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  • Title: Pathophysiology of chronic renal tubular acidosis induced by administration of amiloride.
    Author: Hulter HN, Licht JH, Glynn RD, Sebastian A, Ilnicki LP.
    Journal: J Lab Clin Med; 1980 May; 95(5):637-53. PubMed ID: 7365313.
    Abstract:
    Amiloride is a "potassium-sparing" diuretic agent of moderate natriuretic potency with site of action in postmacula densa segments of the distal nephron. In isolated segments of mammalian cortical distal nephron, amiloride diminishes sodium reabsorption and transtubular electrical PD and inhibits potassium secretion. We investigated the effects of long-term administration of a demonstrably maximal dose of amiloride (1.0 mg/kg b.i.d.) on plasma and urine acid-base and electrolyte composition in fixed steroid-replaced ADX dogs. Amiloride administration resulted in potassium retention and hyperkalemia and reduced net acid excretion and caused chronic hyperchloremic metabolic acidosis. The cumulative reduction in net acid excretion and severity of systemic acidosis were not significantly different in additional groups in which potassium retention was prevented by restriction of dietary potassium during amiloride administration or in which amiloride was administered to animals with pre-existing dietary potassium depletion. The response of urine pH and ammonium excretion, however, differed among groups. In the steady state of chronic acidosis, urine pH and ammonium concentration were lowest in the hyperkalemic group and highest in the hypokalemic group, and among the three groups pH and ammonium were positively correlated (r = 0.67, p less than 0.001). Ammonium concentration varied inversely with plasma potassium concentration. Net acid excretion rates returned to control levels during the steady state of chronic amiloride-induced acidosis in the three groups. During continued amiloride administration, sustained correction of acidosis by long-term oral administration of sodium bicarbonate did not result in negative values of net acid excretion; that is, amiloride did not cause net wasting of base at normal plasma bicarbonate concentration. The results of these studies suggest that chronic amiloride administration results in a sustained impairment of renal hydrogen ion secretion restricted to the distal nephron and not dependent on alterations in potassium balance. Differences in potassium balance (positive or negative) appeared to influence only the availability of ammonia for diffusion into urine and steady-state urine pH, but not the steady-state net rate of renal hydrogen ion secretion during amiloride. These studies identify an experimental model of chronic distal renal tubular acidosis in which external hydrogen ion balance is re-established during chronic acidosis even when the availability of ammonia for excretion is decreased.
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