renal medulla

part of the kidney

DBpedia resource is: http://dbpedia.org/resource/Renal_medulla

Abstract is: The renal medulla is the innermost part of the kidney. The renal medulla is split up into a number of sections, known as the renal pyramids. Blood enters into the kidney via the renal artery, which then splits up to form the segmental arteries which then branch to form interlobar arteries. The interlobar arteries each in turn branch into arcuate arteries, which in turn branch to form interlobular arteries, and these finally reach the glomeruli. At the glomerulus the blood reaches a highly disfavourable pressure gradient and a large exchange surface area, which forces the serum portion of the blood out of the vessel and into the renal tubules. Flow continues through the renal tubules, including the proximal tubule, the Loop of Henle, through the distal tubule and finally leaves the kidney by means of the collecting duct, leading to the renal pelvis, the dilated portion of the ureter. The renal medulla (Latin: medulla renis 'marrow of the kidney') contains the structures of the nephrons responsible for maintaining the salt and water balance of the blood. These structures include the vasa rectae (both spuria and vera), the venulae rectae, the medullary capillary plexus, the loop of Henle, and the collecting tubule. The renal medulla is hypertonic to the filtrate in the nephron and aids in the reabsorption of water. Blood is filtered in the glomerulus by solute size. Ions such as sodium, chloride, potassium, and calcium are easily filtered, as is glucose. Proteins are not passed through the glomerular filter because of their large size, and do not appear in the filtrate or urine unless a disease process has affected the glomerular capsule or the proximal and distal convoluted tubules of the nephron. Though the renal medulla only receives a small percentage of the renal blood flow, the oxygen extraction is very high, causing a low oxygen tension and more importantly, a critical sensitivity to hypotension, hypoxia, and blood flow. The renal medulla extracts oxygen at a ratio of ~80% making it exquisitely sensitive to small changes in renal blood flow. The mechanisms of many perioperative renal insults are based on the disruption of adequate blood flow (and therefore oxygen delivery) to the renal medulla.

renal medulla is …
instance of (P31):
class of anatomical entityQ112826905

sublass of (P279):
set of organ components of kidneyQ66576434
particular anatomical entityQ112826975

External links are
P2581BabelNet ID03426021n
03426021n
P1417Encyclopædia Britannica Online IDscience/renal-medulla
P1402Foundational Model of Anatomy ID74268
P646Freebase ID/m/02t_3z
P7807ICD-11 ID (Foundation)1760114524
P7329ICD-11 ID (MMS)XA91E4
P3827JSTOR topic ID (archived)kidney-medulla
P486MeSH descriptor IDD007679
P672MeSH tree codeA05.810.453.466
P6366Microsoft Academic ID2776295608
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2780512574
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P1748NCI Thesaurus IDC12740
P10283OpenAlex IDC2780371755
C2780512574
P7173TA2 ID3369
P3982TA98 Latin termmedulla renalis
P1323Terminologia Anatomica 98 IDA08.1.01.020
P1554UBERON ID0000362
P2892UMLS CUIC0022664
C0022666
C0227629
P3471WikiSkripta article ID8578

P927anatomical locationkidneyQ9377
P1343described by sourceGray's Anatomy (20th edition)Q19558994
P527has part(s)inner renal medullaQ55631905
outer renal medullaQ55632159
P361part ofmetanephrosQ2366267