Heart failure drug caused deaths

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Yaps

From correspondents in New York
August 05, 2004
A DRUG used for congestive heart failure that was supposed to save lives also caused dozens of deaths from a side effect when doctors began prescribing it more widely, Canadian researchers report.

The scientists say their findings are a cautionary tale for doctors about the risks of applying drug-study results to real-world situations. They suggest physicians aren't being careful enough about who they put on the drug and that they aren't checking for dangerous potassium buildup.

"I have no doubt that in the right patients and with careful monitoring that this is still a good drug combination," said Dr David N Juurlink, one of the Canadian researchers.

"It's just when we prescribe it more widely and maybe we don't monitor patients quite as closely as we should, then that's where we get into trouble."

Dr Juurlink and others believe the same thing is happening in the US as in Canada where the study of the decades-old drug, spironolactone, was conducted.

Even so, Dr Sidney Smith, a professor of medicine at the University of North Carolina and a former president of the American Heart Association, believes the drug offers significant benefits to heart failure patients.

A major study five years ago found that adding spironolactone to the standard treatments cut the death rate by 30 per cent in people with serious heart failure.

The new study looked at what happened after that, when doctors put more patients on the medicine. It was done by the Institute for Clinical Evaluative Sciences, a health care research organisation in Toronto, and is reported in today's New England Journal of Medicine.

About 5 million Americans have heart failure and the number is growing as people live longer and survive heart attacks. It occurs when a weakened heart can't forcefully pump enough blood throughout the body, causing swelling and fluid to back up in the lungs.

Spironolactone, also known as Aldactone, helps the kidneys get rid of excess water and salt but can cause potassium to build up in the blood. At high levels, potassium can cause irregular heart rates or sudden death.

Dr Juurlink and his colleagues examined whether the use of spironolactone had increased after the 1999 research, and what impact it was having on patients who take a standard ACE inhibitor and had been sick enough to be recently hospitalised. ACE inhibitors relax the blood vessels and lower blood pressure but can contribute to high potassium when combined with spironolactone.

The researchers tracked prescription and hospital records from 1994-2001 for about 1.3 million residents of the province of Ontario who were over 65.

"We found when the drug took off in mid-1999, so did rates of hospitalisation for high potassium and deaths in hospital associated with that," said Dr Juurlink.

Prescription rates for spironolactone increased fivefold, and hospitalisations and deaths from high potassium tripled. The number of heart patients hospitalised jumped from 4 to 11 per 1000; deaths rose from 0.7 to 2 per 1000.

Researchers think doctors may have given the drug in higher doses than needed, gave it to patients with other ailments like diabetes and kidney problems that put them at higher risk or gave it to patients eating potassium-rich foods.
 
I dont know but..

I dont know but..

I did have a reaction to this drug.. gave it to me in Thomas Hospital, Fairhope Alabama, last August when I wasnt getting better after open heart and new valve, it made me loony(more so than normal :D )so I simply refused to take it. This is why I posted this..also in 2001 ..my hubby who has ph, was also on this, he was hospitalised due to potassium lacking drugs , I dont know if this caused it or not .. but his cardio stopped it and put him hydrochlorot...just wanted to get this info out. please do not be doomed Ross..we need you!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! :D Love Yaps
 
Well years of high dose Prednisone didn't kill me, though it did cost me a hip, I suppose this won't do me in either.
 
Ooh, Ross, my hubby can identify with that one. He had to take high doses of prednisone after his bone marrow transplant (two years prior to my surgery), and his joints have never been the same.
 
Tell him to be cautious. It really did kill my hip. Avascular Necrosis of the left femoral head or bone death.
 
Prednisone is alright for short term therapy, but I was on it for 5 years at 60mg a day and sometimes even more by I.V.. I looked like the Michelin man, had violent mood swings, felt like crap most of the time, well.....you get the picture. One day my hip started hurting and got worse to the point that I couldn't even put weight on it. Ortho looked at it, xrayed it and said, "Gee, no wonder your hurting, the femoral head is dead and there is no blood flow". Just what I wanted, a total hip replacement. :(
 
Are you guys telling prednisone horror stories just for me?

(currently on prednisone taper for my sternum :D)

Actually the prednisone side effects aren't as bad as when they have put me on the medrol (methylprednisolone). They both make me feel like I want to jump out of my skin, give me insomnia, and make me want to eat like a NFL lineman. :D
 
Took spironolactone for about 6 weeks until I started thinking about getting a training bra :eek: . Made my chestal area quite sore, and according to the measuring tape I was sprouting "mammary tissue". It went away after about a month.
 
Johnny Stephens said:
Took spironolactone for about 6 weeks until I started thinking about getting a training bra :eek: . Made my chestal area quite sore, and according to the measuring tape I was sprouting "mammary tissue". It went away after about a month.
My ****ies are bigger then yours! Neener, Neener, Neener :p
 
Yeah.... Most of the jokes about the pre-pubescent breasts are behind me now....


My wife (she's a newspaper editor remember) put the full article from the Associated Press Wire Service in this morning's paper.


Basically, spironolactone (a diuretic) causes your kidneys to reserve potassium instead of expelling it as normal when you urinate. The buildup of potassium, which can be more pronounced if you're on certan ACE inhibitors, can get to toxic levels which can start to kill heart tissues, causing death.

HOWEVER, there IS a light at the end of the tunnel, at least for the potassium increase (nothing you can do about the pre-teen ****s.) A periodic blood test for electrolyte levels can tell any up-standing physician whether or not you have too much K (potassium, not vitamin K which is something else entirely) in your system. I also take furosemide (lasix) and that actually causes the kidneys to flush out more potassium than is normal (that can be deadly too by the way) and so the two drugs combined together kind of balance eachother out.

For the record, I just got my electrolytes checked about 3 weeks ago, haven't heard results yet though.


Spironolactone also causes your skin to be much more light-sensitive (lather up on the sun screen RELIGIOUSLY) and heightens your tactile sensitivity.

What feels like scalding hot to me now is just a normal, hot cup of coffee to my wife...
 
hehehee

hehehee

heheheheheheheehee, but really ,just wanted to inform people, I remember how horrible my husband felt when they hospitalised him, felt like his muscles were being torn apart.. wouldnt want that for anyone....love yaps
 
Yaps said:
heheheheheheheehee, but really ,just wanted to inform people, I remember how horrible my husband felt when they hospitalised him, felt like his muscles were being torn apart.. wouldnt want that for anyone....love yaps


Thankfully, the worst I've ever gotten was leg cramps, but I think that's always been from a drop in potassium, not excess, as a glass or orange juice or a banana always helped matters go away.

Usually it was a massive cramp in my lower right calf, you could see the right angle in the back of my right leg where the muscle just seized up, usually at night while I'm trying to sleep....
 
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