Countercurrent systems have evolved in a variety of biological systems that allow transfer of heat, gases and solutes. For example, in the renal medulla, the countercurrent arrangement of vascular and tubular elements facilitates the trapping of urea and other solutes in the inner medulla, which in turn enables the formation of concentrated urine. Arteries and veins in the cortex are also arranged in a countercurrent fashion, as are descending and ascending vasa recta in the medulla. For countercurrent diffusion to occur, barriers to diffusion must be small. This appears to be characteristic of larger vessels in the renal cortex. There must also be gradients in the concentration of molecules between afferent and efferent vessels, with the t...
The general nature of the process that is responsible for the formation of concentrated urine is wel...
Since the paper by Wirz, Hargitay, and Kuhn in 1951 [1], the proposal of Kuhn and his colleagues [2–...
Physiologic variation in rate of urine flow in mammals is ascribed principally to reabsorption from ...
To understand how arterial-to-venous (AV) oxygen shunting influences kidney oxygenation, a mathemati...
The kidneys receive ~25% of the cardiac output but weigh ~1% of total body weight. Yet the kidney is...
The concept that the arrangement of vascular bundles of descending and ascending vasa recta subserve...
To understand how geometric factors affect arterial-to-venous (AV) oxygen shunting, a mathematical m...
Renal arterial-to-venous (AV) oxygen shunting limits oxygen delivery to renal tissue. To better unde...
It is now generally accepted that urinary concentration is achieved via the countercurrent hypothesi...
The production of concentrated urine is achieved by osmotic equilibration of the collecting duct lum...
Factors maintaining a pH gradient within the kidney: Role of the vasculature architecture.Background...
Introduction and Aims: Diffusion of oxygen from arteries to veins in the kidney (AV oxygen shunting)...
To assess the physiological significance of arterial-to-venous (AV) oxygen shunting, we generated a ...
The ability of mammals to produce urine hyperosmotic to plasma requires the generation of a gradient...
Although no unified theory has been established to account for the mechanisms of formation of concen...
The general nature of the process that is responsible for the formation of concentrated urine is wel...
Since the paper by Wirz, Hargitay, and Kuhn in 1951 [1], the proposal of Kuhn and his colleagues [2–...
Physiologic variation in rate of urine flow in mammals is ascribed principally to reabsorption from ...
To understand how arterial-to-venous (AV) oxygen shunting influences kidney oxygenation, a mathemati...
The kidneys receive ~25% of the cardiac output but weigh ~1% of total body weight. Yet the kidney is...
The concept that the arrangement of vascular bundles of descending and ascending vasa recta subserve...
To understand how geometric factors affect arterial-to-venous (AV) oxygen shunting, a mathematical m...
Renal arterial-to-venous (AV) oxygen shunting limits oxygen delivery to renal tissue. To better unde...
It is now generally accepted that urinary concentration is achieved via the countercurrent hypothesi...
The production of concentrated urine is achieved by osmotic equilibration of the collecting duct lum...
Factors maintaining a pH gradient within the kidney: Role of the vasculature architecture.Background...
Introduction and Aims: Diffusion of oxygen from arteries to veins in the kidney (AV oxygen shunting)...
To assess the physiological significance of arterial-to-venous (AV) oxygen shunting, we generated a ...
The ability of mammals to produce urine hyperosmotic to plasma requires the generation of a gradient...
Although no unified theory has been established to account for the mechanisms of formation of concen...
The general nature of the process that is responsible for the formation of concentrated urine is wel...
Since the paper by Wirz, Hargitay, and Kuhn in 1951 [1], the proposal of Kuhn and his colleagues [2–...
Physiologic variation in rate of urine flow in mammals is ascribed principally to reabsorption from ...