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Lisinopril Furosemide

A 90-year-old male patient with HTN is being treated with furosemide, lisinopril, and spironolactone. Because of a fainting spell, he is brought to the ER, where his BP supine is 105/60, falling to 65/42 when he is asked to sit up. Which one of the following statements about the case is most reasonable ... [Pg.134]

A 67-year-old man, who had taken amiodarone 200 mg/ day for 3 months, developed hyponatremia (serum sodium concentration 117 mmol/1) (27). He was also taking furosemide 20 mg/day, spironolactone 25 mg/ day, and lisinopril 40 mg/day. His urine osmolality was 740 mosmol/kg with a normal serum osmolality. Fluid restriction was ineffective, but when amiodarone was withdrawn the sodium rose to 136 mmol/1. [Pg.574]

An 82-year-old man with left ventricular dysfunction and gout had worsening renal function (33). He was taking lisinopril, furosemide, naproxen, allopurinol, and baclofen 20 mg tds. As no reason could be found for the use of baclofen the dose was halved and then stopped 10 days later. The next day he had visual hallucinations, confusion, and agitation, and required sedation with diazepam. He was afebrile, with normal inflammatory markers, and a CT scan of the brain showed only cerebral atrophy. Baclofen was reintroduced, with complete resolution of neuropsychiatric symptoms within 48 hours. [Pg.411]

Transporter absorptive effects predominant Examples. Acyclovir, Amiloride -, Amoxicillin Atenolol Atropine, Bidisomide Bisphosphonates Captoprit, Cefazolin Cetirizine Cimetidine Ciprofloxacin, Cloxacillin Dicloxacillin Erythromycin - -, Famotidine Fexofenadine Folinic acid Furosemide, Ganciclovir Hydrochlorothiazide, Lisinopril Metformin Methotrexate, Nadolol Penicillins Pravastatin Ranitidine Tetracycline Trimethoprim Valsartan Zalcitabine... [Pg.158]

The risk of ACE inhibitor-induced renal impairment in patients with or without renovascular disease can be potentiated by diuretics. " In an analysis of 74 patients who had been treated with captopril or lisinopril, reversible acute renal failure was more coimnon in those who were also treated with a diuretic (furosemide and/or hydrochlorothiazide) than those who were not (11 of 33 patients compared with 1 of 41 patients). Similarly, in a prescription-event monitoring study, enalapril was associated with raised creatinine or urea in 75 patients and it was thought to have contributed to the deterioration in renal function and subsequent deaths in 10 of these patients. However, 9 of these 10 were also receiving loop or thiazide diuretics, sometimes in high doses. Retrospective analysis of a controlled study in patients with hypertensive nephrosclerosis identified 8 of 34 patients who developed reversible renal impairment when treated with enalapril and various other antihypertensives including a diuretic (furosemide or hydrochlorothiazide). In contrast, 23 patients treated with placebo and various other antihypertensives did not develop renal impairment. Subsequently, enalapril was tolerated by 7 of the 8 patients without deterioration in renal function and 6 of these patients later received diuretics. One patient was again treated with enalapril with recurrence of renal impairment, but discontinuation of the diuretics (furosemide, hydrochlorothiazide, and triamterene) led to an improvement in renal function despite the continuation of enalapril. ... [Pg.21]

However, in 1998 the manufacturers of lansoprazole had on record two reports of possible interactions. An elderly patient taking warfarin developed an INR of 7 when lansoprazole was added. Despite a warfarin dosage adjustment he had a gastrointestinal haemorrhage, a myocardial infarction and died after 3 weeks. Another man taking warfarin (as well as amiodarone, furosemide and lisinopril) became confused, had hallucinations and developed an increased INR (value not known) when given lansoprazole. The lansoprazole was stopped after 4 days, and he then recovered. However, it is uncertain whether this was an interaction or whether he had taken an incorrect warfarin dosage because of his confusion. ... [Pg.444]

A report describes a 74-year-old woman with increased lithium levels of 2.3 mmol/L and symptoms of lithium toxicity, which were associated with several drugs including irbesartan, lisinopril, escitalopram, levomepro-mazine, furosemide and spironolactone. It was suggested that these drugs could have delayed lithium excretion or worsened neurotoxic effects. An increase in the lisinopril dose and the addition of irbesartan several weeks before admission may have contributed to the lithium toxicity. ... [Pg.1113]

Electrolyte balance Hypernatremia has been reported in a 44-year-old woman with normal renal function who was given too much sodium polystyrene sulfonate she was also taking furosemide, spironolactone, and lisinopril [39 ]. The authors attributed this to net intestinal water loss because of profuse osmotic diarrhea. [Pg.373]

A 79-year-old man underwent colonic resection for bowel obstruction. He had a history of Parkinson s disease and associated dementia, hypertension, type-2 diabetes and occasional constipation. His current medications included carbidopa-levodopa extended release, lisinopril, furosemide, isophane insulin and polyethylene glycol (as needed for constipation). He was treated with metoclopramide (10 mg i.v., every 6 h) for stimulating gastric motility. After receiving the first three doses of metoclopramide, the patient developed mental deterioration until he became xmre-sponsive, and could not be aroused. An electroencephalogram displayed a pattern of diffuse slowing of the background rhythm, which was consistent with acute metabolic encephalopathy. Metoclopramide was discontinued, and... [Pg.542]


See other pages where Lisinopril Furosemide is mentioned: [Pg.319]    [Pg.1339]    [Pg.208]    [Pg.306]    [Pg.682]    [Pg.208]    [Pg.22]    [Pg.23]    [Pg.426]    [Pg.682]    [Pg.257]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.21 ]




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