Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Laxatives.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Laxatives."— Presentation transcript:

1 Laxatives

2 Constipation, pathophysiology:
Disorder of delayed colonic transit because of: Underlying defect in colonic motility Isolated disorder of defecation or evacuation (outlet disorder) due to dysfunction of neuromuscular apparatus of anorectal region. Mixing in colon: Short/long duration stationary non-propulsive contractions. Propulsive contractions- giant migrating contractions- “colonic mass actions”- defecation. Decreased motility of mass action type or increased motility of nonpropulsive type leads to constipation.

3 • Laxative – production of a soft formed stool over a period of 1 or more days.
• Catharsis – prompt, fluid evacuation of the bowel, more intense

4 Indications for laxative use:
• Pain associated with bowel movements • To decrease amount of strain under certain conditions • Evacuate bowel prior to procedures or examinations • Remove poisons • To relieve constipation caused by pregnancy or drugs

5 Contraindications: • Inflammatory bowel diseases
• Acute surgical abdomen • Chronic use and abuse

6 Laxatives: • Stimulate peristalsis • Soften bowel content

7 Fiber laxatives Bran powder Psyllium Methycellulose Calcium polycarbophil Guargum Stool surfactants Docusate sodium Mineral oil Osmotic laxatives Mg (OH) Lactulose or 70 % sorbitol PEG 3350 Stimulant laxatives Bisacodyl Cascara Senna Lubiprostone

8 Enemas Tap water Na(PO4)2 enema Soapsuds enema Mineral oil enema Agents used for acute purgative or to clear bowel prior to medical procedures PEG Na(PO4)2 Mg citrate Combination kits: Na(PO4)2 & Bisacodyl

9 Laxatives generally act in one of the following ways:
 Retention of intraluminal fluid by hydrophilic/ osmotic mechanisms.  Net absorption of fluids by effects on small bowel & large bowel fluid & electrolyte transport. Altering motility by either inhibiting segmenting (nonpropulsive) contractions or stimulating propulsive contractions. Most laxatives  activity of NO synthase & biosynthesis of platelet activating factor in the gut. Both stimulate colonic secretion & GI motility.

10 Fibre rich diet 20-30gm/day,especially fermented ones.
TYPE OF FIBRE WATER SOLUBILITY % FERMENTED Non polysaccharides: Lignin Cellulose Poor 15 Non cellulose polysaccharides: Hemicellulose Mucilages & gums Pectins Good 56-87 85-95 90-95

11 Classification: – Non-absorbable carbohydrates
• Bulk laxatives – Non-absorbable carbohydrates – Osmotically active laxatives • Irritant laxatives = purgatives – Small bowel irritants – Large bowel irritants • Lubricant laxatives – Paraffin – Glycerol

12 Alternate Classification:
Luminally acting agents: Hydrophilic colloids, bulk forming agents (bran, psyllium) Osmotic agents (nonabsorbable inorganic salts or sugars Stool wetting agents (surfactants) & emollients (docusate, mineral oil).

13 Alternate Classification: contd…
Nonspecific stimulants/irritants: Diphenylmethanes (bisacodyl) Anthraquinones (senna, cascara) Castor oil Prokinetic agents: 5HT4 agonists Opioid antagonists

14 Laxative effect and latency in usual clinical dosage
Softening of feces (1-3 days) Soft/semi-solid stools (6-8hrs) Watery evacuation (1-3hrs) Bulk forming laxatives: Bran Psyllium preparations Methylcellulose Calcium polycarbophil Surfactant laxatives: Docusates Poloxamers Lactulose Stimulant laxatives: Diphenylmethane derivatives Bisacodyl Anthraquinone derivatives: Senna Cascara sagrada Osomotic laxatives: Sodium phosphates MgSO4 Milk of magnesia Mg citrate Castor oil

15 Bulk laxatives: Increase in bowel content volume triggers stretch receptors in the intestinal wall Causes reflex contraction (peristalsis) that propels the bowel content forward

16 Carbohydrate-based laxatives
– Insoluble and non-absorbable – Non digestible; take several days for effect – Expand upon taking up water in the bowel – Must be taken with lots of water • Vegetable fibers (e.g. Psyllium, lineseed) • Bran (husks = milling waste product)

17 – Partially soluble, but not absorbable
Osmotically active laxatives (Saline laxatives) – Partially soluble, but not absorbable – Saline-based (mostly sulfates) – Effect in 1-3 hrs  used to purge intestine (e.g. surgery, poisoning) • MgSO4 (= Epsom salt) • Na2SO4 (= Glauber’s salt)

18 Non-digestible sugars & alcohols:
Lactulose,sorbitol, mannitol. Lactulose- synthetic disaccharide of galactose and fructose resists intestinal disaccharidase activity. These are hydrolysed in colon to short chain fatty acids stimulate colonic propulsive motility by osmotically drawing water in to the lumen.

19 Lactulose,sorbitol, mannitol:
Used in treatment of: Constipation caused by opioids & vincristine Idiopathic chronic constipation Constipation in elderly 15-60mL at night. Takes hours for effect to occur. Lactulose also used in hepatic encephalopathy

20 Poly ethylene glycol (PEG)- electrolyte solutions:
Poorly absorbed, retained in intestinal lumen High osmotic nature Produce effective catharsis Colonic cleansing for radiological, surgical & endoscopic procedures Small doses used for treatment of constipation in difficult cases.

21 Stool wetting agents & emollients:
Docusate salts- anionic surfactants. Low surface tension of stool to allow mixing of aqueous & fatty substance ---Easier defecation. Mineral oils: Aliphatic hydrocarbons from petrolatum. Taken orally for 3-4 days. Penetrates & softens stools.

22 Mineral oils: Adverse drug reactions: Interferes with absorption of fat soluble vitamins. Elicits foreign body reaction in intestinal mucosa Leakage of oil past the anal sphincter Rare complication: Lipid pneumonitis due to aspiration

23 Irritant laxatives: Cause irritation of the enteric mucosa 
more water is secreted than absorbed softer bowel content and increased peristaltic due to increase volume

24 Small bowel irritants • Ricinoleic acid (Castor oil)
– Active ingredient of Ricinus communis – The oil (triglyceride) is inactive – Ricinoleic acid released from oil through lipase activity Ricin: – Lectin from the beans of R.communis – Potent toxin: inhibits protein synthesis – Potential bioterrorism agent (LD ~100mg)

25 Large bowel irritants Anthraquinones:
Active ingredient of Senna sp. (Folia and fructus sennae),Rhamnus frangulae (cortex frangulae) and Rheum sp. (rhizoma rhei): contain inactive glycosides  active anthraquinones released in colon Take 6-10 hours to act

26 Large bowel irritants Diphenolmethanes – Derivatives of phenolphtalein
• Bisacodyl – Oral administration: effect in 6-8 hrs – Rectal administration: effect in 1 hr – Often used to prepare for intestinal surgery • Sodium picosulfate

27 Stimulant ( irritant) Diphenylylmethane derivatives :- Sodium Pico sulfate- hydrolyzed by colonic bacteria to its active form. Bisacodyl :- Enteric coated – 10 – 15 mg Adults /Child 5 – 10mg Suppository Hydrolysis by endogenous esterases in the bowel Take at bed time – Effect next morning Suppositories work with in 30 – 60 min Not for more than 10 days – atonic , nonfunctioning colon

28 Refractoty constipation:
Colchicine 0.6mg Misoprostol mcg twice/thrice daily 5-HT4 agonist Tegaserod

29 Laxative abuse: Most common cause of constipation! – Longer interval needed to refill colon is misinterpreted as constipation  repeated use – Enteral loss of water and salts causes release of aldosterone  stimulates reabsorption in intestine, but increases renal excretion of K+  double loss of K+ causes hypokalemia, which in turn reduces peristalsis. This is then often misinterpreted as constipation  repeated use


Download ppt "Laxatives."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google