. So structures in terms of nomenclature so far, so good, |
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29:20 | you draw it out, you Ok. Now, since we know |
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29:28 | nephronic structure, we need to understand there are two different types of nephrons |
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29:34 | based upon where you find the core of that Nephron. All right. |
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29:40 | if the Nephron just exists pretty much in the upper regions to like the |
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29:44 | regions of the cortex, we could to them as cortical nephrons. If |
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29:49 | find the core puzzle near the mela low in the module, we call |
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29:54 | a very low in the cortex, low in the module but low in |
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29:58 | cortex. We refer to it as XTA medullary Nephron. All right. |
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30:04 | means next to. So next to mela, right. So notice they're |
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30:08 | named for where they're positioned right If that was all there was to |
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30:13 | , they probably wouldn't have to name , but they actually have some very |
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30:18 | uh structure associated with them. And is what this picture is trying to |
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30:23 | to you. All right. So notice in this, we have two |
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30:27 | nephrons. We have one up right? This is the cortical one |
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30:32 | you can see it does all its thing. There's a proximal convoluted |
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30:35 | there's the loop of HILA comes down goes back up and there's your distal |
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30:40 | tubule and it joins up with the duct, right? Not too |
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30:44 | But here when we have our juxtamedullary , look at associated with that loop |
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30:51 | Handley. We have this unique structure associated with it. These blood vessels |
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30:55 | you don't see over here associated with Cortical Nephron. So there's two features |
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31:04 | you should be, be observing The first one is the depth to |
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31:08 | the loop of Henley goes, cortical , loop of Henley just kind of |
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31:12 | its toes into the mela. It's kind of like I go |
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31:16 | oh, I don't want to go out again. All right, just |
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31:19 | me, they travel deep, deep and then they come back out |
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31:24 | . And then with the cortical it lacks this blood vessel where here |
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31:30 | can see the blood vessels travel alongside nephronic loop or the loop of henley |
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31:36 | move back out again. This is type of blood vessels are referred to |
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31:40 | the vasa recta. All right, majority of your nephrons are these cortical |
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31:48 | . All right. They're just doing job filtering them the the blood making |
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31:54 | and changing the filtrate and making All right. So when we think |
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31:59 | what the kidney is doing, this kind of the big picture stuff. |
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32:02 | is what most of your nephrons are . All right, the ju IED |
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32:09 | . On the other hand, while doing the same things that the cortical |
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32:12 | are doing. These long loops of are responsible for changing the nature of |
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32:19 | interstitial fluid of the mela. I'm gonna kind of jump out here |
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32:25 | a second to kind of explain this your body. You have water plus |
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32:31 | , right? And if we counted all the little things that are sitting |
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32:33 | all that water, what we would is we would find that you have |
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32:37 | osmotic value of your body you have osmolarity and that osmolarity throughout your entire |
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32:45 | is around 300 milli osmoles, which English means you have about 300 particles |
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32:52 | substance per liter. It's actually, , it's, it's milly osmos, |
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32:56 | osmo 300 mil osmos. So you , you have particles per unit volume |
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33:01 | fluid and it doesn't matter where you it. And we notice we don't |
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33:06 | what the the material is, it be ions, it can be |
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33:09 | it can be just stuff. All . So no matter where you |
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33:12 | you take a little sample of the from your brain, a little bit |
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33:14 | sample fluid from um uh your a little sample from your big |
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33:20 | Look at the fluid, it's gonna measuring up to 300 mil osm. |
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33:25 | . The mela is different the the kidney has a gradient to |
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33:31 | It starts off like the the cortex 300 mil osmoles. But as you |
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33:36 | down through the mela towards the um uh towards the pelvis, the the |
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33:46 | of solute gets greater and greater and and greater and it gets as, |
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33:52 | high as 1200 milli osmoles. So times greater. And it's this osmotic |
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34:00 | of, of solute that your kidney to help you make urine of varying |
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|
34:08 | of fluid. All right now, to paint the picture and we'll explain |
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|
34:14 | all a little bit later. But just want to paint it. Have |
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34:17 | noticed when you drink a lot of ? Your peas looks like water, |
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|
34:21 | ? Have you noticed that when you dehydrated, your pee looks a little |
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34:24 | darker, right? More golden. in fact, if you get it |
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34:29 | like that Aggie maroon color, that's dangerous color and it can get that |
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34:33 | . Don't get there. All That, that's bad. That's |
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34:36 | Go to go to the hospital All right, you notice that. |
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34:40 | other words, when your body is , your body wants to keep water |
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34:45 | it and when you have too much , your body is trying to get |
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34:48 | water. All right, the reason able to do that is because of |
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34:53 | osmotic gradient created here by those Juul . So all that module is modified |
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35:04 | of the presence of that loop of going down deep and the vas erecta |
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35:10 | associated with it. And we're not talk about how that's gonna be |
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35:16 | OK. But I want to put up here at the front end so |
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35:20 | you know what's coming. OK. . All right. I mentioned there's |
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35:28 | other structures, the collecting tubules, I mentioned, it's, here's the |
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35:33 | convoluted tubule. The collecting tubule is the short in between the collecting dep |
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|
35:37 | the distal convoluted tubule. Um It's particularly important for us. So you'll |
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35:42 | not even see it ever again. collecting duct is the large structure. |
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35:48 | that tree on which all the nephrons hanging via their distal convoluted tubules. |
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|
35:52 | . This passes through that osmotic gradient the module. And it's what allows |
|
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35:59 | to start modifying the last little bit the, of the filtrate that we've |
|
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36:04 | to pull water in or to allow to leave. So it plays an |
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36:08 | role in in um uh changing the concentration in our filtrate. There's two |
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36:16 | types of cells in here that are in the collecting duct. It's the |
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|
36:21 | cell. Why do you think they're principal cells? They're the main |
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|
36:27 | That's exactly right. See, they are primarily until you get into |
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|
36:31 | of these tissues. And you're really they have the like the tissue |
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36:34 | worked on was the epi which were most common type of cell were called |
|
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36:38 | cells. And then there's another type cell, really important cell called the |
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|
36:41 | cell. Why is it called the cell? Because it was clear, |
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|
36:46 | ? I mean, this is how , I guess we are. The |
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36:52 | type are inter collated cells right These are the ones that play an |
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|
36:56 | role in monitoring ph in the body in the urine for that matter. |
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|
37:02 | is the one place in this entire universe where you're gonna have the easiest |
|
|
37:07 | to memorize. All right. So just memorize it, you have the |
|
|
37:11 | a cell and you have the type , intercooled cells type A cells are |
|
|
37:16 | , are responsible for eliminating acids. A for acids, type B cells |
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|
37:23 | base B for base, first time the entire universe that someone names something |
|
|
37:29 | . All right. So there you , we're not going to talk about |
|
|
37:32 | whole processes, but you should know intercooled cells type A type B. |
|
|
37:36 | helps me eliminate acids when my P too low. Type B, when |
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37:39 | P gets too high, I'm I'm base. All right, if you |
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37:50 | at the picture up there in the left, right up here, this |
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37:54 | trying to show you um the structure the left front again. So you |
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|
38:00 | see there's your glome. So here's hand, it's a glome, |
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|
38:03 | You got the proximal convoluted tubule, goes loop of henley and goes on |
|
|
38:07 | it forms that distal convoluted tubule. if you look, where does that |
|
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38:10 | convoluted tubule end up. If this the glomeruli, it goes right by |
|
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38:15 | glomeruli like so OK. Right. by Bowman's capsule or the core |
|
|
38:22 | All right. Now, remember the puzzle exists a vasculature. So you |
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38:27 | the glome and then you have the and the E fence arterial. So |
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38:31 | distal convoluted tubule literally passes between the and the E ference arterial. |
|
|
38:37 | Big deal, Doctor Wayne. So ? Well, this is actually a |
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38:43 | associated the XTA glomerular apparatus So look at the name XTA means next |
|
|
38:50 | the glomus, right. So next the glomeruli apparatus and what it |
|
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38:57 | the glam apparatus is responsible for regulating flow of blood into and out of |
|
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39:04 | glori dependent upon how fast the filtrate moving through. So you can see |
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39:40 | my distal convoluted tubule, there's my arterial, there's my EENT arterial, |
|
|
39:44 | glome will be sitting over there So we have granular cells and you're |
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39:49 | the granular cells marked off here in little picture as a little bit darker |
|
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39:55 | for the Book Man Purple. And the granular cells are, these are |
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40:01 | muscle cells, but they have special in them. All right. And |
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40:06 | they're doing is they're looking at the of stretch that's going on and they |
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|
40:12 | have um receptors to respond to signals the distal convoluted tubule. And so |
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|
40:18 | they're stretched, what they'll do is will contract to limit the flow |
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|
40:24 | In other words, they play a in auto regulating and managing the amount |
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40:28 | blood flowing into the a arterial. second thing that they do in response |
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|
40:36 | what the macula dens cells you tell . And then we'll get to that |
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|
40:39 | a second is they produce an enzyme released into the blood. This is |
|
|
40:46 | rein and renin plays a role in long term blood pressure. We already |
|
|
40:51 | about that. Remember that the renin aldosterone system. So, when your |
|
|
40:57 | pressure rises, right? Or, excuse me, when it falls, |
|
|
41:03 | when it's like, oh, we to release seren so that we can |
|
|
41:07 | our blood pressure. All right. it's going to be through that longer |
|
|
41:12 | . But how do I know when blood pressure gets high or low? |
|
|
41:16 | , this is where the other group cells and these are the macula denso |
|
|
41:19 | and they're part of the distal convoluted here, you can see them. |
|
|
41:23 | don't even know what color that All right. It looks like a |
|
|
41:27 | of brown and blue. It's a color. All right. So these |
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|
41:33 | cells and what their job is is have receptor on their surface that are |
|
|
41:39 | sodium chloride, both sodium and chloride by them. And so literally what |
|
|
41:44 | do is they just sit there and , they read the filtrate. So |
|
|
41:48 | filtrate is going by them, going them. And as you come into |
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|
41:52 | with salt, basically it's going This is the rate at which I'm |
|
|
41:56 | salt. And if that rate right. In other words, if |
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42:02 | rate drops, that's an indication that blood pressure has dropped because the primary |
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42:07 | force of that making of the filtrate going to be blood pressure, which |
|
|
42:11 | learn about here at the very end the class. So salt levels |
|
|
42:16 | That's an indication that the blood pressures . So I need to tell the |
|
|
42:21 | to raise the blood pressure. So going to tell the granular cells, |
|
|
42:25 | , release the rein, it releases . Then rin goes and does its |
|
|
42:29 | to cause the conversion of angiotensinogen into . One which gets changed into angiotensin |
|
|
42:35 | yada yada yada yada. OK. that's part of the distal convoluted |
|
|
42:42 | And because your body is not just bunch of empty spaces, there's also |
|
|
42:45 | that are located in and around. are called the extra glomerular mazal |
|
|
42:52 | So there's, there's some that are within and some that are found within |
|
|
42:56 | glomeruli. The extra glomery means are and we don't really know what they |
|
|
43:00 | , but they fill up the space they probably have an important role. |
|
|
43:04 | just don't know half the stuff we we do. So um there's that |
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|
43:10 | this structure make sense to you kind sort of process? Maybe not so |
|
|
43:16 | . But structures. Granular cells regulate pressure release rein macula cells measure salt |
|
|
43:24 | the filtrate to tell the granu cells to do. OK. Other cells |
|
|
43:30 | clue. But they're there pausing for moment. Let your brain soak that |
|
|
43:38 | for a second. Now, all blood in your body passes the entire |
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|
43:50 | of your body. Um roughly every or so, I cannot remember the |
|
|
43:54 | amount. It's very fast. And your kidney is constantly in the process |
|
|
43:58 | filtering uh the blood. All And so blood moving into the kidney |
|
|
44:03 | via the renal artery, it goes the different segments via the segmental |
|
|
44:08 | So you can see two segmental arteries then the first artery that you're going |
|
|
44:13 | see is going to pass through, through the columns into the lobes. |
|
|
44:19 | these are called the inter lobal, , inter lobal arteries. And then |
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|
44:24 | can see they're going to get smarter smaller and smaller. And so what |
|
|
44:28 | going to do is they're going to up and around, they form an |
|
|
44:33 | , hence the name arcuate arteries. then what they do is they then |
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|
44:37 | out through the cortex. You can the radiations. Those are the cortical |
|
|
44:45 | arteries. Ok. Well, it's the cortical radiate arteries that we're gonna |
|
|
44:50 | our a a arterials, our aph then form which structure starts with a |
|
|
45:01 | , the glomeruli and from the glomeruli get which artery EENT arterial? |
|
|
45:07 | All right. So do you see have a pathway here? All |
|
|
45:10 | Now, notice these are arteries and going to eventually have to form a |
|
|
45:15 | system because you have a whole bunch blood or a whole bunch of cells |
|
|
45:18 | need their nutrients. And so blood is blood even though we're filtering it |
|
|
45:24 | we still need to do gas exchange nutrient exchange to all those cells. |
|
|
45:28 | so those arteries, those little tiny EENT arterials form the actual capillary system |
|
|
45:35 | is responsible for providing the nutrients for kidney. These are called the para |
|
|
45:40 | capillaries. All right. And the cartoon you can see the peritubular capillaries |
|
|
45:46 | all wrapped around, all wrapped around here, so on and so |
|
|
45:49 | All right. And again in the , no cell is more than a |
|
|
45:54 | of microns away from a blood All right. And that's what the |
|
|
45:59 | capillary's job is supply the kidney with blood. But we already mentioned, |
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46:05 | have these weird blood vessels moving down these are part of the juxtamedullary |
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46:11 | And these are para tubular capillaries that been modified to follow along the length |
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46:18 | the loop of Henle. And these the vas erecta. So they are |
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46:21 | a capillary system. And what they is they run in the opposite direction |
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46:28 | the loop of Henley. So when loop of Henley descends and then |
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46:33 | the, the vas erecta is descending the or where the ascending limb is |
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46:38 | up. So they're moving in opposite , kind of like traffic on a |
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46:43 | . Can you, can you envision on a highway, right? You |
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46:47 | northbound and southbound lanes. So where ascending limb of the Lipo Henley |
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46:52 | you have the descending arms or the vessels of the vasa. And whenever |
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46:59 | have two things running alongside each other opposite directions, you have a countercurrent |
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47:05 | counter is opposite current flow. So things that are flowing in opposite |
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47:10 | So you have flow going in opposite this way and you have flow going |
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47:15 | opposite directions this way. And what capillaries do is they allow for the |
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47:23 | of water and other substances in the . And if the loop of Henley |
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47:32 | responsible for establishing the uh um the gradient that I described in the |
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47:43 | the vas erecta ensures that, that gradient exists because we're gonna see materials |
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47:52 | back and forth. And because these are moving in opposite directions, if |
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47:56 | is picked up, it can be back to where it needed to |
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48:01 | And so it, it helps to the osmotic gradient that we established through |
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48:06 | loop of handling. All right, it is similar to the peritubular |
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48:13 | Now, the way you can think this in terms of what it looks |
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48:15 | , does it look like? And , I don't know what types of |
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48:18 | these are but those long dr draping , you know what I'm talking |
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48:24 | You have multiple, yeah, that's they kind of look like. And |
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48:27 | just run alongside those loops of Henley of the ju imaginary nephrons, you |
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48:33 | not see them associated with the cortical , then moving back out, you |
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48:40 | cortical radiate veins. If I go , you can see where they join |
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48:44 | again, they come right back up then they join up with the cortical |
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48:47 | veins. There's the cortical radiate veins there. Then you have the arcuate |
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48:52 | which then goes to the inter lobal . So in terms of nomenclature, |
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48:56 | move in and you move out basically same way, uh the names are |
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49:00 | , very similar, the vascular seem back there. I can see you |
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49:07 | falling asleep and reading your phones. , I know. Does that make |
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49:14 | ? Yeah. No. Yeah. , six people in the front say |
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49:18 | , four people in the back. . No, you can look |
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49:25 | I still, I still see your . Yes, I got one thumb |
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49:29 | from the back. All right. . Question. You speak up a |
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49:38 | bit. Yeah, they're just part the smooth muscle that makes up the |
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49:44 | wall that surrounds the aer arterial. and remember an arterial, I'm just |
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49:52 | up an arterial is epithelium, And then uh basically smooth muscle and |
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49:59 | connective tissue that surrounds it and holds together. So the graner cells are |
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50:02 | to the smooth muscle in that particular that allows them to uh produce that |
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50:08 | All right. So there's, there's smooth muscle cell in that location, |
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50:13 | just say smooth muscle cell. That's . Any other questions? So you |
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50:24 | if I asked you tell me the of blood through the kidney, starting |
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50:28 | the renal artery? Yeah. Renal inter glob, arcuate cortical, |
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50:38 | a glaus EENT peritubular or vaz erecta then just the opposite again. All |
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50:49 | . Now, I can do that I've done it for 15, some |
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50:52 | years. But all you gotta do just draw it out, you draw |
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50:56 | out and you'll see the flow, ? Drawing is your friend that is |
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51:05 | anatomy that you need to know. . Everything we've described at the point |
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51:11 | all anatomy, right? What we're do is we're now going to move |
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51:18 | a function, right? It's the because ultimately, what we're trying to |
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51:24 | with the kidney is to do. , what is the kidney's job? |
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51:28 | urine, right? You get to home tonight and you say mom, |
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51:33 | what I learned today, I learned to make urine and she's gonna be |
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51:37 | proud of you. It's like yay wait till we get to digest. |
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51:43 | can say I made poopy. we won't say it that way. |
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51:47 | . All right. So there's some that we need to understand. So |
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51:53 | , this is a system that is for filtering blood and turning into |
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51:59 | but it's not an immediate thing. blood does not immediately turn into |
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52:05 | right? The first thing when blood passed through the Gloria that fluid that |
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52:11 | through is referred to as the That is the term we use. |
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52:15 | just the stuff that's in the No modification has taken place, it's |
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52:19 | material that we've taken from the And then as it begins passing through |
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52:24 | tube, that filtrate becomes modified. we have a different term we |
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52:28 | we call it tubular fluid. I'll probably stick with the term filtrate because |
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52:32 | shorter, right? But tubular fluid not filtrate. There has modification has |
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52:38 | taking place. There are three processes going to learn about that help in |
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52:42 | of changing that filtrate towards urine. this tubular fluid is a result of |
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52:49 | processes that are going on. And ultimately, after that fluid passes through |
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52:55 | distal convoluted tubule begins going down that duct. The last stages of modification |
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53:01 | taking place and when that fluid enters the minor calas or the minor Cali |
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53:08 | , you no longer can make modification it. You have formed urine. |
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53:14 | urine is formed and then once you it, it can't be modified any |
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53:19 | . So once it's made, it what it is, all right. |
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53:25 | so that urine then passes from the Cali to the major Cali into the |
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53:29 | pelvis out through the and on to bladder and you can't modify it uh |
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53:36 | . So the filtration membrane, the step means what do we do? |
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53:39 | do we do this filtration? the glome and this is where I |
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53:44 | trying to get to is here. are in the Glaus. You can |
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53:46 | our aar arterial the EENT arterial. right. And so we're going to |
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53:51 | with endothelium, that's going to be first layer, the blood has to |
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53:54 | through. So we have uh uh endothelium of the cells basically uh |
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54:00 | with gaps and stuff that allow material pass through. And then between that |
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54:06 | and the cells that make up the of the Gloria, what we have |
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54:10 | we have connective tissue that's kind of a screen to make sure that only |
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54:14 | that are small enough can actually pass it. So that's the basement |
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54:19 | All right. So we're limiting this large substances like blood vests or blood |
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54:26 | and big proteins. But then as move downward, you're getting rid of |
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54:30 | the larger proteins that could have escaped . And then finally, what you |
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54:34 | is you have this visceral layer of that are part of the glomeruli itself |
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54:39 | remember it was a blunt tinted, tinted structure that got pushed inward. |
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54:44 | so the cells of the glomeruli are up against the walls of the endit |
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54:50 | . Now, these cells, they a special name. If you look |
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54:53 | them, they have this kind of feature to them. They kind of |
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54:56 | digitate. All right, like, right, so you have one cell |
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55:01 | it has these little tiny feet is they refer to them as and so |
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55:05 | feet are locked together. And so materials that can pass between the feet |
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55:12 | small and tiny. Those cells are to as proto sites, foot |
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55:18 | that's where they come from. All . And so only the smallest things |
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55:24 | pass through there. All right. then also in, in these locations |
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55:31 | , in these areas, these are I told you there's these mesal |
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55:34 | these are the intra glama cells. again, they play a role in |
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55:40 | how close the foot processes are because can modify themselves, they can get |
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55:47 | close or they can expand outward. so you're doing micro regulation and that's |
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55:54 | those mazal cells do. All But we're not going to concern ourselves |
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55:58 | much with that regulation. So we three layers in athe connective tissue between |
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56:05 | or, or not connection basement And then we have our proto sites |
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56:09 | it's those three layers. If you're from the blood into the filtrates, |
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56:13 | have to be able to be small to pass through those things. So |
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56:18 | is kind of what it looks like can imagine up here. This is |
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56:20 | blood. So you're moving through from Aron arteria, you're going to the |
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56:24 | and those little tiny holes represent those layers together. All right. So |
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56:29 | big things, they just keep they're retained in the blood that remain |
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56:35 | of the plasma. But things that small enough water, plus these small |
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56:40 | can pass through the filter and that's going on. I'm passing through that |
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56:45 | into that space. And so what those things? Well, these are |
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56:50 | , very small substances, freely freely filtered substances. Are those things |
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56:55 | water and glucose, small peptides, , small vitamins, really, really |
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57:02 | molecules that can pass through things that limited, include those things of intermediate |
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57:10 | . Anything that's charged Are basically And the reason being is because those |
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57:16 | have charges on their surface that repel larger charge substances and anything that's too |
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57:22 | just isn't going to be filtered and to put this into context, about |
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57:26 | of your plasma is filtered by the as it passes through. So if |
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57:30 | think of a volume being 100%, it passes through, that comes out |
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57:35 | about 125 mils per minute or 180 per day. How much blood do |
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57:40 | have in your body? Five So let's just do the math real |
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57:47 | . 100 and 25 times four Would 500 mills, right? So in |
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57:54 | minutes, your your kidneys are filtering mills who has a water bottle, |
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58:02 | lift it up, lifted high. 500 mils. That's how much is |
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58:07 | filtered in four minutes, right? that by 10, right? In |
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58:15 | minutes, your entire blood has been , right? That's incredible. That's |
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58:22 | hardworking your kidney is impressive. All . Now, If that were true |
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58:31 | , I'll answer your question a If that were true also, that |
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58:34 | mean, um, in about 040 you would have no more blood |
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58:39 | So, what that also means is a process that returns a lot of |
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58:43 | filtrate back to the body. All . And so that's one of the |
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58:49 | . So the first process, the step is filtration and then what we're |
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58:54 | do is the second to two other . One of them is to reabsorb |
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58:59 | materials. OK. And that's what talk about when we start on |
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59:04 | Yeah, I was called to, . So the question is really |
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59:16 | what does filtering mean? Right. the short answer. The short |
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59:20 | right? And what filtering means is it's a nonspecific mechanism of moving materials |
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59:27 | the liquid portion of the blood, the plasma and moving it into and |
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59:31 | that filtrate that, that fluid. it's water plus stuff. But because |
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59:36 | talking about things that are moving under nonregulated manner, that means we can't |
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59:41 | what's being picked up. So notice of those things in that list is |
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59:46 | , is glucose, something your body or wants to get rid of it |
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59:50 | it. I mean, you worked for that glucose, right? I |
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59:53 | , you stood in the line at Bell and so you, you work |
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59:58 | that glucose and your body doesn't want give that up because that's energy that |
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60:02 | needs. And so what we wanna is we don't want the things that |
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60:05 | body needs to just be peed We only want to get rid of |
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60:10 | things that our body doesn't need or to get rid of it. So |
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60:15 | first step is just simply moving things that are small enough that we're trying |
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60:20 | get rid of. The second step gonna be let's pull the things back |
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60:25 | that our body still needs. Because of the things besides glucose is |
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60:30 | your body doesn't want to just get of rid of water. Your body |
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60:35 | to hold on to water that it necessary to maintain the chemical reactions that |
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60:41 | doing. But if you have too water, you want to get rid |
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60:44 | it. Yeah. So there's a here. It like let's just get |
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60:49 | of the water and we'll figure out we need to hold back. All |
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60:52 | . So that's kind of this, , this idea. So anything that |
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60:56 | too big that gets trapped in our that's gonna be or eaten or destroyed |
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61:01 | those intra or mesal cells and anything is small enough to pass through will |
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61:08 | so. And the driving force of of this process is pressure. It's |
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61:14 | blood pressure. All right. And what we're gonna look at is how |
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61:18 | we drive this blood how do what is the pressures that are involved |
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61:21 | ? And they're no different than the . We've already learned. We're just |
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61:25 | one of them and we're gonna give special names, but they're no |
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61:29 | I mean, we're looking at the pressure inside the blood hydrostatic pressure inside |
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61:34 | tube. And then we're looking at colloid pressure inside the plasma. So |
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61:40 | hydrostatic pressure is a pushing pressure. pressure is a pulling pressure, |
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61:47 | Do you remember those? So inside glomeruli, we have blood pressure. |
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61:53 | that's the glomerular blood hydrostatic pressure. a pushing pressure. It's driving fluid |
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61:59 | the blood into Bowman's capsule. when you were a kid, did |
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62:03 | ever play with a hose? Like in the yard spray? People run |
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62:09 | . Were you ever stupid enough to a hose and stick it in your |
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62:12 | ? Drink water? I mean, probably drink water this way but |
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62:14 | you ever put it this way, to drink water fast. If you |
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62:17 | to do that, what would Could you swallow fast enough? |
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62:22 | Right. Because there's only a finite inside your mouth. And so if |
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62:28 | put a hose in the flow would up that space really, really |
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62:33 | And now the water would basically squirt the sides. But let's pretend for |
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62:37 | moment that it can't squirt out the and you stick that hose in your |
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62:41 | . So it's going to create a pressure, isn't it? Inside your |
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62:45 | ? That's gonna fight against the water to come in. All right. |
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62:49 | , so inside Bowman's capsule, we hydrostatic pressure that opposes the movement of |
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62:56 | from the Gloria into Bowman's capsule. right. So that would be the |
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63:03 | hydrostatic pressure. So in here, , hydrostatic pressure out here we have |
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63:08 | blood hydrostatic pressure and then inside the , we have plasma proteins, plasma |
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63:14 | say, hey, um I'm over water. You come join me. |
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63:17 | remember it's a pulling pressure and so pulling water back. It's a it's |
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63:22 | back pressure as well. So these pressure are what we use to |
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63:27 | What is the net filtration pressure. right. Now, where's the colloid |
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63:32 | pressure for Bowman's capsule? Well, doesn't exist because there are no plasma |
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63:37 | . All right, it's, it's zero. So we're just gonna flat |
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63:39 | , ignore it. So the net pressure, this is the differences between |
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63:45 | . We have a pressure that's pushing the, into Bowman's capsule. We |
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63:50 | a pressure that's pushing out of Bowman's . And then we have a pressure |
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63:54 | into and away from uh well into blood, away from Bowman's capsule. |
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64:00 | so you could just separate them Net filtration pressure is just pressure in |
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64:04 | pressure out. So the pressure in the blood hydrostatic pressure. We can |
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64:09 | it. It comes out to about millimeters of mercury. The out pressures |
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64:13 | the Bowman's capsule, uh uh hydrostatic And the um, the colloid osmotic |
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64:21 | that's pulling. And so you can those up. They have values 30 |
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64:24 | 15, sum those together that's So 55 -45 is 10 of |
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64:31 | So we have this positive pressure that's pushing blood from the glomeruli into Bowman's |
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64:41 | . Now, can I modify What do you think? Sure. |
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64:46 | one of the things we need to is we need to consider modifications. |
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64:49 | so the net filtration pressure plays a in the rate at which we filter |
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64:57 | . The greater the pressure, the we're going to filter the lower the |
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65:01 | , the lower the rate at which going to to filter. Does that |
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65:04 | of make sense? Again, if turn a hose full blast, I'm |
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65:09 | water out faster, right? If turn the hose down, water pushes |
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65:14 | less, still moving in the same , it's just not as powerful. |
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65:18 | that's the same thing with net filtration is I'm just modifying those pressures. |
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65:26 | , the back pressure from the glome stays more, more or less the |
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65:29 | or Bowman's capsule stays more or less same, the colloid pressure stays more |
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65:33 | less the same because I don't change number of plasm proteins in my |
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65:36 | So really there's only one pressure that can modify, which is my blood |
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65:42 | , right? And so I have afar arterial and I have an earn |
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65:46 | . If I open up my aph , that means more blood flows into |
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65:50 | glomeruli, which means I've increased blood inside the glomery list. If I |
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65:55 | or constrict my afar arterial, I'm lowering the blood pressure, the amount |
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66:00 | flow going into the glomeruli. So what I'm doing is I'm modifying at |
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66:05 | aph arterial that flow. So, blood pressure at the aar arterial is |
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66:13 | of the primary ways in which I the net filtration pressure, which modifies |
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66:19 | glori filtration rates. That kind of sense. They over there are nodding |
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66:26 | here if that makes sense. In words, if I want to filter |
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66:34 | , how do I filter faster? up my blood vessel if I want |
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66:40 | filter slower? What do I Close my blood vessel? And the |
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66:44 | that I'm probably gonna be working with my a arterial. All right. |
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66:51 | those are the primary ways we do . But what we do is we |
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66:54 | that there are multiple ways that this happen, multiple ways in which I'm |
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66:58 | regulate. I can do it. . Intrinsic means things that are part |
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67:02 | the kidney itself, right? Or can do it extrinsically. All |
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|
67:08 | Now, this should be intuitive at point for you. So if for |
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67:14 | , um I increase my sympathetic what happens to my blood pressure, |
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67:19 | goes up. So if my blood goes up from sympathetic activity, what's |
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67:23 | to happen to my filtration rate, should go up, right? You |
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67:27 | , so there's an extrinsic way that happens or what I can do is |
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67:31 | my blood pressure is really, really , but I don't want it to |
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67:34 | this high because this is dangerous. start blowing out blood vessels. So |
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67:38 | can regulate inside the kidney itself by . That would be an example of |
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|
67:44 | . So we have terminology for we call this auto regulation. So |
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67:49 | regulation would be what's happening inside the extrinsically, we can regulate via the |
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67:55 | pathways or what we can do is can do it through hormonal pathways because |
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|
68:02 | just coming from different structures, that of makes sense. So let's just |
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68:08 | a look at that really, really . You've already kind of understand these |
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|
68:12 | , right? So renal auto regulation says, look over the course of |
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|
68:15 | day, I'm not just a static , it feels like it because I'm |
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68:20 | in class all day long. But truth is is you move around a |
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68:23 | . And so when you move around lot, your blood pressure goes up |
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68:26 | down a lot, right? And body is constantly modifying those changes. |
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|
68:31 | we don't want to do that to kidneys. We don't want the blood |
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68:34 | go up and down, up and because then the kidney can't function the |
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|
68:36 | that it does. And so what kidney is trying to do is trying |
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68:39 | maintain a constant pressure despite natural changes are occurring just in your daily |
|
|
68:45 | Right? So what you're doing here you're saying, look, I'm trying |
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68:48 | maintain a normal static pressure inside my kidney. And if I do |
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68:54 | then my kidney is gonna function more less the same no matter if it's |
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68:58 | 80 or if it's around 100 and . But if I get outside those |
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69:01 | , then my kidney starts messing up doesn't start work, it doesn't work |
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69:04 | same way. So as long as can keep it within this range, |
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69:07 | in good shape. And so it's to use two different mechanisms to allow |
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69:11 | kind of this activity. What is myogenic? And then the other one |
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|
69:14 | tubular glomerular feedback before you even switch slide, myogenic. What does it |
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|
69:20 | when you see my, what do think of muscles? So my muscles |
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69:25 | play a role? All right. , it's not gonna be any |
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|
69:29 | It's gonna be smooth muscles. All . The other one, tubule, |
|
|
69:34 | feedback tu below tubes, glomeruli, , right? So something between the |
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|
69:42 | and the glomeruli are talking to each . Now, what structure did we |
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|
69:48 | about? Where tubes and the glomeruli close to each other? The started |
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|
69:56 | the J the XTA glomerular apparatus. , those are the two things that |
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70:02 | gonna be playing a role here. , myogenic very, very basic, |
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70:09 | gonna constrict constrict or we're gonna relax aar arterial. That's all we're doing |
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70:14 | saying I want to maintain a constant pressure inside the glomeruli. So if |
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70:19 | blood pressure rises in my body, the glomerular blood pressure would rise. |
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|
70:23 | I don't want that to happen. what am I gonna do to counter |
|
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70:28 | ? What, what would I do my blood pressure rises in my |
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|
70:31 | How do I counter blood pressure rising my glomeruli? I constrict. So |
|
|
70:37 | gonna constrict my aar arterial. but my blood pressure has now dropped |
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70:41 | my body because I've been sitting in lecture for an hour and 20 minutes |
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70:45 | my brain is turning the pudding and slowly falling asleep. My blood pressure |
|
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70:49 | dropping. How do I increase my pressure inside my glomeruli? I dilate |
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|
70:55 | aar arterial. So that is the that we're doing here. That is |
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71:00 | regulation. It's measuring the amount of inside the aar arterial and it's modifying |
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|
71:06 | itself to match the needs of the . Now, you can do the |
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71:11 | thing in EENT arterial. It's just the best way to do it. |
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71:14 | can even see here. For if my G F R is, |
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71:19 | getting too high, what do I ? Oh, well, why don't |
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71:24 | just release the valve on the back . So more blood can leave. |
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71:28 | that's not the more common way. common way is dealing with the amount |
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71:31 | blood that's being delivered. Right. can, that's an easier thing to |
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71:36 | on the front end than on the end. So that's why we focus |
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71:39 | that with two marlar feedback. What doing is we're looking at the product |
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71:49 | the filtration. All right. So we're going to learn a little bit |
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71:53 | is that we're going to look at amount of sodium that's being filtered is |
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71:56 | or less constant and the amount of of sodium back and forth into from |
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72:01 | tubule to the body is going to more or less constant. So by |
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72:04 | time you get to the distal convoluted , you know how much sodium should |
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72:09 | there. And that's what those Maladenis are doing is they're measuring the sodium |
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72:15 | the sodium coming by is lower than , that's an indication that the flow |
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72:20 | the tubule is too slow. All . In other words, the fluid |
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72:27 | moving fast enough if the fluid isn't fast enough, that's because the filtration |
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72:32 | has dropped and the filtration rate we is dependent upon the pressure inside the |
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72:38 | . So that's when I'm going to to the a arterial, right? |
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72:43 | I'm going to tell those granular by the way, you need to |
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72:47 | . And if you dilate. That I'm going to increase the flow of |
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72:51 | into the glomeruli, which means the rate will go up, which means |
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72:55 | sodium will go by. So here looking at the product of the |
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73:02 | I'm not just looking at the pressure the arterial. The converse is true |
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73:07 | well. If there's too much that means my filtration rate is too |
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73:12 | , which means my blood pressure is high coming into the Glome Glaus. |
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73:16 | that means I've got to constrict the arterial. All right. So |
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73:21 | my communication here is I'm monitoring how filtering. I'm not just looking at |
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73:27 | flow of blood into the glome. regulating the flow of blood in the |
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73:30 | , but I'm doing it through this long pathway and it's really not long |
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73:37 | they're right next to each other, it's the end of the whole |
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73:42 | So it's the monitoring of the sodium that helps to modify through this |
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73:49 | the flow of blood into the glome the aar arterial. So far, |
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73:55 | kind of makes sense. All Last little bit has to do with |
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74:01 | control. This extrinsic. So we've mentioned sympathetic, if I have increase |
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74:06 | sympathetic activity, what I'm gonna do I'm causing vasoconstriction, right. |
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74:13 | vasoconstriction will result in in a a in G F R. So what |
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74:20 | doing is you're basically preventing that increased because remember the blood flow through the |
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74:26 | is a lot faster. But what doing is we're saying here at the |
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74:30 | we want to protect and so we're to constrict. So it's going to |
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74:34 | the amount of flow into these right. So the other thing that |
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74:42 | does, it decreases the surface So you get less flow into the |
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74:48 | into the filtrate. But you also going to stimulate the production of |
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74:53 | etcetera, etcetera. So it's going result in a, in a reversal |
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75:01 | the process that is resulting in the pressure. The last little bit here |
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75:06 | with A N P attic peptide. we said reduces or is a hormone |
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75:13 | results in the lowering of blood And so here what's going to happen |
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75:19 | when the A P goes to the , what it's going to do is |
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75:21 | going to cause the aph arterial to . So, what we're doing here |
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75:25 | as blood pressure is going down, opening up the kidney to allow for |
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75:31 | flow of blood to go through so we can remove material from the |
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75:36 | And that's allowing the blood pressure to down right through the filtration process. |
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75:41 | right. So your glomery filtration rate up and your blood volume goes down |
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75:46 | , is the the outcome here. right. In our last minute |
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75:54 | let me just summarize really quickly. did some anatomy. I think the |
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75:58 | is pretty straightforward. But we're taking first leap into understanding this process, |
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76:03 | first step of the kidney, in of conditioning the blood is taking the |
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76:08 | from the blood water. And plus the stuff that's small enough to go |
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76:12 | and get its way into the That's the first step that's filtration. |
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76:18 | we see how we can regulate that well. When we come back on |
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76:21 | , we're going to deal with the of reabsorption and a tertiary process called |
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76:27 | that's going to help modify that fluid urine. Ok. |
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