Abstract
Intravenous furosemide doses ranging from 5 to 120 mg were given to healthy young volunteers with and without individualized active rehydration with a sodium chloride solution. Sodium excretion rates and fractional sodium excretions (FENa) percentages were correlated significantly with dose and with urinary excretion rates of furosemide. The ED50 was below 5 mg and no additional natriuretic effect was seen above 40 mg. The efficiency (FENa percentage per microgram of furosemide excreted per minute during a certain clearance period) was dependent on hydration and on time. For the period 15 to 30 min a significant linear relationship between furosemide dose and the reciprocal of the efficiency indicated a higher efficiency for lower doses and a theoretical maximal value of FENa of 0.4% per micrograms of furosemide excreted per minute. A relative value for a dose-dependent efficiency reduction was calculated for each dose. The ED50 for dose-dependent efficiency reduction was about 12 mg i.v. Simultaneous measurements of lithium clearance indicated a proximal site of action for furosemide which was saturated at furosemide excretion rates above 50 micrograms/minute. For the major, distal, site of action no maximal value was demonstrated. It is concluded that a wanted balance between a strong natriuretic effect and weak sodium retaining mechanism not necessarily is achieved by a high dose and that information concerning that problem must be obtained from studies in relevant patient groups.
JPET articles become freely available 12 months after publication, and remain freely available for 5 years.Non-open access articles that fall outside this five year window are available only to institutional subscribers and current ASPET members, or through the article purchase feature at the bottom of the page.
|