Filtration is the process by which water and solutes in the blood leave the vascular system through the filtration barrier and enter Bowman’s space (a space that is topologically outside the body).
Secretion is the process of moving substances into the tubular lumen from the cytosol of epithelial cells that form the walls of the nephron. Secreted substances may originate by synthesis within the epithelial cells or, more often, by crossing the epithelial layer from the surrounding renal interstitium.
Reabsorption is the process of moving substances from the lumen across the epithelial layer into the surrounding interstitium. In most cases, reabsorbed substances then move from the interstitium into surrounding blood vessels, so that the term
reabsorption implies a 2-step process of removal from the lumen followed by movement into the blood.
Excretion means exit of the substance from the body (ie, the substance is present in the final urine produced by the kidneys).
Synthesis means that a substance is constructed from molecular precursors, and
catabolism means the substance is broken down into smaller component molecules.
The 3 basic renal processes. Only the directions of reabsorption and secretion, not specific sites or order of occurrence, are shown. Depending on the specific substance, reabsorption and secretion can occur at various sites along the tubule. The renal handling of any substance consists of some combination of the justmentioned processes. If we can answer the following questions, we can know what the kidney does with a given substance. Is it filtered? Is it secreted? Is it reabsorbed? Is it synthesized? Is it catabolized?
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