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Aldactazide
CLINICAL PHARMACOLOGY
Aldactazide
Mechanism of Action
Aldactazide is a combination of two diuretic agents with different but complementary mechanisms and sites of action, thereby providing additive diuretic and antihypertensive effects. Additionally, the spironolactone component helps to minimize the potassium loss characteristically induced by the thiazide component.
The diuretic effect of spironolactone is mediated through its action as a specific pharmacologic antagonist of aldosterone, primarily by competitive binding of receptors at the aldosterone-dependent sodium-potassium exchange site in the distal convoluted renal tubule. Hydrochlorothiazide promotes the excretion of sodium and water primarily by inhibiting their reabsorption in the cortical diluting segment of the distal renal tubule.
Aldactazide is effective in significantly lowering the systolic and diastolic blood pressure in many patients with essential hypertension, even when aldosterone secretion is within normal limits.
Both spironolactone and hydrochlorothiazide reduce exchangeable sodium, plasma volume, body weight, and blood pressure. The diuretic and antihypertensive effects of the individual components are potentiated when spironolactone and hydrochlorothiazide are given concurrently.
Pharmacokinetics
Spironolactone is rapidly and extensively metabolized. Sulfur-containing products are the predominant metabolites and are thought to be primarily responsible, together with spironolactone, for the therapeutic effects of the drug. The following pharmacokinetic data were obtained from 12 healthy volunteers following the administration of 100 mg of spironolactone (Aldactone film-coated tablets) daily for 15 days. On the 15th day, spironolactone was given immediately after a low-fat breakfast and blood was drawn thereafter.
| Accumulation Factor: AUC (0-24 hr, day 15) / AUC (0-24 hr, day 1) | Mean Peak Serum Concentration | Mean (SD) Post-Steady State Half-Life | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 7-alpha-(thiomethyl) spirolactone (TMS) | 1.25 | 391 ng/mL at 3.2 hr | 13.8 hr (6.4) (terminal) |
| 6-beta-hydroxy-7-alpha-(thiomethyl) spirolactone (HTMS) | 1.50 | 125 ng/mL at 5.1 hr | 15.0 hr (4.0) (terminal) |
| Canrenone (C) | 1.41 | 181 ng/mL at 4.3 hr | 16.5 hr (6.3) (terminal) |
| Spironolactone | 1.30 | 80 ng/mL at 2.6 hr | Approximately 1.4 hr (0.5) (beta half-life) |
The pharmacological activity of spironolactone metabolites in man is not known. However, in the adrenalectomized rat the antimineralocorticoid activities of the metabolites C, T.S. and HTMS, relative to spironolactone, were 1.10, 1.28, and 0.32, respectively. Relative to spironolactone, their binding affinities to the aldosterone receptors in rat kidney slices were 0.19, 0.86, and 0.06, respectively.
In humans the potencies of TMS and 7- alpha -thiospirolactone in reversing the effects of the synthetic mineralocorticoid, fludrocortisone, on urinary electrolyte composition were 0.33 and 0.26, respectively, relative to spironolactone. However, since the serum concentrations of these steroids were not determined, their incomplete absorption and/or first-pass metabolism could not be ruled out as a reason for their reduced in vivo activities.
Generic Name: Spironolactone and Hydrochlorothiazide
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