Literature DB >> 1265008

Samuel Hyde lecture. Polypharmacy in rheumatoid arthritis--help or hindrance?

K D Muirden.   

Abstract

The use of multiple drugs in treating rheumatoid arthritis is based on the assumption that their effects are additive. Sometimes the results are unexpected or the added drug may confer no additional benefit to the patient whilst leaving him more liable to undesirable side-effects. Some form of polypharmacy may be necessitated by the different pharmacological properties of our drugs. Certain drugs have been judged on their steroid-sparing effects allowing lower doses to be used and thereby reducing the toxicity of corticosteroids. It is likely that some potential areas of danger from interacting drugs have been over-emphasized, being based on speculative rather than real data or purely on animal experiments using non-clinical doses. The patient with active RA with a low serum albumin would be unusually susceptible to changes induced by combinations of strongly bound anti-inflammatory drugs. He would also be highly susceptible to side-effects, as has been shown with prednisone. Side-effects here are doubled when the patients serum albumin is below 2.5g/100ml(lewis et al.1971). I believe we should continue to ask ourselves whether by subtracting one or more drugs from the patients cocktail we may not produce a most welcome benefit for both patient and doctor and, I suppose we could even add, the hard-pressed tax payer.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  1976        PMID: 1265008      PMCID: PMC1864162     

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Proc R Soc Med        ISSN: 0035-9157


  18 in total

1.  Pharmacokinetics of drugs in patients with the nephrotic syndrome.

Authors:  R Gugler; D W Shoeman; D H Huffman; J B Cohlmia; D L Azarnoff
Journal:  J Clin Invest       Date:  1975-06       Impact factor: 14.808

Review 2.  Drug interactions with coumarin anticoagulants. 2.

Authors:  J K Weser; E Sellers
Journal:  N Engl J Med       Date:  1971-09-02       Impact factor: 91.245

3.  Prednisone side-effects and serum-protein levels. A collaborative study.

Authors:  G P Lewis; W J Jusko; L Graves; C W Burke
Journal:  Lancet       Date:  1971-10-09       Impact factor: 79.321

4.  Competition between salicylate and other drugs in binding to human serum protein in vitro.

Authors:  K D Muirden; P Deutschman; M Phillips
Journal:  Aust N Z J Med       Date:  1974-04

5.  Interactions of aspirin, indomethacin and other drugs in adjuvant-induced arthritis in the rat.

Authors:  C G Van Arman; G W Nuss; E A Risley
Journal:  J Pharmacol Exp Ther       Date:  1973-11       Impact factor: 4.030

6.  Clinicopathologic conference: hypertension and the lupus syndrome--revisited.

Authors:  A S Nies; J A Oates
Journal:  Am J Med       Date:  1971-12       Impact factor: 4.965

7.  Interaction between aspirin and indomethacin in the treatment of rheumatoid arthritis.

Authors:  R Jeremy; J Towson
Journal:  Med J Aust       Date:  1970-07-18       Impact factor: 7.738

8.  Displacement of one drug by another from carrier or receptor sites.

Authors:  B B Brodie
Journal:  Proc R Soc Med       Date:  1965-11

9.  Metabolic drug interactions--a critical review.

Authors:  D J Birkett; S M Pond
Journal:  Med J Aust       Date:  1975-05-31       Impact factor: 7.738

10.  Salicylate therapy and drug interaction in rheumatoid arthritis.

Authors:  D R Barraclough; K D Muirden; B Laby
Journal:  Aust N Z J Med       Date:  1975-12
View more

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.