Hyponatraemia (HN) can be a life-threatening medical condition which may lead to severe neurological and psychiatric symptoms. The AMSP (Arzneimittelsicherheit in der Psychiatrie) is a multicentre drug surveillance programme that assesses severe or new adverse drug reactions during psychopharmacological treatment in psychiatric inpatients. We report on a total of 263 864 psychiatric inpatients monitored from 1993 to 2007 in 80 psychiatric hospitals in Germany, Switzerland and Austria. During this period plasma sodium levels below 130 mmol/l (severe HN according to AMSP) were reported in 93 patients (relative frequency 0.04%). On average, the plasma sodium levels of all cases were 119.7 mmol/l (±5.8 s.d.); median 121 mmol/l (range 104-129 mmol/l). Patients who showed no clinical signs (n=65, 70%) had a mean sodium level of 121.3 mmol/l (±5.0 s.d.); median 122 mmol/l (range 114-129 mmol/l). By contrast, patients with clinical symptoms (n=28, 30%) had a mean sodium level of 116.0 mmol/l (±6.0 s.d.); median 117 mmol/l (range 104-125 mmol/l). HN was mainly observed during treatment with selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) (0.06%), Serotonin noradrenaline reuptake inhibitors (SNRIs) (0.08%), carbamazepine (0.10%) and oxcarbazepine (1.29%); the highest rate was found for oxcarbazepine. Antipsychotics, mirtazapine and tricyclic antidepressants were only rarely involved in HN (0.003-0.005%). Combinations of several drugs known to induce HN significantly increased the risk of HN, e.g. more than 10-fold for SSRI+diuretics+ACE inhibitors (0.37%) vs. SSRI given alone (0.02%). This is clinically relevant because such combinations, e.g. SSRI+diuretics may occur especially in elderly patients, who are in general at higher risk of developing HN.
Objective. Uncoupling of isolated mitochondria by nonsteroidal antiinflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) has been considered relevant to the development of gastrointestinal (GI) side effects. We investigated the occurrence of NSAID-induced uncoupling of mitochondria in intact cells (rat thymocytes) compared with the effects of a selective cyclooxygenase 2 (COX-2) inhibitor.Methods. Oxygen consumption and mitochondrial membrane potential were simultaneously measured amperometrically and by distribution of radioactive tracer molecules, respectively, in the presence and absence of pharmacologically relevant concentrations of the NSAIDs indomethacin and diclofenac and the selective COX-2 inhibitor SC-236. Analysis of data by a technique related to top-down elasticity analysis permitted assessment of the influence of these compounds on individual components of cellular energy metabolism.Results. Indomethacin, diclofenac, and SC-236 increased proton leak in isolated mitochondria. Both diclofenac and SC-236 significantly stimulated proton leak in intact cells and simultaneously inhibited substrate oxidation and ATP turnover. Oxygen consumption rates of isolated cells remained unchanged over a wide concentration range of the drugs, despite significant effects on subsystems of cellular energy metabolism.Conclusion. NSAIDs and selective COX-2 inhibitors have significant and equally directed effects on cellular energy metabolism. They both uncouple mitochondrial respiration and inhibit substrate oxidation and ATP turnover. However, the topical effect and selective COX-2 inhibition may not be sufficient to cause NSAID-like damage to the GI tract.
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