Title: CORE AREA 2 CARDIOVASCULAR Topic C
1CORE AREA 2CARDIOVASCULAR Topic C
2CASE STUDY
- Mr. DD
- 60 years old
- smoker gt 40 years
- Conditions CHF and COPD
- Medications
- - enalapril 10mg BD
- - frusemide 80mg mane
- - salbutamol MDI prn
3Mr. DDs Biochemistry Results
4Syndrome of Inappropriate Anti-Diuretic Hormone
(SIADH)
- Is characterised by the sustained and
inappropriate release of ADH from the posterior
pituitary gland. - Continued release of ADH despite fluid intake,
interferes with the osmoregulation of thirst. - Ingested fluid is retained and the extracellular
fluid expands and cells become hypo-osmolar.
Patients excrete small amounts of concentrated
urine
5Clinical Manifestations of SIADH
- Cardinal signs of SIADH are
- Hyponatremia serum Na lt 120mmol/L
- Serum hypo-osmolality (overhydration)
- Normal acid-base and potassium balance
- Concentrated urine
- Low blood urea and nitrogen levels
6Clinical Manifestations of SIADH (contd)
- Anorexia, nausea, vomiting, abdominal cramps,
muscle weakness and fatigue. - CNS effects abnormal mental status, seizures,
hallucinations, headaches and confusion. - Common causes of SIADH include
- Malignancies e.g. tumours
- Pulmonary lesions and other lung diseases
- Neurological (CNS) disorders
- Medications e.g. psychoactive drugs, oral
hypogylcaemics and substances e.g. nicotine
7Hypernatraemia
- Acute hyponatraemia
- Serum Na lt 115 mmol/L in 48 hours.
- Cerebral oedema results in symptoms of headache,
nausea, restlessness and drowsiness. - Should be corrected quickly to 130 mmol/L to
prevent permanent brain damage. - Chronic hyponatraemia
- Serum Na lt 125 mmol/L
- Patients can present with mild symptoms or be
asymptomatic (50 of patients). No brain oedema. - Rate of correction 0.5 mmol/hr till Na reaches
130 mmol/L.
8Treatment of SIADH
- Aims to decrease fluid retention in order to
treat dilutional hyponatraemia. This is achieved
with Frusemide, a loop diuretic. - Other treatments aimed to treat hyponatraemia
include fluid intake restriction to 0.5 1L
daily, or Demeclocycline (tetracycline AB)
6001200mg daily if fluid restriction is
insufficient. - However, demeclocycline is inappropriate for Mr.
DD, as it may cause irreversible nephrotoxicity
in patients with oedema forming disorders e.g.
CHF.
9Which of Mr. DDs medications are associated with
hyponatraemia SIADH?
- Enalapril (ACE-Inhibitor) is associated with
hyponatraemia, but is not documented to cause
SIADH. - ACE-I blocks conversion of Angiotensin I to II
Increased circulation of angiotensin II, may
stimulate thirst and the release of ADH and
hyponatremia. - Frusemide (loop diuretic)- used for treatment of
SIADH, but can cause hyponatraemia. It works with
high efficacy at the loop of Henle to block Na
and Cl- reabsorption. - Salbutamol- unlikely to cause these problems
10How does COPD predispose to hyponatremia or SIADH?
- COPD is a condition which is characterised by
chronic bronchitis and progressive airway
obstruction. - There are many drugs and disease states which
may cause SIADH. COPD and nicotine are examples
of these, however the direct MOA is unknown.
11How does CHF predispose to SIADH and
hyponatraemia.
- CHF (Congestive Heart Failure) is a condition
where there is an accumulation of fluid within
the body caused by the heart pumping
inefficiently. - An accumulation of body fluid results in dilution
of solutes such as sodium i.e. dilutional
hyponatremia results. - Diuretics are used to treat CHF which depletes
the body of solutes and therefore contributes to
hyponatraemia.
12Conclusion of SIADH
- Potential risk of Mr DDs developing SIADH
presenting as low osmolality and hyponatraemia is
high - Pathology results low sodium and especially low
urea are indicative of SIADH. - Use of frusemide, which interferes with the
reabsorption of sodium, and enalapril, which
causes hyponatremia. - Fluid retention caused by CHF causing dilution of
sodium - COPD and nicotine may contribute to SIADH by
increasing the release of ADH.
13Digoxin
- Used to treat heart failure
- Narrow therapeutic window
- Normal dose 1-2 ng/mL
- Toxic dose gt2 ng/mL
- Signs of toxicity
- Early clinical warning signs include anorexia,
nausea, vomiting, malaise, listlessness, fatigue
and generalized weakness/dizziness, insomnia - Cardiac rhythm disorders
- Halo vision
- Hence serum levels should be monitored. This is
achieved with RIA, EMIT and ELISA.
14Radioimmunoassay (RIA)
- Involves incubation of
- Limited amount of specific antibody with a fixed
amount of radio-labelled antigen - Serum unlabeled antigen
- Labelled and unlabelled antigens compete for the
binding site on the antibody
15Advantages and disadvantages of RIA
- Advantages
- Sensitivity(10-10-10-11 M)
- Specificity
- Determines the concentration of both
macromolecular antigens small haptens - Disadvantages
- High level of wastage and expensive
- Short shelf life of radioisotope
- Labour-intensive
- Radiation Exposure
16EMIT
- Homogenous Competitive immunoassay system
- Separation using specifically of antibody-antigen
binding and quantification using enzyme reaction - EMIT is reliant on enzyme activity. Enzymatic
activity is severely reduced when it becomes
bound to antibody, thus making the separation
from hapten unnecessary.
17Components of the EMIT
- Drug to be measured is the hapten part of the
antigen - Antibody binding the enzyme-hapten conjugation,
inhibiting the enzyme activity - Buffered substrate
- Enzyme covalently linked to pure drug such as
glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase
18Procedure of the EMIT
- Mix sample of serum with a solution containing
antibody, enzyme-hapten complex buffered
substrate. Incubate at 37ºC for short time - Measure rate of absorbance changed at 340nm by
UV-visible spectroscopy - Determine ? Absorbance from reaction rate and
drug concentration - Non-linear relationship between ? Absorbance and
concentration
19Procedure Contd
- Determine standard curve and obtain concentration
of the analyte from standard curve
Fig 3.8.1 EMIT Assay Components
in Action
20Advantages and disadvantages of EMIT
- Advantages
- Enzyme stability
- Automated spectrophotometer
- Inexpensive (25-65 per test)
- EMIT 2000 lower cross sensitivity of digoxin
compared to RIA and ELISA. - Disadvantages
- Mainly for small molecule detection eg. Steroid
hormones or thyroxine (T4) - Less sensitive compared to ELISA or RIA
(sensitivity range 10-6-10-8 M) - Lower limit of quantification than RIA method
21Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay (ELISA)
- ELISA is a widely used method for measuring the
concentration of molecules (e.g. hormone and
drug) in serum or urine - In this case study the molecule is digoxin, and
it is detected using antibodies that have been
made against it, i.e. for which digoxin is the
antigen
22ELISA- Sandwich technique
- Antigen-specific antibody (monoclonal) is
attached to a solid phase surface e.g. inner
surface of test tube - Tubes are filled with antigen solution to be
assayed. Any antigen present bind to antibody
molecules
23Sandwich technique (cont)
- An enzyme-labeled antibody specific to the
antigen (conjugate) is added. - After washing away any unbound conjugate, the
substrate solution is added, which in presence of
the enzyme, changes colour.
24Sandwich ELISA-Quantification
- The concentration of the coloured product formed
is measured in a spectrophotometer. The intensity
of the colour is proportional to the
concentration of bound antigen.
25ELISA- Competitive technique
- Specific antibody is attached to a solid-phase
surface. - Test specimen, which may or may not contain the
antigen, and an enzyme-labeled antigen specific
to the test antigen (conjugate) are added together
26Competitive technique (cont)
- Chromogenic substrate is added, in which presence
of the enzyme, changes colour. - Colour change intensity is proportional to the
amount of antigen present.
27Competitive ELISA- Quantification
- Colour of the solution is inversely proportional
to amount of antigen - The test solution of unknown antigen is compared
with standard solutions of known concentrations
of antigen to competitively inhibit the indicator
antibody binding. - Increased antigen decreases the amount of bound
antibody. An inhibition curve , is a function of
antigen concentration, can be derived using the
results from the standard solutions.
28Comparison of EMIT ELISA
- EMIT
- Measures haptens (Small molecules)
- Drug
- Hormone
- Metabolite
- Faster than ELISA
- (No need to separate free and bound enzyme
labels)
- ELISA
- Measures macromolecules
- Antigens
- Antibodies
- Greater Sensitivity
29References
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Biochemistry and Cell Biology. 35 (2003) p1495
1499 - Choi M.H., Kim M.K., Cho H.C., Kim M.S., Lee E.A,
Paeng I.R, Cha G.S Enzyme Linked Competitive
Binding Assays for Digoxin Bulletin of the Korean
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71503-507 - Verbalis JG, Best practice and Research clinical
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503, 2003 - The Merck manual 17th Edition Centennial edition
1997 - Australian Pharmaceutical Formulary and Handbook
18th Edition 2002 - http//www.endocrinology.ed.ulca.edu/siadh.htm
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