Home 24-7 Combining certain meds with ibuprofen can permanently injure kidneys

Combining certain meds with ibuprofen can permanently injure kidneys

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Source: MakeLemonade.nz

Ontario – Commonly prescribed hypertension drugs may be harmful in combination with ibuprofen, new research has found.

People who take a diuretic and a renin-angiotensin system (RSA) inhibitor for high blood pressure should be cautious about also taking ibuprofen, according to the Canadian research.

Diuretics and RSA inhibitors are commonly prescribed together for people with hypertension and are available under various pharmaceutical brand names. Painkillers such as ibuprofen are available over-the-counter in most pharmacies and stores in popular brands.

Researchers at Canada’s University of Waterloo used computer-simulated drug trials to model the interactions of the three drugs and the impact on the kidney.

They found that in people with certain medical profiles, the combination can cause acute kidney injury, which in some cases can be permanent.

It’s not that everyone who happens to take this combination of drugs is going to have problems, the researchers say. But the study found it’s enough of a problem that people should exercise caution.

Computer-simulated drug trials can quickly produce results that would take much longer in human clinical trials. Layton and her team use mathematics and computer science to give medical practitioners a head start with issues like drug complications.

The research, in this case, can also speak directly to the many people who are taking drugs for hypertension and may reach for a painkiller with ibuprofen without giving it much thought.

Diuretics are a family of drugs that make the body hold less water.  Being dehydrated is a major factor in acute kidney injury, and then the RAS inhibitor and ibuprofen hit the kidney with this triple whammy.

If people happen to be on these hypertension drugs and need a painkiller, they should consider acetaminophen instead.

The research work determining risk factors for triple whammy acute kidney injury has appeared in the journal Mathematical Biosciences.

MIL OSI

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