Urinary System Resources

Lessons:

  1. Lesson 1: Kidney Architecture & Blood Flow
  2. Lesson 2: Glomerular Filtration & Pressure Dynamics
  3. Lesson 3: Reabsorption, Secretion & Solute Management
  4. Lesson 4: Water Balance & Urine Concentration
  5. Lesson 5: Urinalysis, Renal Clearance & Acute Renal Failure

Lesson 1: Kidney Architecture & Blood Flow

When Plumbing Goes Wrong: Understanding the Kidney’s Layout

Meet Mr. Wu, a 76-year-old retired engineer who just discovered that kidneys are basically the world’s most sophisticated plumbing system—and his has sprung a leak. Turns out, when you spend decades with clogged arteries (chronic arteriosclerosis), your kidneys don’t appreciate the reduced blood flow any more than you’d appreciate a plumber who shows up late. Today’s surgery might have saved his heart, but his kidneys are having second thoughts about the whole arrangement.

Key Concepts:

  • Kidney Structure & Protection: The kidney’s three-layer protective wrapping (renal fascia, perinephric fat, fibrous capsule) and internal organization (cortex, medulla, pyramids, calyces) create a sophisticated filtration factory
  • Renal Blood Supply Architecture: Blood travels through a hierarchical arterial system (renal → segmental → interlobar → arcuate → cortical radiate → afferent arteriole) before reaching the two unique capillary beds in series
  • Dual Capillary Beds: Unlike other organs, kidneys have TWO capillary beds connected by an arteriole (not a venule)—the glomerulus for filtration and the peritubular capillaries/vasa recta for reabsorption

Lesson 2: Glomerular Filtration & Pressure Dynamics

The Great Kidney Pressure Cooker: What Happens When the Force Is (Not) With You

 Imagine you’re trying to squeeze orange juice through a coffee filter using nothing but water pressure. That’s basically what Mr. Wu’s glomeruli are attempting right now—except his “water pressure” dropped lower than a submarine during his surgery (45/30, to be exact), and now those coffee filters are about as useful as a screen door on a submarine. Spoiler alert: when you can’t generate enough pressure to filter blood, bad things accumulate. Really bad things. Like “we need to call the dialysis team” bad things.

Key Concepts:

  • Glomerular Filtration Membrane: Three-layer barrier (fenestrated capillary endothelium, basement membrane, podocyte filtration slits) that allows molecules smaller than albumin through while keeping blood cells and proteins in the blood
  • Pressure Balance in Filtration: Net Filtration Pressure = (Glomerular Hydrostatic Pressure) – (Blood Colloid Osmotic Pressure + Capsular Hydrostatic Pressure). Normal NFP ≈ 10 mmHg drives filtration
  • Filtration Rate Control: The kidney uses intrinsic controls (myogenic response, tubuloglomerular feedback) and extrinsic controls (sympathetic nervous system, renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system) to maintain consistent GFR despite blood pressure fluctuations

Lesson 3: Reabsorption, Secretion & Solute Management

The Kidney’s Recycling Program: One Tube’s Trash Is Another Tube’s Treasure

Remember how I compared the PCT to my pack-rat father who couldn’t let go of anything my mother tried to throw away? Well, Mr. Wu’s PCT cells are currently on strike. They’re supposed to be frantically grabbing back all the glucose, amino acids, and sodium that accidentally got filtered out, but instead they’re floating around dead in his urine. It’s like a recycling facility that burned down—everything valuable is going straight to the landfill. And by landfill, I mean Mr. Wu’s bladder, which is filling with the most expensive urine you’ve ever seen. That glucose in his urinalysis? That’s $200 worth of blood sugar per deciliter that should have been rescued. Wasteful AND tragic.

Key Concepts:

  • Segment-Specific Reabsorption: PCT reabsorbs 65% of filtrate (nearly all glucose, amino acids, vitamins) via active transport with water following passively; descending loop reabsorbs water only; ascending loop reabsorbs Na⁺/K⁺/Cl⁻ but is impermeable to water; DCT and collecting duct fine-tune under hormonal control
  • Active Transport & Cotransport: Sodium-glucose cotransporters (SGLT) in PCT use the sodium gradient to reabsorb glucose; Na⁺/K⁺-ATPase pumps maintain gradients; water follows sodium movement via osmosis through aquaporins
  • Tubular Secretion for Homeostasis: DCT and collecting duct secrete H⁺ (pH regulation), K⁺ (eliminate excess), and various drugs/toxins; secretion of H⁺ by intercalated cells requires exchange with K⁺, creating a potassium management dilemma

Lesson 4: Water Balance & Urine Concentration

The Countercurrent Multiplier: Or, How Your Kidneys Became Water-Hoarding Geniuses

Here’s a fun party trick: your kidneys can make urine that’s four times saltier than your blood, or four times more dilute. It’s like having a universal remote for your body’s water content. The secret? A ridiculously clever countercurrent multiplier system that would make any engineer weep with joy. Sadly, Mr. Wu—who IS an engineer—can’t appreciate this masterpiece right now because his countercurrent multiplier is currently multiplying nothing except his medical bills. His specific gravity is 1.050 (ridiculously concentrated) and his urine osmolarity is 2100 mOsm/L (also ridiculously concentrated), but here’s the tragic irony: these aren’t signs of a kidney working hard to save water. They’re signs of a kidney that’s barely producing any urine at all, so whatever trickles out is super-concentrated garbage juice.

Key Concepts:

  • Obligatory vs. Facultative Water Reabsorption: Obligatory reabsorption occurs automatically in PCT and descending loop (no hormones needed); facultative reabsorption in DCT and collecting duct requires ADH to insert aquaporins—this is how the body fine-tunes water retention
  • Medullary Osmotic Gradient: The ascending loop actively pumps out Na⁺/K⁺/Cl⁻ without water following, creating increasingly salty medullary interstitium; this high osmolarity pulls water from the descending loop and collecting duct; juxtamedullary nephrons with long loops create the steepest gradients for maximum water conservation
  • Countercurrent Mechanism: The descending and ascending loops flow in opposite directions, with the vasa recta blood vessels also flowing countercurrent; this arrangement multiplies the osmotic gradient and prevents washout—it’s the reason mammals can survive on land without constant drinking

Lesson 5: Urinalysis, Renal Clearance & Acute Renal Failure

Reading Urine Like Tea Leaves, Except Actually Scientific

If you think peeing in a cup is just for drug tests and pregnancy scares, think again. Urine is basically your kidney’s report card, and Mr. Wu’s is currently covered in red ink. His urinalysis reads like a disaster movie: proteins present (shouldn’t be there), glucose at 200 mg/dL (definitely shouldn’t be there), dark orange/brown color (yikes), and a consistency that suggests his kidneys have given up on quality control entirely. Normal urine is a carefully curated collection of waste products. Mr. Wu’s urine is a cry for help in liquid form. It’s screaming, “THESE NEPHRONS ARE DEAD, SEND HELP.” Preferably in the form of a dialysis machine, stat.

Key Concepts:

  • Normal vs. Abnormal Urine Components: Normal urine contains water, urea, creatinine, uric acid, ions; abnormal findings include albumin/protein (glomerular damage), glucose (PCT damage or diabetes), RBCs (kidney stones/infection/cancer), WBCs (infection), ketones (starvation/diabetes)
  • Urine Physical Properties as Diagnostic Tools: Color (yellow = normal, dark = concentrated or blood/bilirubin), specific gravity (1.001-1.028 = normal), osmolarity (50-1200 mOsm/L depending on hydration), pH (4.5-8.0, usually ~6); abnormalities reveal kidney function, hydration status, and metabolic conditions
  • Renal Clearance & GFR Assessment: Clearance = (urine concentration × urine flow rate) / plasma concentration; creatinine clearance estimates GFR because creatinine is freely filtered and not reabsorbed; low clearance = low GFR = kidney failure; BUN and serum creatinine rise when GFR drops
Illustration of renal corpuscle structure showing intertwined capillaries and surrounding capsule.

Pre-Class Lectures

Post-Class Lectures

  • Review the Urinary Case Study
  • Review the GFR Game

By the End of This Module
You Will be Able to:

  • Describe the gross anatomy of the kidney and its coverings.
  • Trace the blood supply through the kidney.
  • Describe the anatomy of a nephron and differentiate cortical from juxtamedullary nephrons by function.
  • Describe the forces (pressures) that promote or counteract glomerular filtration.
  • Compare the intrinsic and extrinsic controls of the glomerular filtration rate.
  • Describe the mechanisms underlying water and solute reabsorption from the renal tubules into the peritubular capillaries.
  • Describe how sodium and water reabsorption are regulated in the distal tubule and collecting duct.
  • Describe the importance of tubular secretion and list several substances that are secreted.
  • Describe the mechanisms responsible for the medullary osmotic gradient.
  • Explain formation of dilute versus concentrated urine.
  • Define renal clearance and explain how this value summarizes the way a substance is handled by the kidney.
  • Describe the normal physical and chemical properties of urine.
  • List several abnormal urine components, and name the condition characterized by the presence of detectable amounts of each.
  • Describe the general location, structure, and function of the ureters, urinary bladder, and urethra
  • Define micturition and describe its neural control.

List of terms