Term
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Definition
congenital defect in which the renal cortex is replaced by numerous cysts in various sizes - [image]no functional renal tissue can be identified
classic type, (less common) hydronephrotic type
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Term
From what structure does the urogenital system develop?
What structures do those derivatives give rise to? |
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Definition
Intermediate mesoderm
--> urogenital ridge --> urinary, genital systems
nephrogenic cord (part of urogenital ridge) --> urinary system |
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Term
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Definition
the first set of kidneys - rudimentary, nonfunctional, appears in early 4th week, soon degenerates
develop in the cervical intermediate mesoderm; serves as orientation for mesonephric kidney |
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Term
Mesonephros kidney
how do they begin?
what structures do they form?
what is their function?
what structures do they give rise to? |
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Definition
Second set, appears late 4th wk, function for 4 wks until permanent kidneys develop (end of first 3 months)
begin as nephrogenic cords that extend from 1st thoracic level to upper lumbar region of the embryo
forms urogenital ridges (6th wk) bilaterally that project into abdominal cavity; within each one the mesonephric duct forms (a collecting component of the kidney)
produce urine from 6-10 wks, drain via mesonephric ducts into the cloaca
Male: tubules --> efferent ductules of testes
ducts --> epididymis, vans deferens, ejaculatory ducts, seminal gland
Female: these structures regress |
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Term
[image]Metanephros kidney
when/where does it develop?
what structures does the metanephric diverticulum give rise to? what's another name for this structure
[image] |
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Definition
early 5th wk (functional 9th wk), sacral region
MD (aka ureteric bud) --> permanent kidneys
kidneys also form from a metanephric mass of mesoderm (aka metanephric blastema)
The MD is the primordium of the ureter, renal pelvis, calyces, and collecting tubules
- Stalk of the MD --> ureter
- cranial end --> renal pelvis
- collecting tubules divide, --> major calcyes, minor calcyes |
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Term
How do the nephrons develop?
How does this process begin?
5 steps
what factors are secreted that are essential to this process? What happens if someone is deficient in them? |
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Definition
Collecting tubules secrete factors* that induce the metanephric cap to form the nephrons (renal corpuscles, loops of Henle, PCT, DCT) - beginning of 8th wk
1. lobulation at kidney surface
2. aggregations of metanephric mesenchyme
3. basement membrane forms on outer surface of epithelial cells
4. polarization of cells
5. final functional nephron
basic fibroblast growth factor (FGF-2)
bone morphogenetic protein 7 (BMP-7)
you won't have a nephron w/o these growth factors!
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Term
Positional changes of the kidneys
where do the kidneys form?
what changes occur during the ascent of the kidneys?
what structures half the ascent of the kidneys (normally) |
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Definition
kidneys form within the pelvis, anterior to the sacrum, with the hilum positioned anterior
kidneys ascend to their adult position by 9th week/adrenal gland (due to caudal growth), while rotating medially 90 degrees so hilum faces anteromedially
- kidneys become retroperitoneal
- ascent can be arrested if they contact the IMA
- blood supply changes during ascent |
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Term
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Definition
form when temporary renal arteries that form during ascent of the kidneys fail to degenerate
25% of adults have 2-4 renal aa (75% have just one)
problematic only if an accessory artery supplies the inferior pole that obstructs a ureter --> hydronephrosis
these are end aa; if damaged, the region they supply becomes ischemic
2x more prevalent than accessory veins |
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Term
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Definition
10% of chronic renal failures |
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Term
Congenital renal diseases |
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Definition
usually an acquired developmental defect arising during gestation |
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Term
Wilm's tumor 1
Potter's syndrome |
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Definition
a defect in this development gene can cause urogenital defects
renal agensis, hypoplastic lungs, neonatal respiratory distress, edema, acidosis, cyanosis
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Term
Renal agenesis
unilateral vs. bilateral |
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Definition
unilateral: usually not a problem, other kidney hypertrophies
bilateral: usually deadly; results from failure of development of metanephric diverticula or primorida of the ureters |
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Term
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Definition
Caused by failure of one or both kidneys to ascend; most commonly the kidney remains in the pelvis
sometimes assoc with malrotation
crossed renal ectopia - when one kidney crosses to the other side |
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Term
Discoid (pancake) kidney
Horseshoe kidney |
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Definition
caused by fusion of kidneys within the pelvis
usually formed when inferior poles become fused in pelvis
most common renal fusion
ascent may be stopped by IMA
7% have Turner's syndrome
children at greater risk of developing Wilms tumor |
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Term
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Definition
when kidney doesn't develop to normal size
usually unilateral
usually occurs from scarring, not a development failure
true hypoplastic kidney has no scars and reduced number of renal lobes or fewer (< 6) |
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Term
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Definition
has two ureters and renal pelves
formed by the incomplete division of the metanephric diverticulum (ureteric bud)
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Term
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Definition
2 forms: autosomal dominant (ADPKD), symptoms in adulthood
recessive (ARPKD), symptoms in early infancy/childhood
common: 600,000; 4th leading cause of renal failure
ARPKD less common than ADPKD (90%)
In ARPKD both kidneys have hundreds of small cysts (infantile PKD; gene = PKDH1); survival dependent on transplants/dialysis
cysts form by wide dilations of parts of the continuous nephrons, usually the loops of Henle
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Term
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Definition
opens anywhere except posterosuperior bladder (bladder neck, prostatic urethra, vagina, vaginal vestibule) |
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