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Pharmacy Pharmacology: Diuretics

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Inhibition of the apical Na-K-2Cl cotransporter of the TALH ... Blockade of apical Na channel in the principal cells of the CCD ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Pharmacy Pharmacology: Diuretics


1
Pharmacy Pharmacology Diuretics
  • InstructorWilliam B. Jeffries,
    Ph.D.wbjeff_at_creighton.eduflap.creighton.edu
  • Required Reading Katzung, Chapter 15

2
Lecture Topics
  • You need to know these things
  • Mechanism of action
  • Clinical indications
  • Toxicity/adverse reactions

3
Objective 1
  • Review the pathways of Na and water reabsorption
    along the human nephron

4
Nephron Structure
5
Renal Epithelial Cell Polarity Drives Na and
Water Transport
Tubular Fluid
Blood
6
Proximal Tubule
  • Na flows down concentration gradient
  • Na/K ATPase maintains gradient
  • Water follows passively
  • 67 of Na and water reabsorption

7
Loop of Henle
  • TDL permeable to water but not Na
  • TAL impermeable to water and transports Na
  • Differences in permeabilities creates the
    countercurrent multiplier
  • Countercurrent multiplier creates interstitial
    osmolar gradient
  • 20 of filtered load of Na absorbed by the TAL

8
Distal Convoluted Tubule
  • 5 of filtered load of Na reabsorbed
  • Segment mostly impermeable to water

9
Cortical Collecting Duct
  • Water permeability controlled by antidiuretic
    hormone (ADH)
  • Driving force for water reabsorption is created
    by the countercurrent multiplier
  • 2-3 of filtered Na reabsorbed here via Na
    channels that are regulated by aldosterone
  • Major site of K secretion

10
Classes of DiureticsDefinitions
  • Diuretic substance that promotes the excretion
    of urine
  • Natriuretic substance that promotes the renal
    excretion of sodium

11
Objective 2
Discuss the chemical characteristics,
pharmacological properties, therapeutics uses and
adverse effects of the thiazide and thiazide-like
diuretics
12
Mechanism of Action
  • Thiazides freely filtered and secreted in
    proximal tubule
  • Bind to the electroneutral NaCl cotransporter
  • Thiazides impair Na and Cl- reabsorption in the
    early distal tubule low ceiling

13
Increased K Excretion Due To
  • Increased urine flow per se
  • Increased Na-K exchange
  • Increased aldosterone release

Na/K exchange in the cortical collecting duct
14
Whole Body Effects of Thiazides
  • Increased urinary excretion of
  • Na
  • Cl-
  • K
  • Water
  • HCO3- (dependent on structure)
  • Reduced ECF volume (contraction)
  • Reduce blood pressure (lower CO)
  • Reduced GFR

15
Pharmacokinetics
  • Oral administration - absorption poor
  • Diuresis within one hour
  • T1/2 for chlorothiazide is 1.5 hours,
    chlorthalidone 44 hours
  • Bo-
  • Ring

16
Therapeutic Uses
  • Edema due to CHF (mild to moderate)
  • Essential hypertension
  • Diabetes insipidus
  • Hypercalciuria

17
Diabetes Insipidus
  • Thiazides paradoxical reduction in urine volume
  • Mechanism volume depletion causes decreased GFR
  • Treatment of Li toxicity
  • Thiazides useful
  • Li reabsorption increased by thiazides. Reduce
    Li dosage by 50

18
Thiazide Use in Hypercalciuria - Recurrent Ca2
Calculi
  • Thiazides promote distal tubular Ca2
    reabsorption
  • Prevent excess excretion which could form
    stones in the ducts of the kidney
  • 50-100 mg HCT kept most patients stone free for
    three years of follow-up in a recent study

19
Thiazide Toxicity
  • Hypokalemia due to
  • Increased availability of Na for exchange at
    collecting duct
  • Volume contraction induced aldosterone release
  • Hyperuricemia
  • Direct competition of thiazides for urate
    transport
  • Enhanced proximal tubular reabsorption efficiency
  • Hyperglycemia
  • Diminished insulin secretion
  • Related to the fall in serum K
  • Elevated plasma lipids

20
Objective 3
  • Discuss the chemical characteristics,
    pharmacological properties, therapeutics uses and
    adverse effects of the loop diuretics

21
Available Loop Diuretics
  • Furosemide (prototype)
  • Bumetanide
  • Torsemide
  • Ethacrynic acid

22
Molecular Mechanism of Action
  • Enter proximal tubule via organic acid
    transporter
  • Inhibition of the apical Na-K-2Cl cotransporter
    of the TALH
  • Competition with Cl- ion for binding

23
Pharmacological Effects of Loop Diuretics
  • Loss of diluting ability Increased Na, Cl and K
    excretion
  • Loss of concentrating ability
  • reduction in the medullary osmotic gradient
  • Loss in ADH-directed water reabsorption in
    collecting ducts
  • Loss of TAL electrostatic driving force
    increased excretion of Ca2, Mg2 and NH4
  • Increased electrostatic driving force in CCD
    increased K and H excretion

24
Pharmacokinetics
  • Rapid oral absorption, bioavailability ranges
    from 65-100
  • Rapid onset of action
  • extensively bound to plasma proteins
  • secreted by proximal tubule organic acid
    transporters
  • Blah
  • Blah
  • Blah

25
Therapeutic Uses
  • Edema of cardiac, hepatic or renal origin
  • Acute pulmonary edema (parenteral route)
  • Chronic renal failure or nephrosis
  • Hypertension
  • Symptomatic hypercalcemia

26
Loop Diuretic Toxicity
  • Hypokalemia
  • Magnesium depletion
  • Chronic dilutional hyponatremia
  • Metabolic alkalosis
  • Hyperuricemia
  • Ototoxicity

27
Drug Interactions
  • Displacement of plasma protein binding of
    clofibrate and warfarin
  • Li clearance is decreased
  • Loop diuretics increase renal toxicity of
    cephalosporin antibiotics
  • Additive toxicity w/ other ototoxic drugs
  • Inhibitors of organic acid transport (probenecid,
    NSAID's) shift the dose-response curve of loop
    diuretics to the right

28
Objective 4
  • Discuss the chemical characteristics,
    pharmacological properties, therapeutics uses and
    adverse effects of the potassium-sparing
    diuretics

29
Spironolactone
  • Mechanism of action aldosterone antagonist
  • Aldosterone receptor function
  • Spironolactone prevents conversion of the
    receptor to active form, thereby preventing the
    action of aldosterone

30
Pharmacokinetics
  • 70 absorption in GI tract
  • Extensive first pass effect in liver and
    enterohepatic circulation
  • Extensively bound to plasma proteins
  • 100 metabolites in urine
  • Active metabolite canrenone (active)
  • Canrenoate (converted to canrenone)

31
Therapeutic Uses
  • Prevent K loss caused by other diuretics in
  • Hypertension
  • Refractory edema
  • Heart failure
  • Primary aldosteronism

32
Administration
  • Dose orally administered (100 mg/day)
  • Spironolactone/thiazide prep (aldactazide, 25 or
    50 mg of each drug in equal ratio)

33
Toxicity
  • Hyperkalemia - avoid excessive K supplementation
    when patient is on spironolactone
  • Androgen like effects due to it steroid structure
  • Gynecomastia
  • GI disturbances

34
Triamterene and Amiloride
  • Non-steroid in structure, not aldosterone
    antagonists

35
Mechanism of Action
  • Blockade of apical Na channel in the principal
    cells of the CCD
  • Amiloride blocks the Na/H exchanger (higher
    concentrations)
  • Blockade of the electrogenic entry of sodium
    causes a drop in apical membrane potential (less
    negative), which is the driving force for K
    secretion

36
Pharmacokinetics
  • Triamterine
  • 50 absorption of oral dose
  • 60 bound to plasma proteins
  • Extensive hepatic metabolism with active
    metabolites
  • Secreted by proximal tubule via organic cation
    transporters
  • Amiloride
  • 50 absorption of oral dose
  • not bound to plasma proteins
  • not metabolized, excreted in urine unchanged
  • Secreted by proximal tubular cation transporters

37
Therapeutic uses
  • Eliminate K wasting effects of other diuretics
    in
  • Edema
  • Hypertension

38
Toxicity
  • Hyperkalemia. Avoid K supplementation
  • Drug interaction - do not use in combination with
    spironolactone since the potassium sparing effect
    is greater than additive
  • Caution with ACE inhibitors
  • Reversible azotemia (triamterine)
  • Triamterene nephrolithiasis. 1 in 1500 patients

39
Objective 5
Discuss the chemical characteristics,
pharmacological properties, therapeutics uses and
adverse effects of the carbonic anhydrase
inhibitors
40
Prototype Acetazolamide
Developed from sulfanilamide, after it was
noticed that sulfanilamide caused metabolic
acidosis and alkaline urine.
41
Mechanism of Action Na Bicarbonate Diuresis
  • Inhibit carbonic anhydrase in proximal tubule
  • Blocks reabsorption of bicarbonate ion,
    preventing Na/H exchange
  • Pharmacological effect
  • Sodium bicarbonate diuresis
  • metabolic acidosis

42
Therapeutic Uses
  • Urinary alkalinization
  • Metabolic alkalosis
  • Glaucoma acetazolamide, dorzalamide
  • Acute mountain sickness

43
CA Inhibitor Toxicity
  • Hyperchloremic metabolic acidosis
  • Nephrolithiasis renal stones
  • Potassium wasting

44
Objective 6
  • Discuss the chemical characteristics,
    pharmacological properties, therapeutics uses and
    adverse effects of the osmotic diuretics

45
Osmotic Diuretic Characteristics
  • Freely filterable
  • Little or no tubular reabsorption
  • Inert or non-reactive
  • Resistant to degradation by tubules

46
Mechanism of ActionInhibition of Water Diffusion
  • Free filtration in osmotically active
    concentration
  • Osmotic pressure of non-reabsorbable solute
    prevents water reabsorption and increase urine
    volume
  • Proximal tubule
  • Thin limb of the loop of Henle

47
Osmotic Diuretics in Current Use
  • Mannitol (prototype)
  • Urea
  • Glycerin
  • Isosorbide

48
Therapeutic Uses
  • Prophylaxis of renal failure
  • Mechanism
  • Drastic reductions in GFR cause dramatically
    increased proximal tubular water reabsorption and
    a large drop in urinary excretion
  • Osmotic diuretics are still filtered under these
    conditions and retain an equivalent amount of
    water, maintaining urine flow

49
Therapeutic Uses (Cont.)
Reduction of pressure in extravascular fluid
compartments
  • Reduction of CSF pressure and volume
  • Reduction of intraocular pressure

50
Toxicity of Osmotic Diuretics
  • Increased extracellular fluid volume
  • Hypersensitivity reactions
  • Glycerin metabolism can lead to hyperglycemia and
    glycosuria
  • Headache, nausea and vomiting

51
Summary Sites of Diuretic Action
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