Physiology

Clearance and Renal Plasma Flow

A Comprehensive Article

Renal System

Clearance tells us how efficiently the kidneys remove a substance from blood β€” a window into how the nephron handles everything from water to waste.

πŸ§ͺ 1️⃣ What is Renal Clearance?

The volume of plasma completely cleared of a substance per unit time.

Formula:

C = \frac{U \times V}{P}

Where:

  • C = Clearance (mL/min)
  • U = Urine concentration
  • V = Urine volume per min
  • P = Plasma concentration
🧠 If C < GFR β†’ reabsorption (e.g., glucose). If C = GFR β†’ filtered only (e.g., inulin). If C > GFR β†’ secretion (e.g., PAH).

🩸 2️⃣ Types of Clearance Based on Renal Handling

Substance Type Example Renal Handling Clearance Relation
Completely reabsorbed Glucose, amino acids Filtered, fully reabsorbed C = 0
Filtered only Inulin, creatinine Not reabsorbed or secreted C = GFR
Filtered + secreted Para-aminohippuric acid (PAH), urea Actively secreted C > GFR
πŸ’‘ Key Concept: Clearance helps us map how the nephron treats different substances.

🩸 3️⃣ Glomerular Filtration Rate (GFR)

Definition: The rate at which plasma is filtered through all glomeruli per minute. It’s the gold standard measure of kidney function.

Normal GFR: ~125 mL/min in men, ~110 mL/min in women

Equation: GFR = K_f \times (P_{GC} - P_{BS} - \pi_{GC})

Where:

  • K_f = Filtration coefficient
  • P_{GC} = Glomerular capillary pressure
  • P_{BS} = Bowman’s space pressure
  • \pi_{GC} = Glomerular oncotic pressure
🧠 Summary: Anything that increases glomerular pressure β†’ increases GFR.
πŸ’‘ Afferent arteriole constriction β†’ ↓ GFR. Efferent arteriole constriction β†’ ↑ GFR (initially).

B. Measurement of GFR

1. Inulin Clearance β€” Gold Standard

GFR = \frac{U_{inulin} \times V}{P_{inulin}}

2. Creatinine Clearance β€” Practical Clinical Method

GFR \approx \frac{U_{cr} \times V}{P_{cr}}

C. Estimated GFR (eGFR) β€” Simplified for Clinical Use

Normal eGFR: >90 mL/min/1.73mΒ²

🚰 4️⃣ Renal Plasma Flow (RPF) and PAH Clearance

Concept: To understand blood flow through kidneys, we use para-aminohippuric acid (PAH) β€” it’s filtered and secreted completely.

RPF = \frac{U_{PAH} \times V}{P_{PAH}}

Normal RPF: ~600 mL/min

Renal blood flow (RBF): RBF = \frac{RPF}{1 - hematocrit} β‰ˆ 1.2 L/min (~25% of cardiac output)

βš–οΈ 5️⃣ Filtration Fraction (FF)

Represents how much plasma entering the kidney is actually filtered.

FF = \frac{GFR}{RPF}

Normal FF: ~20%

🧠 Meaning: Out of every 100 mL of blood plasma entering the kidney, about 20 mL becomes filtrate.

🧩 6️⃣ Clinical Correlations

Parameter Change Possible Cause
↓ GFR ↑ Creatinine, ↓ Urine output Renal failure, hypovolemia
↑ GFR (rare) Pregnancy, high cardiac output
↑ BUN & Creatinine ↓ Clearance Kidney dysfunction (azotemia)
↓ RPF Renal artery stenosis ↓ Perfusion pressure
↑ FF Efferent constriction Angiotensin II effect
πŸ’‘ BUN/Creatinine ratio: Normal: 10–20:1. >20:1 β†’ prerenal (dehydration). <10:1 β†’ renal (tubular damage).

🧠 7️⃣ Quick Summary Table

Test / Concept Purpose Normal Range / Meaning
Clearance formula Determines rate of removal from plasma C = (UΓ—V)/P
GFR (inulin / creatinine) Measures filtration capacity ~125 mL/min
RPF (PAH) Measures plasma flow to kidney ~600 mL/min
Filtration fraction (FF) % of plasma filtered ~20%
Serum creatinine Inverse to GFR ↑ = renal impairment
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