Moderate
Hydrochlorothiazide × Spironolactone
Thiazide diuretics×Potassium-sparing diuretics (mineralocorticoid receptor antagonists)
Mechanism
Opposing effects on potassium: thiazide depletes it, spironolactone retains it. Combination in resistant hypertension and ascites. In CKD, hyperkalaemia risk rises.
Symptoms
With a balanced combination, no specific symptoms. Weakness, fatigue, paraesthesias, arrhythmia. Symptoms develop at potassium above 5.5 mmol/L; life-threatening above 6.5 mmol/L.
Management
Check potassium and creatinine at 2 and 4 weeks after starting, then every 3 months. With creatinine clearance below 30 mL/min, do not prescribe spironolactone. In older patients, watch for dehydration, especially in heat or acute illness.
Check the full regimen, not just this pair
Opens the checker with these two drugs prefilled. Add the rest of the regimen and recompute additive risks.
Sources
- Lexicomp: Lexicomp Drug Interactions (2024)– Wolters Kluwer Clinical Drug Information, Inc. Lexi-Interact Online, 2024
- Pharmaceutical Press: Stockley's Drug Interactions, 12th edition (2024)– Preston CL (ed.). Stockley's Drug Interactions. 12th ed. London: Pharmaceutical Press; 2024