Thiazide Diuretics Flashcards
1
Q
examples
A
bendroflumethiazide and metolazone
2
Q
mechanism of action
A
blocks the Na+/Cl- co-transporter in the distal convoluted tubule hence increasing water loss
3
Q
why are thiazide diuretics not that potent
A
because over 90% of sodium in the filtrate has already been re-absorbed by the time the filtrate reaches the distal convoluted tubule
4
Q
pros of thiazide diuretics
A
- they are well absorbed orally
- they cause vasodilation to reduce total peripheral resistance (mechanism of this is unknown)
5
Q
cons of thiazide diuretics
A
- ineffective if the Estimated glomerular filtration rate is less than 30ml/min/1.73 metres squared
- hypokalaemia, hyponatraemia, hypomagnasaemia
- metabolic alkalosis
- hypercalcaemia
- hyperglycaemia
- hyperlipidaemia
- hyperuricaemia thiazides classica precipitate gout
6
Q
why do thiazide diuretics cause hypercalcaemia
A
- thiazide diuretics cause water depletion in the proximal convoluted tubule which causes compensatory increase in sodium re-absorpion in the proximal convoluted tubule which generates an electrical gradient leading to passive calcium re-absorption
- Na+/Cl- transporter is blocked therefore, there is reduced sodium in the cell which causes the Na/Ca+ EXCHANGER ON THE BASOLATAERL MEMBRANE to become activated bringing sodium into the cell and moving calcium into the blood