glomérule
Glomérule, in anatomy, is the French term for the glomerulus, a tuft of capillaries at the vascular pole of each nephron in the kidney. It sits within Bowman's capsule and serves as the primary site of blood filtration, producing the filtrate that becomes urine after tubular processing. Blood enters through the afferent arteriole, passes through the capillary tuft with fenestrated endothelium, and exits via the efferent arteriole. The filtration barrier comprises the fenestrated endothelium, the glomerular basement membrane, and slit diaphragms formed by podocyte foot processes, with mesangial cells providing structural support.
Filtration is size- and charge-selective, allowing water and small solutes through while restricting larger proteins and
Renal hemodynamics regulate GFR. Autoregulation includes the myogenic response of the afferent arteriole and tubuloglomerular feedback
Clinical relevance: glomerular injury affects permeability and filtration, causing proteinuria, hematuria, or reduced GFR. Glomerular diseases
Development: glomeruli arise during nephron development from metanephric mesenchyme in response to signals from the ureteric