Active Transport - The Sodium Pump Flashcards

1
Q

What is the effect of [K+]o on digoxin inhibition of the sodium pump?

A

Increasing Potassium concentration on the outside decreases the affinity between cardiac glycosides and the sodium pump, therefore decreasing inhibition

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2
Q

What is the therapeutic index?

A

Dose producing toxicity in 50% of the population

OR

Minimum effective dose for 50% of the population

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3
Q

What is hypokalaemia?

A

Low levels of potassium in blood

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4
Q

What is hyperkalaemia?

A

High levels of potassium in blood

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5
Q

What are diuretics?

A

Drugs e.g.: Flurosemide

  • Diuretics increase urine output by the kidney
  • Treatment for high BP and excessive fluid retention
  • Side effects: increased urinary excretion of potassium
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6
Q

How does cardiac glycoside toxicity arise?

A
  • Patient has congestive heart failure, therefore they are prescribed digoxin
  • They might develop acute pulmonary oedema (excess fluid on lungs), and to get rid of that fluid, they prescribe diuretics (e.g. Furosemide)
  • Diuretics increase urine output but also increase urinary excretion of Potassium
  • Patient becomes hypokalaemic, increasing digoxin binding to Sodium pumps, inhibiting that
  • Because of the very narrow therapeutic index, the patient develops digoxin toxicity
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7
Q

How is cardiac glycoside toxicity solved?

A

Administering digoxin binding antibody

- Digibind binds to digoxin, causing it to dissociate from the Sodium pump

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8
Q

Difference between the primary and secondary active transport?

A

Primary
- active transport systems directly couple the hydrolysis of ATP to molecular movement

Secondary

  • active transport system use the energy stored in the Na+ gradient generated by the Sodium pump
  • can be in one direction or opposite directions
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9
Q

What is facilitated transport?

A

Move solutions in either direction of the cell

e.g.: glucose transporters (GLUT1, GLUT2, GLUT3…etc)

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10
Q

Where is glucose concentration higher - in or out of cell?

A

Out of cell

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11
Q

Give an example for secondary active co-transporting?

A

Na+ dependent glucose transport

- they cross the membrane together (different from GLUT transporters)

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12
Q

What are the Na+ dependent glucose transporter isoforms?

A

SGLT1
- 2Na+ : 1 glucose

SGLT2
- 1Na+ : 1 glucose

They reabsorb glucose into the cell in intestines and kidney tubules for example

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