Dynamics of glomerular ultrafiltration in the rat. IV. Determination of the ultrafiltration coefficient

WM Deen, JL Troy, CR Robertson… - The Journal of clinical …, 1973 - Am Soc Clin Investig
WM Deen, JL Troy, CR Robertson, BM Brenner
The Journal of clinical investigation, 1973Am Soc Clin Investig
Pressures and flow rates were measured in accessible surface glomeruli of mutant Wistar
rats under conditions deliberately designed to prevent achievement of filtration pressure
equilibrium, that is, the equalization of transcapillary hydrostatic and oncotic pressures by
the efferent end of the glomerulus as typically observed in the normal hydropenic rat.
Disequilibrium was obtained at elevated levels of glomerular plasma flow (GPF) brought
about by acute expansion of plasma volume with a volume of rat plasma equal to 5% of …
Pressures and flow rates were measured in accessible surface glomeruli of mutant Wistar rats under conditions deliberately designed to prevent achievement of filtration pressure equilibrium, that is, the equalization of transcapillary hydrostatic and oncotic pressures by the efferent end of the glomerulus as typically observed in the normal hydropenic rat. Disequilibrium was obtained at elevated levels of glomerular plasma flow (GPF) brought about by acute expansion of plasma volume with a volume of rat plasma equal to 5% of body weight. Glomerular hydrostatic and oncotic pressures measured at high GPF were used to calculate the ultrafiltration coefficient, Kf, the product of effective hydraulic permeability and surface area. GPF was then either lowered (by aortic constriction) or raised (by carotid occlusion) in order to examine the dependence of Kf on GPF. The value of Kf per glomerulus, 0.08 nl/(s·mm Hg), was found not to vary over an approximately twofold range of GPF. This finding, taken together with data from previous studies from this laboratory, leads us to conclude that plasma-flow dependence of glomerular filtration rate (GFR) results primarily from flow-induced changes in mean ultrafiltration pressure, rather than large changes in Kf.
The Journal of Clinical Investigation