Non-diuretic Drugs and Renal Function Flashcards

1
Q

What are the 3 processes that contribute to the renal elimination of a drug?

A

1- Glomerular Filtration 2. Tubular Secretion 3. Tubular Reabsorption

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2
Q

Which of these 3 processes is dependent on ionization status of the drug, as well as concentration gradient?

A

Tubular Reabsorption. It is a passive diffusion process, and water reabsorption is the driving force. Amount reabsorbed depends on the physical/chemical properties of the drug: pH, molecular weight, esp. lipophilicity. Some protein like drugs (B-lactams and ACE inhibitors) utilize peptide transporters on the apical membrane of the tubular epithelium. (PEPT1, PEPT2)

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3
Q

How effective is drug elimination by glomerular filtration? Why?

A

Not very. It is a low clearance process, entirely dependent on perfusion pressure of the kidney. Also: ONLY UNBOUDN DRUG in plasma can be excreted by glomerular filtration.

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4
Q

The potential for drug/drug interactions occurs with which of the 3 renal elimination routes? Explain.

A

Tubular secretion. This process is based on transporters in the basolateral and luminal side of the tubular membrane. (from blood to tubule) Drugs may be secreted by the same transporter (compete), thereby decreasing their respective clearances.

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5
Q

Why is drug elimination reduced in the elderly?

A

As we age, our kidney function declines, and so does our GFR.

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6
Q

The Crockroft-Gault equation gives a value of GFR that take what into account?

What extra factor does the MDRD1 equation account for?

A

GFR varies by individual, age, muscle mass, and sex. Cockroft-Gault equation gives a standardized measurement of GFR, taking 2 of these factors into account: Age and Sex.

MDRD1 equation also factors in RACE (whether or not you’re black)

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7
Q

To tell if kidney disease is acute or chronic, what would you do?

A

Compare current and previous Creatinine levels.

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8
Q

Why are the elderly at increased risk for NSAID adverse effects?

A

-Use them more often - Increased prevalence of conditions exacerbated by NSAIDs -More comorbid conditions -More concurrent medications

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9
Q

What conditions are exacerbated by NSAIDs?

A

HTN CHF Renal Insufficiency

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10
Q

How do NSAIDs increase Hypertension?

A

NSAIDs block prostaglandin synthesis. Decreased bloodflow to the kidney because PGs aren’t there to vasodilate the afferent arterioles. Decreased GFR. Increased RAAS –> increased vascular resistance/ Na+ and H2O retention.

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11
Q

What effects do NSAIDs elicit in a healthy person?

A

Beneficial effects of pain relief. There is no need to worry about renal NSAID adverse effects in a healthy individual, because their volume status is normal, and PG production is LOW in healthy people.

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12
Q

T/F: Prostaglandins are primary regulators of renal function.

A

FALSE! They are secondary auto regulators of bloodflow and vascular resistance.

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13
Q

What are the renal functions of PGE2 and PGI2?

A

Induce VASODILATION of the inter lobar arteries, afferent and efferent arterioles, and glomeruli.

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14
Q

Why is PG production low in healthy people and high in people with renal disease?

A

Pre-renal kidney disease involves decreased ECV, thereby activating local mediators of GFR by the kidney. The RAAS system is activated (Ang II constricts the efferent arteriole), and PGs are synthesized to maintain GFR (dilate the afferent arteriole). PGs are only used by the kidney when there is something wrong, and GFR needs to be supplemented.

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15
Q

Give a person with Bilateral Renal Artery Stenosis an NSAID. What happens?

A

The person develops Acute Kidney Failure: Acute reduction in renal bloodflow and GFR. RAS already causes a decrease in GFR, and PGs are compensating for that, trying to maintain a healthy renal bloodflow. NSAIDs take away this auto regulatory mechanism. GFR decreases further.

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16
Q

Why are PGs produced in CKD?

A

In chronic kidney diease, PGs are unregulated to increase bloodflow to the few functional neuphrons you have left.

17
Q

What happens if you give a person on ARBs or ACEi’s an NSAID?

A

ARBs and ACEi’s treat HTN and CHF.

Remember: NSAIDs exacerbate certain conditions, including HTN and CHF by messing up vascular resistance.

THIS REACTION IS ONLY A PROBLEM IN PATIENTS WITH DECREASED KIDNEY FUNCTION.

18
Q

The following drugs will cause hyperkalemia or hypokalemia? 1. Spironolactone 2. Captopril 3. Heparin 4. Amiloride/Triamterene 5. Laxatives 6. Furosemide 7. B-2 agonist (Albuterol, dopamine)

A
  1. Spironolactone - HYPERkalemia (K+ sparing diuretic, works on aldosterone receptor)
  2. Captopril - HYPERkalemia (Ace Inhibitors prevent aldosterone release. No aldosterone, no K+ secretion)
  3. Heparin - HYPERkalemia apparently
  4. Amiloride/Triamterene- HYPERkalemia ENaC channel blockers in Principal cells. Prevent Na+ reabsorption, therefore prevent K+ secretion.
  5. Laxatives - HYPOkalemia - increased flow of tubular fluid increases the intracell/extracell gradient of K+ = outflow of K+ from cells into tubular fluid.
  6. Furosemide - HYPOkalemia - Loop diuretics work in the Thick Ascending limb at the Na/K/2Cl channel. They decrease Na+ uptake there, which increased delivery of Na+ to DCT and CD. This results in a compensatory uptake of Na+ there, with simultaneous K+ outflow.
  7. B-2 agonists (Albuterol, dopamine) - HYPOkalemia - B2 agonists cause increased cellular uptake of blood K+. (ECF–> ICF movement)
19
Q

Which drug blocks Na+/K+ ATPase activity in the distal nephron?

A

Cyclosporine.

20
Q

What class of drugs causes HYPERkalemia by inhibiting Extrarenal K+ disposal?

A

B-blockers. B-agonism causes cellular uptake of K+. No stimulation = K+ stuck in the ECF.

21
Q

What drug blocks the Na+/K+ ATPase in skeletal muscle, causing HYPERkalemia?

A

Digoxin

22
Q

What drugs cause rhabdomyalysis? What is that? What does it do to plasma K+ levels? What other cell injuries can cause this K+ abnormality to happen?

A

STATINS cause Rhabdomyalysis. Rhabdomyolysis is the breakdown of muscle fibers that leads to the release of muscle fiber contents (myoglobin) into the bloodstream. Can harm the kidney. Causes HYPERkalemia, because there is significant breakdown of cells. Other means of cell breakdown: crush injuries, tumor lysis syndrome.

23
Q

What 2 drugs can cause AKI in patients with renal dysfunction?

A

ACE inhibitors and NSAIDS (due to bloodflow regulation malfunction)

24
Q

What drugs are the culprits of the most cases of drug-induced Hyperkalemia?

A

Spironolactone, Eplerenone - K+ sparing ALDOSTERONE ANTAGONONISTS ACEi’s,

ARBs. - either prevent aldosterone from being secreted or block its effects.

Blocking Aldosterone leads to hyperkalemia. Bottom line.

25
Q

Your patient who is on Spironolactone shows EKG changes consistent with Hyperkalemia. You send the labs off but they won’t be done for an hour. Do you treat for hyperkalemia or wait?

A

TREAT IMMEDIATELY

26
Q

How do you treat Hyperkalemia?

A
  1. Calcium Gluconate - temporarily stabilizes the myocardium.
  2. Make the K+ in the blood go to the ICF –> B-agonist (albuterol), or Insulin+Glucose
  3. Eliminate the Excess K+ –> Kayexalate
27
Q

What effects does Calcium Gluconate have on the myocardium?

A

Temporary stabilization of the myocytes.

  1. Shift in resting membrane potential closer to normal (from the hyperkalemic state of -90 to -80)
  2. Increased availability of calcium in calcium-dependent tissues like the SA and AV node.
28
Q

How does Albuterol increase the cellular uptake of K+?

A

Albuterol is a B-agonist.

B2 stimulation causes increase in cellular uptake of K+ via activation of the Na+/K+ ATPase

29
Q

How does Insulin increase cellular uptake of K+?

A

Activates the Na+/H+ exchanger, increasing intracellular content of Na+, which stimulates the Na+/K+ exchanger to pump Na+ out and K+ in. INDIRECT MECHANISM.

30
Q

Describe the relationship between Magnesium levels and K+ levels.

A

Low levels of Mg2+ can exacerbate hypokalemia. Under normal physiologic concentrations, Mg2+ keeps K+ in cells by physically occluding the outward transporter, but not inhibiting the INWARD movement of K+. When Mg2+ is gone, K+ moves in and out more easily. You can’t fix Hypokalemia if you have low Mg2+ levels.

31
Q

What is the most common cause of drug-induced hypokalemia? Second?

A

Anti-infective agents. 2nd - Diuretics

32
Q

Hypokalemia caused by diuretics is also associated with another blood condition. What?

A

Metabolic alkalosis. remember: Metabolic alkalosis is often associated with Hypokalemia.

33
Q

How do you fix Hypokalemia?

A

Potassium supplements K+ sparing diuretics Stop whatever meds that are causing it.