Title: DIURETICS AND ELECTROLYTE DISTURBANCES
1DIURETICS AND ELECTRO-LYTE DISTURBANCES
- DAVID G. WARNOCK, MD
- UNIVERSITY OF ALABAMA
- AT BIRMINGHAM
2DIURETICS AND ELECTROLYTE DISTURBANCES
- REVIEW TUBULAR TRANSPORT AND DIURETIC MECHANISMS
OF ACTION - REVIEW INDICATIONS AND SIDE EFFECTS OF DIURETIC
CLASSES - DEVELOP AN UNDERSTANDING OF CLINICAL SITUATIONS
WHERE THE CHOICE OF A SPECIFIC DIURETIC AGENT
MAKES A DIFFERENCE
3DIURETICS AND ELECTROLYTE DISTURBANCES
- PROXIMAL TUBULE - CA INHIBITORS
- THICK ASCENDING LIMB -
- LOOP AGENTS
- DISTAL CONVOLUTED TUBULE -
- THIAZIDE DIURETICS
- COLLECTING TUBULE -
- K SPARING DIURETICS
- OSMOTIC DIURETICS
4DIURETICS AND ELECTROLYTE DISTURBANCES
- DIURETIC-INDUCED RENAL K WASTING
- Increased Distal Na Delivery Drives K Secretion
- High Renin and Aldo
- H Secretion is Also Enhanced
- Associated Metabolic Alkalosis
5PROXIMAL TUBULE CARBONIC ANHYDRASE INHIBITORS
- SITE OF ACTION
- INHIBITS HCO3 REABSORPTION IN PROXIMAL TUBULE
- BICARBONATURIA RESULTS FROM ??CA ACTIVITY IN BBM
- SHORT TERM ??IN URINE pH
6PROXIMAL TUBULE CARBONIC ANHYDRASE INHIBITORS
- INDICATIONS
- GLAUCOMA, URINE ALKALINIZATION, MOUNTAIN SICKNESS
- TOXICITIES
- HYPERCHLOREMIC METABOLIC ACIDOSIS
- CaPO4 STONES
- RENAL K WASTING
- NH3 INTOXICATION
7THICK ASCENDING LIMB
- LOOP AGENTS INHIBIT Na, K, 2Cl- CO-TRANSPORTER
AT THE LUMEN SIDE - REDUCE THE POSI-TIVE TRANSPORT POTENTIAL TO ZERO
- INCREASE URINARY NaCl and K, Mg2 AND Ca2
EXCRETION
8THICK ASCENDING LIMB
- INDICATIONS FOR LOOP AGENTS
- Pulmonary Edema
- Refractory Edema
- Hypercalcemia
- TOXICITIES
- K and Mg2 Wasting
- Metabolic Alkalosis
- Hypercalciuria
- Ototoxicity
9DISTAL CONVOLUTED TUBULE
- THIAZIDES INHIBIT THE LUMINAL NaCl COTRANSPORTER
- REDUCE THE NEGA-TIVE TRANSPORT POTENTIAL TO 0 mV
- INCREASE URINARY NaCl and K, BUT NOT Ca2
EXCRETION
10DISTAL CONVOLUTED TUBULE THIAZIDES
- Ca2 ABSORPTION IS ENHANCED
- Negative Transepithelial Potential Retards Ca2
Absorption - Thiazides Take the Brake Off by Reducing the
Transport PD to Zero - Alternatively, Hyperpolarization of Membrane PD
May Activate Ca2 Entry - Thiazide Effect on Ca2 Absorption is Blunted by
Excess Dietary NaCl
11DISTAL CONVOLUTED TUBULE
- INDICATIONS FOR THIAZIDES
- HTN and CHF
- Hypercalciuria
- TOXICITIES
- Renal K Wasting
- Metabolic Alkalosis
- Increased Lipids, Uric Acid and Glucose
12COMBINED USE OF AGENTS
- THIAZIDES AND LOOP AGENTS HAVE DISTINCT SITES AND
MECHANISMS OF ACTION - TRUE SYNERGIC EFFECT OCCURS
- UNMASKING OF A PROXIMAL EFFECT
- ADAPTATION OF DISTAL CONVOLUTED TUBULE TO CHRONIC
INHIBITION OF THICK ASCENDING LIMB FUNCTION
13COMBINED USE OF AGENTS
- INDICATIONS FOR COMBINED THERAPY
- REFRACTORY EDEMA
- SEVERE HYPERKALEMIA
- TOXICITIES
- RENAL K WASTING
- METABOLIC ALKALOSIS
14DIURETICS AND ELECTROLYTE DISTURBANCES
- DIURETIC-INDUCED RENAL K WASTING
- Increased Distal Na Delivery Drives K Secretion
- High Renin and Aldo
- H Secretion is Also Enhanced
- Associated Metabolic Alkalosis
15COLLECTING TUBULE
- SITE OF FINAL REGULATION OF SALT, WATER AND
ACID-BASE BALANCE - MULTITUDE OF HORMONAL CONTROL MECHANISMS
- 3 SPECIFIC FUNCTIONAL ASPECTS
- Na and K Transport
- Water Transport
- H Transport
16COLLECTING TUBULE
- K SPARING AGENTS INHIBIT LUMINAL Na CHANNEL
ACTIVITY - REDUCE THE NEGA-TIVE TRANSPORT PD TO ZERO
- INCREASE URINARY NaCl EXCRETION
17COLLECTING TUBULE
- INDICATIONS FOR K SPARING AGENTS
- Primary and Secon-dary Aldosteronism
- TOXICITIES
- Hyperkalemia
- Metabolic Acidosis
- BPH, Gynecomastia with Spironolactone
- ARF, Stones
18DIURETIC INDUCED K WASTING
- REDUCE DIURETIC DOSING TO ? ALDO
- REDUCE DIETARY NaCl INTAKE
- K SUPPLEMENTS
- ADD K SPARING DIURETICS IN CON- JUNCTION WITH
SALT RESTRICTION
19COLLECTING TUBULEADH RESPONSE
- HYDRO-OSMOTIC RESPONSE TO ADH CONCENTRATES THE
URINE - AQP-3 Expressed in the Baso-Lateral Membrane
- ADH causes insertion of AQP-2 into the apical
membrane
20COLLECTING TUBULE OSMOTIC DIURETICS
- OSMOTIC H2O FLOW IS DRIVEN BY MEDUL-LARY
HYPERTONICITY - OSMOTIC DIURETICS OBLIGATE FREE WATER EXCRETION
- MAJOR EFFECT IN H2O PERMEABLE SEGMENTS
21COLLECTING TUBULE OSMOTIC DIURETICS
- INDICATIONS FOR OSMOTIC AGENTS
- REDUCTION OF INTRACELLULAR VOLUME (eg. CEREBRAL
EDEMA) - INTRA-TUBULAR OBSTRUCTION (CAST NEPHROPATHY,
RHABDOMYOLYSIS) - TOXICITIES
- HYPERNATREMIA
- VOLUME DEPLETION
- ACUTE RENAL FAILURE
22DIURETICS AND ELECTROLYTE DISTURBANCES
- REVIEW TUBULAR TRANSPORT AND DIURETIC MECHANISMS
OF ACTION - Specificity of Diuretic Effects Are a Reflection
of Their Sites of Action - Tubular Transport Mechanisms Have Been Recently
Illuminated By Studies of the Effects of Specific
Diuretic Agents - Linear Heterogeneity and Integrative Function
Explain Global Effects
23DIURETICS AND ELECTROLYTE DISTURBANCES
- REVIEW INDICATIONS AND SIDE EFFECTS OF DIURETIC
CLASSES - Side Effects Are in Large Part Dose-Dependent and
Predictable From the Known Effects of Each
Diuretic Class - Specific Indications Are Predicated On the
Effects of Each Class of Agents - Combination Agents Can Be Rational Therapeutic
Choices