AI Article Synopsis

  • People with chronic kidney disease (CKD) often experience cognitive problems due to various factors, including medication side effects.
  • The complexity of treating CKD patients increases due to polypharmacy, as they usually have multiple health issues requiring numerous medications, which raises the risk of adverse drug reactions.
  • The review emphasizes two main points: CKD can disrupt the blood-brain barrier, and impaired kidney function can alter how drugs are processed in the body, leading to higher risks for issues affecting the central nervous system.

Article Abstract

People living with chronic kidney disease (CKD) frequently suffer from mild cognitive impairment and/or other neurocognitive disorders. This review in two parts will focus on adverse drug reactions resulting in cognitive impairment as a potentially modifiable risk factor in CKD patients. Many patients with CKD have a substantial burden of comorbidities leading to polypharmacy. A recent study found that patients seen by nephrologists were the most complex to treat because of their high number of comorbidities and medications. Due to polypharmacy, these patients may experience a wide range of adverse drug reactions. Along with CKD progression, the accumulation of uremic toxins may lead to blood-brain barrier (BBB) disruption and pharmacokinetic alterations, increasing the risk of adverse reactions affecting the central nervous system (CNS). In patients on dialysis, the excretion of drugs that depend on kidney function is severely reduced such that adverse and toxic levels of a drug or its metabolites may be reached at relatively low doses, unless dosing is adjusted. This first review will discuss how CKD represents a risk factor for adverse drug reactions affecting the CNS via (i) BBB disruption associated with CKD and (ii) the impact of reduced kidney function and dialysis itself on drug pharmacokinetics.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10689135PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ckj/sfad241DOI Listing

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