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Renal actions of a uricosuric diuretic, racemic indacrinone, in man: comparison with ethacrynic acid and hydrochlorothiazide.
Author(s) -
Brooks BA,
Lant AF,
McNabb WR,
Noormohamed FH
Publication year - 1984
Publication title -
british journal of clinical pharmacology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.216
H-Index - 146
eISSN - 1365-2125
pISSN - 0306-5251
DOI - 10.1111/j.1365-2125.1984.tb02382.x
Subject(s) - uricosuric , free water clearance , chemistry , hydrochlorothiazide , diuretic , endocrinology , medicine , diuresis , reabsorption , excretion , renal function , uric acid , kidney , blood pressure , hyperuricemia
The effects of indacrinone (IND) have been investigated in a two part study. First, a total of 36 clearance studies have been performed in 14 healthy volunteers, under conditions of either maximal hydration or hydropenia, to compare the renal sites of action of single oral doses of IND, 20 mg, ethacrynic acid (EA), 100 mg, and hydrochorothiazide (HCTZ), 100 mg. Under conditions of maximal water hydration, IND increased fractional Na+ excretion from a mean of 1.19 +/‐ 0.05 to 4.93 +/‐ 0.67% of GFR. This was similar to the response seen with HCTZ, which increased fractional Na+ clearance up to 3.16 +/‐ 0.17% of GFR; EA increased fractional Na+ excretion up to 14.5 +/‐ 2.5% of GFR. The mean reduction in fractional free‐water clearance (CH2O/GFR X 100%) invoked by IND, (delta = −34.8% of control) was similar to that produced by EA, (delta = −27.2% of control), and by HCTZ, (delta = ‐ 26.6% of control). During hydropenia with superimposed mannitol diuresis, both IND and EA caused a fall in fractional free‐water reabsorption (TcH2O/GFR X 100%), delta IND = −20.3% of control, delta EA = −70.1% of control. HCTZ produced a significant increase in fractional free‐water reabsorption, delta HCTZ = −20.7% of control. In all studies, single doses of IND were both uricosuric and hypouricaemic. Fractional urate excretion increased from a mean 6.7 +/‐ 0.1 to 15.2 +/‐ 2.1% of GFR whilst plasma urate concentration fell from a mean of 0.36 +/‐ 0.03 to 0.34 +/‐ 0.03 mM (P less than 0.05) within 2‐ 3 h post drug. HCTZ and EA, in single doses, had little effect on urate excretion. In the second part of the study, a total of 16 healthy volunteers received either IND, 10 mg, or HCTZ 50 mg, orally for 8 days, whilst on a diet of controlled electrolyte content. Both drugs were well tolerated by both sets of subjects with no adverse clinical or pathological findings. Both IND and HCTZ caused a significant reduction in weight and standing systolic blood‐pressure during the first 48 h of therapy. At the doses administered, IND and HCTZ displayed similar diuretic responses with respect to water, Na+, Cl‐, Ca2+ and PO4(3‐) excretion. IND produced less kaliuresis than HCTZ during the first treatment day but cumulative K+ loss was similar for both drugs over the eight days of therapy. Fractional urate excretion after IND remained elevated throughout the 8 days of therapy and the subjects remained isouricaemic for 7 days.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)

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