Rate the Diuretic classes from least to greatest in terms of efficacy
Least - Carbonic Anhydrase Inhibitors
Middle - aldosterone antagonists and Na channel blockers, thiazides, loop diuretics
Most - Loop of henle (not counting the double whammy of loop + thiazide)
What do the 5 different diuretic classes do to potassium levels?
Most Wasting = Loop + Thiazide combination
Wasting (least-greatest) = thiazides, carbonic anhydrase inhibitors, loop of henle agents
SAVING = aldosterone antagonists and sodium channel blockers
What do the 5 different diuretic classes do in terms of H+ handling?
The carbonic anhydrase inhibitors and aldosterone antagonists/Na channel blockers have no H+ effect
H+ decrease (least-greatest) = thiazides, loop agents, combo
What diuretic agents mess with calcium levels?
Loop of henle agents sharply DECREASE calcium levels
Thiazides sharply INCREASE calcium levels
Loop + thiazide combo keeps things about equal in/out
Which diuretic classes affect magnesium levels?
Only loop of henle agents have an appreciable effect on magnesium levels in the serum
Which diuretics function by inhibiting processes in the proximal convoluted tubule?
Mannitol (osmotic) and Acetazolamide (CA inhibitor)
*they also work in proximal straight tubule
Which diuretics function by inhibiting cells in the TALH?
TALH = thick ascending loop of henle
which diuretics work after the loop of henle in the proximal portion of the distal convoluted tubule?
* metolazone
Which diuretics act at the level of the cortical collecting duct?
Amiloride (sodium channel blocker), spironolactone (aldosterone inhibitor), Triamterene
What is the job of the proximal convoluted tubule?
70-80% of the reabsorption of water, electrolytes, short peptides and small molecules in plasma filtrate
How does mannitol work?
Mannitol is an osmotic diuretic that is not metabolized or reabsorped in the proximal tubule
What are the pharmacokinetics of mannitol?
Administered IV, distributes in ECF, excreted by glomerular filtration
When do you use mannitol?
Prevention of acute kidney injury secondary to major vascular surgery
Glaucoma (decrease intraocular pressure)
Preservation of renal function in rhabdomyolysis
Elevated intracranial pressure
What are the adverse effects of mannitol?
acute increase in ECF volume, nausea/headache, in prolonged use, can cause severe water loss and hypernatremia, heart failure (volume expansion)
What does Acetazolamide do?
It inhibits tubular Carbonic Anhydrase, which messes with the tubular reabsorption of bicarbonate
What is Acetazolamide used for?
Glaucoma, Metabolic alkalosis, Mountain sickness/altitude sickness
What are the adverse effects of Acetazolamide?
metabolic acidosis, drowsiness, fatigue, CNS depression, parasthesias
What are the 4 Loop diuretics we talked about?
Furosemide, bumetanide, torsemide, ethacrynic acid
What are the different absorbance percentages through the nephron for water?
Proximal convoluted tubule = 70%
Loop of Henle = 15%
Distal convoluted tubule and collecting duct = 14%
What are the different absorbance percentages for sodium through the nephron?
proximal convoluted tubule = 70%
Loop of Henle = 25%
Distal convoluted tubule and collecting duct = 4.5%
What channel do loop diuretics inhibit?
Na/K/2Cl co-transporter in the TALH
How is Furosemide administered?
can be administered oral or IV. It binds well to plasma proteins and has a rapid onset of action
*both metabolized and renally eliminated
How is ethacrynic acid administered?
IV. It binds plasma proteins extensively, is metabolized AND renally eliminated. Rapid onset of action
What are loop diuretics used for?
HTN, edema by CV, renal or hepatic diseases.
*also used in hypercalcemia and pulmonary edema
DO NOT USE when there is edema caused by calcium channel blockers