Clearance
[AV6:Chp3]
Clearance
... is the volume of plasma per unit time from which all of a substance is removed
Calculation of clearance
Clearance
= (Urine rate x urine conc.) / plasma conc
i.e. Clearance = rate of excretion / plasma conc
Factors influencing clearance
- Filterability
- Net reabsorption/secretion
- Metabolism/breakdown in tubular lumen
Examples
Inulin
- Polysaccharide
- Freely filtered
* Concentration in Bowman's capsule is the same as plasma concentration
- Neither reabsorbed or secreted
- No metabolism in the tubular lumen
Thus,
Clearance of inulin
= GFR
Para-aminohippurate (PAH)
- Small water-soluble organic anion
- Freely filtered
- Secreted by proximal tubule
* Transcellular route
* Secretion rate saturable
At low plasma concentration
90% of PAH entering kidney is removed from plasma.
Thus,
Clearance of PAH
= Effective renal plasma flow
* Slightly less than RPF
Creatinine
- Freely filtered
- Not reabsorbed
- Small secretion by proximal tubule
Thus,
Clearance of creatinine
= 10-20% higher than GFR
At low GFR
--> The secreted portion of creatinine becomes relatively larger.
Thus,
When GFR is low,
Creatinine clearance more severely overestimates GFR
NB:
- Creatinine is an end product of creatine metabolism
- Rate of production is proportional to skeletal muscle mass
- GFR and plasma creatinine level (in steady-state) are inversely related
Glucose
- Freely filtered
- Reabsorbed in promixal tubules
* By saturable secondary active transport system
* Normally completely reabsorbed.
Thus,
Glucose excretion is normally zero.
NB:
- Theoretical transport maximum (Tm) is about 375mg/min in men and 300mg/min in women
- Should correspond to plasma level of 300mg/dL
* 375/300 x 100
- But actual renal threshold is about 200mg/dL of arterial blood or 180mg/dL of venous blood
* Due to splay