Bumex
bumetanide
Generic Name
bumetanide
Brand Names
for bumetanide, a potent loop diuretic used in the management of fluid overload.
Mechanism
- Inhibits the Na⁺‑K⁺‑2Cl⁻ cotransporter (NKCC2) in the thick ascending limb of the loop of Henle.
- Blocks reabsorption of Na⁺, K⁺, and Cl⁻, leading to osmotic diuresis and natriuresis.
- Decreases the reabsorption of Ca²⁺ and Mg²⁺, causing mild hypocalcemia and hypomagnesemia.
Pharmacokinetics
- Absorption: Rapid oral absorption; bioavailability ~50 %.
- Distribution: Highly lipophilic; crosses the blood‑brain barrier.
- Metabolism: Metabolized by the liver (CYP2C9, CYP3A4).
- Excretion: Primarily renal (70‑80 % unchanged); half‑life ≈ 0.9–1.3 h.
- Drug interactions:
- Potentiated diuretic effect with NSAIDs, salt‑sparing diuretics, ACE inhibitors, and ARBs.
- Reduced clearance when combined with metformin (possible lactic acidosis).
Indications
- Congestive heart failure – acute decompensation and chronic volume overload.
- Pulmonary edema – including cardiogenic and non‑cardiogenic causes.
- Edema associated with hepatic cirrhosis (ascites).
- Renal disease requiring aggressive diuresis (e.g., acute tubular necrosis when fluid overload is present).
Contraindications
- Absolute contraindication: Hypersensitivity to bumetanide.
- Use with caution:
- Severe renal impairment (CrCl <20 mL/min).
- Severe hepatic cirrhosis with high bilirubin.
- Hypotension, hypovolemia, or volume depletion.
- Congenital or acquired electrolyte disorders (e.g., severe hypokalemia).
- Warnings:
- Monitor for ototoxicity (rare at therapeutic doses).
- Avoid in patients with pre‑existing deafness.
Dosing
| Population | Starting Dose | Maintenance Dose | Typical Max Dose |
| Adults, renal function intact | 0.5–1 mg PO q12 h | 2–5 mg PO q12 h | 10 mg daily |
| Adults, impaired renal function | 0.75 mg PO Q12 h | Tailor to urine output | ≤ 5 mg daily |
| Children (≥2 y) | 0.02–0.05 mg/kg PO q12 h | 0.05–0.10 mg/kg q12 h | 0.25 mg/kg daily |
• Administer in the morning to reduce nocturia.
• Intravenous form: 0.1–0.5 mg IV over 10‑15 min; titrate to desired diuresis.
Monitoring
- Daily: Weight, urine output, serum electrolytes (Na⁺, K⁺, Cl⁻, Mg²⁺, Ca²⁺).
- Blood pressure every visit (or more frequently if unstable).
- Renal function (serum creatinine, BUN, CrCl) at baseline and periodically.
- Hearing assessment if prolonged or high‑dose therapy.
Clinical Pearls
- Potent diuretic: Bumetanide is 10–15× more potent than furosemide; a 2–3 mg dose often equals 80 mg furosemide.
- Sparing sodium: Because it blocks Na⁺ reabsorption in multiple segments, even modest sodium loads can be excreted.
- Use with potassium‑sparing agents (spironolactone, amiloride) as prophylaxis against hypokalemia.
- Ototoxicity risk: Dose‑response relationship; monitor hearing in patients with renal disease or concomitant aminoglycosides.
- Gout prophylaxis: Consider allopurinol or febuxostat when initiating or escalating bumetanide therapy.
- Avoid sudden withdrawal – it can precipitate acute decompensation in heart failure patients.
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• Key Terms: *Bumetanide, Bumex, loop diuretic, NKCC2, natriuresis, electrolyte imbalance, ototoxicity, hypokalemia.*