JoVE Logo

登录

6.4 : Renal Drug Excretion: Glomerular Filtration

The kidney serves as the primary organ responsible for eliminating drugs and their metabolites from the body. This process, known as renal elimination, starts with glomerular filtration and results in urine formation. Each kidney houses millions of functional units called nephrons, where urine production occurs. A nephron has two main components: a renal corpuscle and a renal tubule.

Drugs gain access to the kidney via the renal artery, which progressively branches off into afferent arterioles. The drug is then transported to the glomerulus, a network of capillaries enclosed by Bowman's capsule, located within the renal corpuscle section of the nephron. Due to the porous nature of the glomerular capillaries' endothelium and the elevated hydrostatic blood pressure inside the capillaries, unbound drug molecules, plasma, and other small solutes are pushed out of the glomerulus and into Bowman's capsule through a mechanism known as glomerular filtration. The resulting fluid, or renal filtrate, moves into the renal tubule portion of the nephron, where it ultimately forms urine.

Factors such as the glomerular filtration rate and the level of drug binding to plasma proteins determine the number of drugs that enter the tubule. Drugs not included in the filtrate leave the glomerulus via efferent arterioles.

Tags

Renal Drug ExcretionGlomerular FiltrationKidneyRenal EliminationUrine FormationNephronsRenal CorpuscleRenal TubuleGlomerulusBowman s CapsuleGlomerular CapillariesHydrostatic Blood PressureRenal FiltrateGlomerular Filtration RateDrug Binding

来自章节 6:

article

Now Playing

6.4 : Renal Drug Excretion: Glomerular Filtration

Pharmacokinetics: Drug Excretion and Clearance

130 Views

article

6.1 : Drug Elimination: Overview

Pharmacokinetics: Drug Excretion and Clearance

979 Views

article

6.2 : Elimination Kinetics: First-Order and Zero-Order

Pharmacokinetics: Drug Excretion and Clearance

395 Views

article

6.3 : Renal Drug Excretion: Overview

Pharmacokinetics: Drug Excretion and Clearance

100 Views

article

6.5 : Renal Drug Excretion: Tubular Reabsorption

Pharmacokinetics: Drug Excretion and Clearance

88 Views

article

6.6 : Renal Drug Excretion: Tubular Secretion

Pharmacokinetics: Drug Excretion and Clearance

114 Views

article

6.7 : Renal Drug Excretion: Effect of Urine pH, Flow Rate, and Drug pKa

Pharmacokinetics: Drug Excretion and Clearance

132 Views

article

6.8 : Hepatic Drug Excretion: Enterohepatic Cycling

Pharmacokinetics: Drug Excretion and Clearance

954 Views

article

6.9 : Hepatic Drug Excretion: Influencing Factors

Pharmacokinetics: Drug Excretion and Clearance

79 Views

article

6.10 : Drug Excretion: Pulmonary and Glandular Routes

Pharmacokinetics: Drug Excretion and Clearance

66 Views

article

6.11 : Drug Excretion: Miscellaneous Routes

Pharmacokinetics: Drug Excretion and Clearance

34 Views

article

6.12 : Drug Clearance: Overview

Pharmacokinetics: Drug Excretion and Clearance

46 Views

article

6.13 : Clearance Models: Physiological Models

Pharmacokinetics: Drug Excretion and Clearance

45 Views

article

6.14 : Clearance Models: Compartment Models

Pharmacokinetics: Drug Excretion and Clearance

47 Views

article

6.15 : Clearance Models: Noncompartmental Models

Pharmacokinetics: Drug Excretion and Clearance

37 Views

See More

JoVE Logo

政策

使用条款

隐私

科研

教育

关于 JoVE

版权所属 © 2025 MyJoVE 公司版权所有,本公司不涉及任何医疗业务和医疗服务。