Latest News

Which Medications Can Cause Edema?


 

Implications

Understanding how these medications cause edema is important for effective management. For example, in the case of those causing edema due to reduced oncotic pressure, like insulin, slow dose titrations can help adapt to osmolarity changes. For drugs causing edema due to increased hydrostatic pressure, diuretics are more effective in acute management.

The key takeaways from this review are:

  • Awareness of drug-induced edema. Many drugs besides CCBs can cause edema.
  • Combination therapy. Combining ACE inhibitors or ARBs with CCBs can prevent or reduce CCB-induced edema.
  • Edema management strategies. Strategies to manage or prevent edema should include dose reductions or replacement of the problematic medication, especially in severe or refractory cases.

Dr. Wajngarten, professor of cardiology, University of São Paulo, Brazil, has disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

This story was translated from the Medscape Portuguese edition using several editorial tools, including AI, as part of the process. Human editors reviewed this content before publication. A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

Pages

Recommended Reading

Glucose Level Fluctuations Affect Cognition in T1D
MDedge Neurology
Antidiabetic Drugs That Lower Stroke Risk Do So By Unclear Mechanisms
MDedge Neurology
Sugar Substitute Tied to Higher Risk for Heart Attack, Stroke
MDedge Neurology
Chronotherapy: Why Timing Drugs to Our Body Clocks May Work
MDedge Neurology
GLP-1s Reduced Secondary Stroke Risk in Patients With Diabetes, Obesity
MDedge Neurology
What Toxic Stress Can Do to Health
MDedge Neurology
Weight Loss Drugs Cut Cancer Risk in Diabetes Patients
MDedge Neurology
Study: AFib May Be Linked to Dementia in T2D
MDedge Neurology
Two Diets Linked to Improved Cognition, Slowed Brain Aging
MDedge Neurology
High Blood Sugar May Drive Dementia, German Researchers Warn
MDedge Neurology