Vasopressin antagonist-like effect of acetazolamide in a heart failure patient: a case report.

Eur Heart J Case Rep

Division of Internal Medicine, Nishida Hospital, Tsuruoka-Nishi-Machi 2-266, Saiki-City, Oita, Japan.

Published: September 2018

AI Article Synopsis

  • Hyponatraemia, a condition characterized by low sodium levels, can be treated with costly oral vasopressin antagonists, but their use is limited in Japan due to insurance restrictions, making acetazolamide a potential alternative diuretic.
  • An 83-year-old male with decompensated heart failure and several electrolyte imbalances was successfully treated with low-dose oral acetazolamide and polystyrene sulfonate-Ca jelly, leading to normalization of his electrolyte levels and stabilization of his heart failure status within two weeks.
  • The case suggests that acetazolamide may act similarly to vasopressin antagonists in treating hyponatraemia in heart failure patients, offering a more accessible treatment option

Article Abstract

Background: Hyponatraemia is easily corrected by treatment with an oral vasopressin antagonist, but these medications are costly and their use at outpatient clinics is restricted by government-managed insurance in Japan. Acetazolamide could be an alternative diuretic to a vasopressin antagonist.

Case Summary: An 83-year-old dyspnoeic male patient was emergently admitted to the hospital due to decompensated heart failure (HF), hypotension, and hyperkalaemia-associated sinus arrest with a junctional escape rhythm. Urgent treatment with a noradrenaline drip infusion and a beta stimulant adhesive skin patch promptly restored sinus rhythm with conducted normal QRS complex, which resolved the hypotension. Blood tests on admission revealed moderately elevated b-type natriuretic peptide (BNP, 576 pg/mL), hyponatraemia (128 mEq/L), hypochloraemia (95 mEq/L), hyperkalaemia (5.7 mEq/L), and preserved renal function (creatinine, 1.0 mg/dL) under no cardiovascular medications. Immediately after admission, low-dose oral acetazolamide (500 mg/day) and polystyrene sulfonate-Ca jelly (Argamate, 25 g/day for 3 days) were prescribed to correct the decompensated HF status and electrolyte disturbance. Three days later, both the serum sodium and chloride concentrations had recovered to normal levels (136 mEq/L and 104 mEq/L, respectively), and the serum potassium concentration had decreased to 4.5 mEq/L. Two weeks later, the patient's HF status became stable and the serum BNP concentration returned to normal (55 pg/mL).

Discussion: The present case indicates that the classic diuretic of acetazolamide would have a vasopressin blockade-like effect and could be an alternative diuretic to vasopressin antagonists for some proportion of HF patients with hyponatraemia.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6177024PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ehjcr/yty076DOI Listing

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