In neonates pharmacokinetics of furosemide is very slow, as compared to adult
individuals, because it is eliminated through glomerular filtration and tubular secretion,
mechanisms that are not fully developed in the newborn mammal. In addition, Henle's loop,
the main site of action of this diuretic, is shorter in the neonate than in the adult animal. The
aim of this study was to measure the response to furosemide in the unanesthetized newborn rat
and to compare it with that of the adult. Furosemide (0.5, 1, 1.5, 2, 5 or 10 mg/kg body weight,
i.p.) or vehicle were administered to newborn and adult rats and the effects on sodium,
potassium and water balance were assessed. Despite the physiological characteristics of the
neonatal kidney, furosemide induced a more marked sodium excretion and decrease in free
water clearance in the newborn than in the adult rat. In contrast, urinary potassium losses
elicited by furosemide were higher in the adult than in the newborn rat at similar doses. At both
ages, the effects of the diuretic were dose-dependent. Plasma sodium decreased, whereas
plasma potassium and hematocrit increased in the newborn rats, after the highest doses of
furosemide. In the adult rat changes were less marked. Our results suggest that the neonatal
kidney is more sensitive to equivalent doses of furosemide than the adult kidney.
The presence of a horizontal aorta in patients treated with transcatheter aortic valve replacement increases the difficulty of the procedure. We present 5 cases with aortic stenosis with a horizontal aorta who underwent transcatheter aortic valve replacement using a self-expanding prostheses, with the objective of describing the techniques used and obtaining success with a snare catheter. (
Level of Difficulty: Intermediate.
)
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