A-27. Potassium excreting (wasting) diuretics Flashcards

1
Q

Which solutes are reabsorbed in the Proximal Convoluted Tubules?

A

66% of sodium and potassium; 85% bicarbonate; almost all glucose and Amino Acids are reabsorbed

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2
Q

In the Tall Ascending Limb how much sodium is reabsorbed?

A

20% sodium reabsorbed

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3
Q

Which are the other two sites of Sodium reabsorption in the renal tubules

A

Distal Convoluted Tubule (10% Na reabs) and Collecting Tubules (3% Na reabsor)

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4
Q

Classification of Diuretic Medication
3 K+ wasting diuretics
2 others

A

K+ wasting diuretics
1.) Carbonic Anhydrase inhibitors- work in PCT
2.) Loop diuretics- TAL
3.)Thiazide- DCT (main idication: hypertension, mild edemas)
Other diuretics
4.) K+-Sparing Diuretics- collecting tubules, in combo with K-wasting diuretics
5.) Osmotic Diuretics

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5
Q

Carbonic anhydrase inhibitors cause

A

Bicarbonate, Na+, and H2O to be excreted causing lose of fluid and alkaline urine.
Later Na+ exchanged for K+ in collecting tubules causing hypokalemia
Also leads to more Cl- reabsorption and retention of H+ causing hypercholemic metabolic acidosis

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6
Q

Carbonic anhydrase inhibitor drugs

A

Dorzolamide and Acetazolamide

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7
Q

Dorzolamide used for?

A

Used topically to treat glaucoma since ciliary body normally secretes HCO3 from blood into aqueous humor

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8
Q

Acetazolamide indications

A

1.) broad spectrum anti-epileptics
Slight acidosis inhibits neurons
Commonly used for women with seizures during mentruation
2.)Acute mountain sickness
-with dizziness, weakness, insomnia, HA, nausea +/- pulmonary and cerebral edema
-CA inhibition decrease CSF production and pH which increases ventilation and decreases hypoxia and symptoms
3.) Chronic metabolic alkalosis
4.)glaucoma
(idiopathic intracranial hypertension and cystine/urate stone prevention with increased urine pH)

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9
Q

Side effects of Acetazolamide

A

1.) Hypercholermic metabolic acidosis with normal anion gap
2.)Hypokalemia
3.) Renal stones (Ca3(PO3)2 due to alkaline urine
(Type 2 Renal Tubular Acidosis and Hypersensitivity)

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10
Q

Most effective diuretic

A

Loop Diuretics

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11
Q

Where and how does loop diuretics act?

A

On the TAL (where 25% Na is reabs) by inhibiting the Na/K/2Cl cotransporter
(Does not cause an acidosis)

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12
Q

What are the consequences of blocking the Na/K/2Cl cotransportor

A
  • loss of water (diuresis)
  • Na+ exchanged for K+ in the distal collecting tubule (hypokalemia)
  • No electrochemical gradient made by K+ so Ca2+/Mg is not reabsorbed
  • COX expression increases prostaglandins leading to direct vasodilation of vena cava to diminish pulmonary edema
  • RBF and renin increased
  • metabolic alkalosis in patient
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13
Q

How is the loss of calcium later compensated by the body? Magnesium?

A

PTH allows for active reabsorption of Ca2+

Magnesium needs to be given orally

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14
Q

Loop Diuretic Drugs (3)

A

Furosemide, Torsemide, and Ethacrynic Acid (not a sulfa drug)

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15
Q

Indications of Loop diuretics

A

1.) Edema
2.) Hypertension
3.) Acute Renal Failure-except anuric patients
4.) Chronic Renal Failure
5.) Hypercalcemia-
6.)Intoxications (halogen/alkali metal poisoning except Li)
(Ascites?)

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16
Q

Dosage of loop diuretics for Interstitial/pulmonary edema via chronic heart failure? Dosage for pulmonary edema from acute LV failure?

A
  1. ) 20 mg furosemide oral daily
  2. ) IV furosemide 40 mg, repeatable after half an hour acts first by dilating large veins such as vena cava, then by diuretic action)
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17
Q

Drug and dosage for loop diuretic use in hypertension?

A

Torsemide 2-3 mg

18
Q

Drug and dosage for loop diuretic use in chronic renal failure?

A

Furosemide 200-2000 mg oral (binds protein so need high dosage to have effective dose)

19
Q

Contraindications for loop diuretics?

A

Cirrhosis since there is a risk of hepatic encephalopathy.
Ammonia level increases due to metabolic alkalosis in the body that inhibits ammonia transformation into ammonium.
Ammonia crosses the BBB leading to encephalopathy

20
Q

Side effects of loop diuretics

A
  1. )Hypokalemia
  2. ) Hypomagnesium
  3. ) Metabolic alkalosis
  4. ) Ototoxicity (transient deafness)
  5. ) Hyperuricemia
  6. ) Impaired glucose tolerance
  7. ) Hyperlipidemia (increased LDL)
  8. ) Interstitial Nephritis
21
Q

Metabolic alkalosis mechanism

A

Hypovolemia increases renin and aldosterone. Aldosterone causes K+ and H+ excretion; increases angiotensin II also which directly increases Na/H exchange in PCT

22
Q

Is the loop diuretic ototoxicity reversible?

A

Yes to a point, then can cause definite ototoxicity. Don’t combine with other ototoxic drugs like aminoglycosides

23
Q

How is hyperuricemia caused by loop diuretics?

A

hypovolemia associated increase of uric acid reabsorption in PCT. May cause gouty arthritis. Avoidable by starting lower doses then increasing dosage

24
Q

Impaired glucose intolerance in loop diuretics can be explained by?

A

Hypokalemia causes decreased insulin secretion and peripheral glucose uptake

25
Q

Which structural component of loop diuretics causes interstitial nephritis?

A

Sulfonamide structure of many loop diuetics leading to hypersensitivity reaction including interstitial nephritis, rash, and eosinophilia

26
Q

Loop diuretics interactions

A

NSAIDS due to COX inhibition interferes with high PGs which increases effects of loop diuretics

27
Q

K+ wasting diuretic that acts at the DCT (10% of Na)

A

Thiazide diuretics which inhibit the Na/Cl cotransporter

28
Q

Main indication of Thiazide diuretics are?

A

hypertension with moderate diuretic effect

29
Q

Typically in the DCT what ions are reabsorbed?

A

Usually a a Na/Cl cotransporter reabsorbs both and Calcium channel causes reabsorption with a basolateral Ca/Na exchange

30
Q

Less Na sodium reabsorption causes

A

osmotic diuresis and enhanced activity of basal Na/Ca exchanger (limited by PTH-regulation)

31
Q

Thiazide drugs (4)

A

Hydrochlorothiazide
Clopamide
Indapamide
Chlorthalidone

32
Q

Hydochlorothiazide 3 drug dosage and uses

A

(Diuretic use 5 mg)??
hypertension (25-100 mg)??
CHF (25-100 mg)
look at dosage list

33
Q

Indications of thiazide drugs

A
  1. ) Hypertension
  2. ) Edema
  3. ) Idiopathic Nephrogenic Calciuria/ renal Ca stones
  4. ) Osteoporosis (calcium reabsorption)
  5. ) Nephrogenic DI
  6. ) Heart failure
34
Q

How long til thiazide diuresis effect fades? Why

A

2-3 weeks
This is due to decrease in EC space which increases diameter of vessels, maybe due to decreased Na
Secondary decrease in Ca

35
Q

Why do thiazide drugs help in CHF? Are they used in severe hypertensive emergencies?

A

They decrease preload of heart and are NOT used in hypertensive emergencies (use loop diuretics instead)

36
Q

Mechanism of treating renal Ca stones/ Idiopathic Nephrogenic Calciuria

A

Decreased Urine Calcium via increased calcium reabsorption in DCT

37
Q

Nephrogenic DI treatment mechanism

A

Li treatment; work via hypovolemia-induced increase of Na/water reabsorption in proximal nephron
Also decreases hypertonicity of plasma which decreases thirst

38
Q

Heart failure thiazide drugs are combined with what other drugs?

A

Loop diuretics

39
Q

Side effects thiazide drugs

A

1.) Hypokalemia
2.) Metabolic Alkalosis
3.) Impaired Glucose Tolerance
4.) Acute hypouricemia (urea wasting) and chronic hyperuricemia (more transporters?)
5.) Hyperlipidemia (LDL)
(rarely hypercalcemia + Hyponatremia, more water loss + hypersensitivity since they are also sulfa drugs)

40
Q

Thiazide interations

A

Lithium causes they decrease Li renal clearance increasing risk of lithium toxicity