diuresis

Modern strategy has shifted from ‘escalating monotherapy’ to early sequential nephron blockade and natriuresis-guided titration (Mullens Protocol).

Decongestion reduces morbidity (readmission), but loop diuretics themselves do not improve survival (TRANSFORM-HF).

summary: mullens protocol

Based on Mullens W, et al. Eur J Heart Fail. 2019.

StepTimeTrigger / CheckAction
1. Initial TherapyT+0Fluid OverloadIV Loop Diuretic (2.5x Home Dose)
2. Response CheckT+2 mmol/LDouble the Dose
but low volIncrease Frequency (e.g. q6h)
3. Volume CheckT+6Urine Output mL/hRepeat Bolus / Start Infusion
4. Efficiency CheckT+24Efficiency kg/40mgAdd Thiazide (Metolazone) or Acetazolamide
5. RefractoryAnyHypochloraemia ()Hypertonic Saline (SALT-HF Protocol)

core concepts: the mortality paradox

1. the ‘neurohormonal brake’

Loop diuretics inhibit at the macula densa (NKCC2).

  • Physiology: The kidney interprets this as ‘hypovolaemia’ massive Renin release.
  • Result: Upregulation of RAAS (Angiotensin II/Aldosterone) vasoconstriction and cardiac fibrosis.
  • Trade-off: Haemodynamic improvement (decongestion) comes at the cost of neurohormonal activation.

2. mortality vs. morbidity

  • Loops: Remove the fluid (symptom control).
  • GDMT (BB/ACEi/MRA): Block the RAAS surge caused by the loops (mortality control).
  • If patient is euvolemic but hypotensive/azotemic, wean the loop first to preserve the GDMT.
Drug ClassTargetDecongestionMortality Benefit?
LoopsHaemodynamics (Preload)+++Neutral (TRANSFORM-HF)
ACE Inhibitors/ARNINeurohormonal (RAAS)+YES (Remodelling)
Beta BlockersNeurohormonal (SNS)- (Worsens acute)YES (Arrhythmia/Remodelling)
Spironolactone (MRA)Neurohormonal (Aldo)+/- (Weak diuretic)YES (Antifibrotic - RALES)
SGLT2 InhibitorsMetabolic/Osmotic++YES (Pleiotropic - EMPEROR)
Low Sodium DietVolume Load+/-Neutral (QoL only - SODIUM-HF)

step 1: the loop foundation (DOSE-AHF)

Mechanism: Inhibits NKCC2 () in the Thick Ascending Limb (25% of Na reabsorption).

dosing & evidence

Based on DOSE-AHF

  • Start: IV Bolus 2.5x Home Total Daily Dose.
  • Intensity: High dose strategy is superior to low dose for dyspnoea relief and fluid loss.
  • Mode: No difference between continuous infusion and bolus for initial therapy.

why switch loops?

Furosemide has erratic oral absorption (), which is often worsened by gut oedema.

AgentBioavailabilityPotency ()Clinical Role
Furosemide10–100% (Erratic)20–25%Standard first-line.
Bumetanide80–100% (Stable)20–25%Use if Furosemide fails (gut oedema).
Torsemide80–100%20–25%Longer half-life prevents rebound.
Metolazone~65%5–8%‘Booster’ to overcome distal hypertrophy.

monitoring: the mullens protocol

Natriuresis-guided therapy prevents ‘clinical inertia’.

T+2 hours (the ‘quality’ check): is the kidney responding?

  • Test: Spot Urine Sodium ().
  • Target: .
  • Action: If below target Double the dose.

T+6 hours (the ‘quantity’ check): is the volume actually leaving?

  • Test: Cumulative Urine Output.
  • Target: (approx 1000 mL total at 6h).
  • Action: If below target Repeat the bolus (or start infusion).

T+24 hours (the ‘efficiency’ check): what is the cost?

  • Formula: .
  • Target: per 40mg equivalent.
  • Action: Poor efficiency Add Sequential Blockade (Thiazide/Acetazolamide) for the next day.

sulfa allergy

True cross-reactivity between antibiotic sulfonamides and non-antibiotic sulfonamides (diuretics) is rare/theoretical. HOWEVER, if history of SJS/TEN or Anaphylaxis to Furosemide/Thiazides:

  • All Sulfonamides (Loops, Thiazides, Acetazolamide) are contraindicated.
  • Ethacrynic Acid a non-sulfa loop may be used.
    • Dose: 50mg IV 40mg Furosemide.
    • Warning: High risk of Ototoxicity.

step 2: optimization (infusion)

If boluses fail to achieve target despite dose escalation:

  • Continuous Infusion: Consider switching (e.g., 10–40 mg/hr). Maintains constant tubular concentration above the natriuretic threshold, preventing ‘post-diuretic salt retention’ (rebound) that occurs between boluses.

step 3: mechanisms of resistance

If ceiling dose loop (e.g., Furosemide 400-600mg IV) fails, resistance mechanisms are active.

  1. Braking Phenomenon: Acute restoration of sodium balance (rebound retention) once the drug wears off.
  2. Distal Hypertrophy: Chronic loop blockade DCT cell hypertrophy avid uptake downstream.
  3. Chloride Depletion Syndrome: (Key Driver)

    Loops waste . Low distal delivery triggers Macula Densa Renin Release (tubuloglomerular feedback). The kidney avidly holds sodium because chloride is low (hypochloraemic metabolic alkalosis). Fix: Aggressive KCl repletion, Hypertonic Saline, or Acetazolamide.

step 4: sequential nephron blockade

Synergism is achieved by blocking reabsorption at multiple sites.

1. proximal blockade (acetazolamide)

  • Site: Proximal Convoluted Tubule (Carbonic Anhydrase inhibitor).
  • Evidence: ADVOR Trial (2022).
    • Findings: 500mg IV Daily + Loop vs Placebo + Loop. Improved decongestion (42% vs 31%).
    • Predictor of Response: Benefit is magnified when baseline Bicarbonate is elevated ( mmol/L).
  • Role: Efficiency. Increases natriuresis per mg of Loop. Corrects metabolic alkalosis.

2. distal blockade (thiazides)

  • Site: Distal Convoluted Tubule (inhibits NCC).
  • Role: Potency. Overcomes distal hypertrophy.
  • Evidence: Weak. Unlike the large ADVOR/CLOROTIC trials, evidence for Metolazone relies on small studies/observational data ( total).
  • Metolazone Pearls:
    • Give 30+ mins BEFORE the Loop.
    • Long half-life (14–24h); daily dosing is sufficient.
    • Costs: IV Chlorothiazide is equally effective but costly.
    • Caution: Massive electrolyte wasting (, ).

3. the ‘metabolic’ pillar (sglt2 inhibitors)

  • Site: Proximal Tubule (SGLT2).
  • Evidence: EMPULSE.
  • Role: Standard of Care (Class I). Osmotic diuresis + renal protection. Start in hospital once stable.
  • Caveat: ADVOR excluded patients on SGLT2 inhibitors. Since SGLT2i is now standard of care, the synergy is extrapolated.

4. mineralocorticoid receptor antagonists (mra)

  • Evidence: ATHENA-HF.
    • Finding: High dose spironolactone (100mg) did NOT improve acute decongestion vs placebo.
    • Reason: Pharmacokinetics are too slow for acute rescue (genomic effect).
  • Exception: Cirrhosis/Ascites. Secondary hyperaldosteronism is the primary driver; high dose spironolactone (up to 400mg) is effective here.

step 5: rescue therapy

1. hypertonic saline protocol

  • Evidence: SALT-HF.
    • Finding: Neutral for 3h urine output overall, but improved 7-day weight loss. Safe profile. Previous inpatient meta-analyses suggested stronger acute benefit.
    • Target Population: Most effective in Hypochloraemia () or Hyponatraemia.
  • Mechanism: Osmotic extraction from interstitium (plasma refill) + Chloride repletion.
  • Protocol (SALT-HF):
    1. Load: 150 mL of 3% NaCl IV over 30 mins.
    2. Diuretic: Give High-Dose Loop (e.g., Furosemide 250mg IV) concurrently or immediately after.
    3. Frequency: BID (Twice daily).
  • Monitoring response:
    • Assess Urine Output 3–4 hours post-dose.
    • Response: If output mL Continue BID.
    • Failure: If output minimal STOP infusion. (Risk of flash pulmonary oedema/hypernatraemia without excretion).
  • Stop Parameters:
    • Serum .
    • Resolution of congestion.

2. ultrafiltration / dialysis

  • Evidence: CARRESS-HF.
    • Finding: Ultrafiltration was inferior to stepped pharmacologic care (more adverse events, no benefit).
    • Why: Fixed filtration rates often exceed the patient’s plasma refill rate, leading to intravascular depletion and rising creatinine.
  • Role: Last resort for uraemia/acidosis, not for ‘diuretic resistance.‘

step 6: transition & discharge

The highest risk period for readmission.

  1. The ‘Stability’ Rule:
    • Ideally, observe on oral diuretics for 24–48 hours before discharge.
    • Ensure weight remains stable (no rebound accumulation).
  2. Dose Conversion (IV to PO):
    • Furosemide has ~50% oral bioavailability (erratic in gut oedema).
    • Double the IV dose. (e.g., Stable on 40mg IV BID Discharge on 80mg PO BID).
  3. STRONG-HF Strategy:
    • Do not discharge solely on diuretics.
    • Rapid up-titration of GDMT (BB/ACEi/MRA/SGLT2i) before discharge reduces 180-day readmission/death.

safety & complications

permissive hypercreatinemia

If the patient is decongesting and creatinine rises: CONTINUE.

DOSE-AHF showed that while high-dose loops caused transient AKI, patients with haemoconcentration (rising Cr/Hct) had better survival. The rise is often haemodynamic (resetting).

Stop Trigger: Cr rise () without effective diuresis, or hypotension.

electrolyte wasting

Sequential blockade causes massive and loss.

  • Hypokalaemia: Major risk for arrhythmia. Keep . Supplement before giving Metolazone.
  • Hypomagnesaemia: Prevents repletion. Keep .
  • Hyponatraemia:
    • Thiazides: High risk (block diluting segment). Stop if .
    • Loops: Often correct hyponatraemia (excrete hypotonic urine).