Drug protects kidneys of people with diabetes
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Kidney damage is a constant danger for people with Diabetes Mellitus, especially when their blood pressure is high. Now European researchers report that the addition of a drug, spironolactone, to standard blood pressure-lowering therapy for such patients helps reduce both blood pressure and the amount of albumin protein in urine, a measure of kidney impairment.
Dr. Kaspar Rossing of Steno Diabetes Mellitus Center in Gentofte, Denmark, and colleagues note in the medical journal Diabetes Care that two types of antihypertensive drugs—ACE inhibitors and angiotensin receptor blockers (ARBs)—have protective effects on the kidneys in diabetics who already have kidney damage.
These drugs work by controlling the release of a hormone called aldosterone. While they’re effective initially, aldosterone levels may subsequently rise once more in almost 40 percent of patients, resulting in greater urinary protein levels and a faster decline in kidney function.
To see whether supplementary treatment with spironolactone, which is an aldosterone inhibitor, might be helpful in these circumstances, the researchers conducted a study with 21 patients with Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus.
While the participants continued on their recommended antihypertensive treatments (which included diuretics, ACE inhibitors and ARBs), they were randomly assigned to take in addition either an inactive placebo or spironolactone for 8 weeks. They then switched to the other pill for another 8 weeks.
During spironolactone treatment, urinary albumin levels fell by 33 percent, and their upper and lower blood pressure readings fell by 6 and 4 points.
One patient developed dangerously lower potassium levels and had to be withdrawn from the study, but recovered rapidly. Otherwise, the treatment was well tolerated.
The researchers call for further studies, but conclude that in the short term, spironolactone may offer beneficial renal and cardiovascular protection.
SOURCE: Diabetes Care, September 2005.
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