Recipe

Eight pills you shouldn’t take because they damage your kidneys

If by “eight pills” you mean common medications that can potentially harm the kidneys, these are among the most frequently cited categories:

  1. NSAID pain relievers
    • Examples: Ibuprofen, Naproxen, Aspirin
    • Risk increases with high doses, long-term use, dehydration, or existing kidney disease.
  2. Certain antibiotics
    • Examples: Gentamicin, Vancomycin
    • Some antibiotics can be directly toxic to kidney tissue, especially at high doses.
  3. Proton pump inhibitors (acid-reflux medicines)
    • Examples: Omeprazole, Lansoprazole
    • Long-term use has been associated with kidney injury and chronic kidney disease.
  4. Diuretics (“water pills”)
    • Examples: Furosemide, Hydrochlorothiazide
    • Can contribute to dehydration and reduced kidney blood flow.
  5. ACE inhibitor blood-pressure medicines
    • Examples: Lisinopril, Enalapril
    • Usually beneficial when prescribed appropriately, but can sometimes cause kidney problems in certain situations, such as dehydration or when combined with NSAIDs.
  6. ARB blood-pressure medicines
    • Examples: Losartan, Irbesartan
    • Similar considerations as ACE inhibitors.
  7. Lithium
    • Used to treat certain mental health conditions.
    • Long-term use can cause chronic kidney damage in some patients.
  8. Calcineurin inhibitors
    • Examples: Cyclosporine, Tacrolimus
    • Commonly used after organ transplantation and require careful monitoring because of kidney toxicity risks.

A key point: these medications are not “bad” or automatically unsafe. Many are essential treatments and are prescribed because their benefits outweigh the risks. Kidney damage is more likely with factors such as:

  • Long-term use
  • High doses
  • Dehydration
  • Older age
  • Existing kidney disease
  • Diabetes or high blood pressure
  • Taking multiple kidney-stressing medications together

If you’re concerned about a specific medication you’re taking, tell me its name and I can explain its kidney-related risks and precautions.

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