Question 1
Question
Which two hormones does the kidney produce?
Answer
-
Erythropoetin
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Renin
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Aldosterone
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Adrenaline
Question 2
Question
The left kidney is more inferior.
Question 3
Question
At what spinal level does the ureter exit the kidney?
Question 4
Question
Choose the incorrect statement about the kidney.
Answer
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The convex face of the kidney faces laterally.
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The concave face of the kidney faces medially.
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The hilum exits the convex face.
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The kidney is retroperitoneal
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They kidney is protected by the fibrous renal capsule, fat deposits, and the ribs
Question 5
Question
A kidney lobe is a medullary pyramid and the cortical/renal columns on either side of it.
Question 6
Question
The pathway of urine drainage from the kidney begins at the [blank_start]papilla[blank_end], then to the [blank_start]minor[blank_end] calyx, the [blank_start]major[blank_end] calyces, the [blank_start]renal pelvis[blank_end], exits via the [blank_start]hilum[blank_end] and enters the [blank_start]ureter[blank_end] to reach the bladder.
Answer
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papilla
-
minor
-
major
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renal pelvis
-
hilum
-
ureter
-
urethra
Question 7
Question
Blood enters the kidney in the left or right [blank_start]renal artery[blank_end], which comes from the [blank_start]abdominal[blank_end] artery. From there it branches into the [blank_start]segmental[blank_end] arteries which branch into the [blank_start]lobar[blank_end] arteries to travel to the lobes. There it become the [blank_start]arcuate[blank_end] arteries, which lie in the cortex.
[blank_start]Afferent[blank_end] arterioles travel into the glomerulus to the [blank_start]glomerular[blank_end] capillaries, and then blood exits in the [blank_start]efferent[blank_end] arterioles. It then goes into the [blank_start]peritubular[blank_end] capillaries, the interlobar vein, the segmental vein, and exits via the hilum in the right or left renal vein.
Answer
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renal artery
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abdominal
-
aortic
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segmental
-
lobar
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arcuate
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Afferent
-
efferent
-
peritubular
-
glomerular
Question 8
Question
What nerve does the sympathetic nerve fibres of the renal plexus originate from?
Answer
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Splanchic nerve
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Splenic nerve
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Vagus nerve
Question 9
Question
Choose the correct statement.
Answer
-
Glomerular capillaries have fenestrated endothelium.
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Pressure is low in the glomerular capillaries.
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Pressure is high in the peritubular capillaries.
-
The vasa recta are associated with the Loop of Henle in cortical nephrons.
Question 10
Question
The renal corpuscle is the [blank_start]glomerular[blank_end] capillaries and the Bowman's [blank_start]capsule[blank_end]. The Bowman's capsule's parietal layer is [blank_start]simple squamous[blank_end] epithelium while its visceral layer are specialised epithelial cells called [blank_start]podocytes[blank_end]. Between these layer's is the Bowman's space. It also contains [blank_start]mesangial[blank_end] cells which are regulatory.
The podocytes are part of the filtration barrier and attach to the [blank_start]basement membrane[blank_end] that surrounds the glomerular capillaries. They have foot like processes called [blank_start]pedicels[blank_end] and inbetween are the [blank_start]filtration slits[blank_end] which small molecules can move through.
Answer
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simple squamous
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podocytes
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mesangial
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basement membrane
-
pedicels
-
filtration slits
-
glomerular
-
capsule
Question 11
Question
Which of these describes the proximal convoluted tubule?
Answer
-
Cuboidal epithelia, dense brush border, many microvilli
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Simple squamous epithelia, permeable to water, impermeable to NaCl
-
Simple squamous epithelia, impermeable to water, permeable to NaCl
-
Thin cuboidal epithelia, few microvilli, few mitochondria
Question 12
Question
Which part of the nephron has simple squamous epithelia, is permeable to water, but is impermeable to NaCl?
Answer
-
Thin descending limb (Loop of Henle)
-
Thin ascending limb (Loop of Henle)
-
Proximal convoluted tubule
-
Distal convolutes tubule
Question 13
Question
Select all the kinds of cells you would find in the collecting duct.
Question 14
Question
Reabsorption in the DCT is affected by ADH, while reabsorption in the CD is affected by aldosterone.
Question 15
Question
The juxtaglomerular apparatus senses and controls glomerular filtration rate and stabilises blood [blank_start]pressure[blank_end].
In the afferent arteriole there are [blank_start]juxtaglomerular cells[blank_end] which act as [blank_start]mechanoreceptors[blank_end]. They can release renin in response to [blank_start]low[blank_end] blood pressure.
In the distal convoluted tubule there are [blank_start]macula densa[blank_end] which are [blank_start]chemoreceptors[blank_end] which sense the [blank_start]NaCl[blank_end] concentration, a good indication of GFR.
Answer
-
pressure
-
volume
-
juxtaglomerular cells
-
macula densa
-
macula densa
-
juxtaglomerular cells
-
low
-
high
-
NaCl
-
creatinine
-
mechanoreceptors
-
chemoreceptors
-
chemoreceptors
-
mechanoreceptors
Question 16
Question
Transitional epithelium (stratified, rounded cells which flatten when stretched) is only found in the urinary tract.
Question 17
Question
Choose the correct answers.
Answer
-
Ureters descend retroperitoneally.
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The inner muscle of the ureter is circular, the outer muscle is longitudinal.
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There are protein plaques on the outer surface of the ureter for protection.
-
Peristalsis moves urine through the ureters.
-
The ureter enters the bladder at an oblique angle, at it's anteriolateral corners.
Question 18
Question
Choose the incorrect statement about the bladder.
Answer
-
Infections usually persist in the trigone.
-
Two ureter openings and one urethra opening forms the trigone
-
It has rugae for expansion and collapse
-
It holds ~0.8L and expands without a large increase in pressure
Question 19
Question
Select the features which define a bladder when empty?
Answer
-
Pyramidal
-
Entirely in pelvis
-
Thick walled
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Spherical
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Thin walled
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Expanded above pelvis
Question 20
Question
The internal urinary sphinctre is at the junction of the [blank_start]bladder and the urethra[blank_end]. The detrusor muscle which controls it is stimulated by the [blank_start]parasympathetic nervous system[blank_end] and so is under [blank_start]involuntary[blank_end] control.
The external urinary sphinctre is where the urethra passes through the [blank_start]urogenital diaphragm[blank_end] (pelvic floor). This is [blank_start]voluntarily[blank_end] controlled skeletal muscle.