Diuretic Resistance and Chronic Heart Failure

Author(s):  
Alice Ravera ◽  
Jozine M. ter Maaten ◽  
Marco Metra
2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Keenan Saleh ◽  
Mayooran Shanmuganathan ◽  
Dahlia Abdulrahman ◽  
Noemi Findlay ◽  
Laura Greswell ◽  
...  

2017 ◽  
Vol 3 (2) ◽  
pp. 108 ◽  
Author(s):  
David Pham ◽  
Justin L Grodin ◽  
◽  

Despite advances in medical therapy over the past few decades, the incidence of heart failure hospitalisation continues to rise. Diuretics are the most common therapy used to treat heart failure as they relieve congestion. However, there is a lack of guidance on how to best use these medications. Guidelines support the use of diuretics at the lowest clinically effective dose but do not specify a diuretic strategy beyond that. Here we review the diuretics available for treatment, potential mechanisms of diuretic resistance and ways to address this in the ambulatory setting, and review tools that have been developed to help guide diuretic use in the treatment of chronic heart failure.


Hypertension ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 76 (4) ◽  
pp. 1045-1054
Author(s):  
Christopher Stuart Wilcox ◽  
Jeffrey Moore Testani ◽  
Bertram Pitt

Diuretic resistance implies a failure to increase fluid and sodium (Na + ) output sufficiently to relieve volume overload, edema, or congestion, despite escalating doses of a loop diuretic to a ceiling level (80 mg of furosemide once or twice daily or greater in those with reduced glomerular filtration rate or heart failure). It is a major cause of recurrent hospitalizations in patients with chronic heart failure and predicts death but is difficult to diagnose unequivocally. Pharmacokinetic mechanisms include the low and variable bioavailability of furosemide and the short duration of all loop diuretics that provides time for the kidneys to restore diuretic-induced Na + losses between doses. Pathophysiological mechanisms of diuretic resistance include an inappropriately high daily salt intake that exceeds the acute diuretic-induced salt loss, hyponatremia or hypokalemic, hypochloremic metabolic alkalosis, and reflex activation of the renal nerves. Nephron mechanisms include tubular tolerance that can develop even during the time that the renal tubules are exposed to a single dose of diuretic, or enhanced reabsorption in the proximal tubule that limits delivery to the loop, or an adaptive increase in reabsorption in the downstream distal tubule and collecting ducts that offsets ongoing blockade of Na + reabsorption in the loop of Henle. These provide rationales for novel strategies including the concurrent use of diuretics that block these nephron segments and even sequential nephron blockade with multiple diuretics and aquaretics combined in severely diuretic-resistant patients with heart failure.


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